In Re Motion of Ellsworth H. Mosher

248 F.2d 956, 45 C.C.P.A. 701, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 140, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 1957
Docket956
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 248 F.2d 956 (In Re Motion of Ellsworth H. Mosher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Motion of Ellsworth H. Mosher, 248 F.2d 956, 45 C.C.P.A. 701, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 140, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 136 (ccpa 1957).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner has moved the “full court” under Rule 12 for an order directing the clerk of the court to provide photostatic or other copies of the decision or decisions of the Patent Office Board of Appeals as set forth in the Transcript of Record that was filed in a patent appeal before this court. The motion is in proper form and is accompanied by the fee required by the Rules of this court for the making of the copies.

The appeal in question is presently pending before this court and has not yet been heard. Petitioner is not a party to the appeal nor has he alleged any special interest therein.

*957 Petitioner originally informally requested of the clerk the copies herein sought, but was refused.

The Solicitor of the Patent Office has been advised of the instant motion but has presented no comments for our consideration.

Rule 1(1) of this court provides in part:

“ * * * The parties interested in any matter pending before the court may have full access to the records in such matters in the office of the clerk and may take copies of all papers filed therein: * * * ” (Emphasis added.)

Rule 1(3) of this court provides:

“The clerk shall furnish to any applicant a copy of any paper on file in any case on payment of the legal fees therefor.” (Emphasis added.)

Petitioner urges that unless the words “any applicant” in Rule 1(3) be construed to have a meaning broader and different from the words “the parties,” it would follow that Rule 1(3) is completely superfluous, a result repugnant to basic principles of the rules of construction. In further support of his position, petitioner cites and discusses, amongst others, the cases of Ex parte Drawbaugh, 1894, 2 App.D.C. 404 and In re Sackett, 136 F.2d 248, 30 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1214.

After careful consideration of the authorities and the arguments advanced by petitioner, we are of the opinion that his motion must be granted.

Rules 1(1) and 1(3), when read together (as we feel they must be read), are unfortunately not free from ambiguity. No doubt many plausible contrary arguments might be advanced as to the intended meanings of the words “the parties interested” [Rule 1(1)] and “any applicant” [Rule 1(3)]. We are constrained to admit that we have had difficulty reconciling the two rules and avoiding interpretations which render the wording of one or the other superfluous. We have attempted, however, to arrive at the interpretation closest to what we feel was-the result intended by the framers of the rules.

Rule 1 of the Rules of the Court of' Customs Appeals (the predecessor of this-court in customs jurisdiction), as amended on December 2, 1916, and as corrected to July 1, 1923, contained a provision identical to the portion of Rule 1(1) of the current rules of this court quoted" supra. No provision equivalent to Rule-1(3) appeared in the former. It was not until February 28, 1931, when rules governing the then recently constituted Court of Customs and Patent Appeals-were promulgated, that Rule 1(3) appeared, in words identical to those now-used. This rule is a substantial duplicate of a similar rule (Rule XIX, par. 5) in. force at the time of the Drawbaugh case,, supra, in the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, the predecessor of this-court in patent jurisdiction. The only significant change made by this court in adopting this rule was that, while the-rule as it existed in the Court of Appeals applied exclusively to patent appeals, the rule of this court applies to both customs and patent appeals.

In the Drawbaugh case, the Court of Appeals denied a motion, filed by the appellant therein before decision on the merits of the case (as in the instant case), requesting that the files in the appeal be preserved in secrecy and. that the-clerk be directed not to permit the files or any part thereof to be inspected or copied.

The court stated in part as follows i “The transcript is brought here to obtain a review of a judgment already rendered by a public tribunal, and the transcript of the record of appeal and the papers and documents pertaining thereto, upon being filed with the clerk, become public judicial records of this court and must be so-treated.
«* * * * *
“Such claims of right [to inspect, and make copies] and contests over them are not the ordinary incidents- *958 of judicial proceeding, and any attempt to maintain secrecy over the records of the court would seem to be inconsistent with the common understanding of what belongs to a public court of record, to which, all persons have the right of access, and to its records, according to long-established usage and practice.” (Emphasis added.)

It will be noted that, while the question of whether or not it was necessary that the party seeking access to the court records have a direct or substantial interest in the records was not at issue in the case, the court used language indicating the negative of this question. The court was clearly of the opinion that all persons, regardless of a showing of special interest, had access thereto. The fact that the italicized portion of its opinion so closely resembles the wording of a case cited by the court (Brewer v. Watson, 1881, 71 Ala. 299, in which it was stated that no interest need be shown where it is desired to obtain access to judicial records) is confirmatory of this conclusion. The reasoning of the Drawbaugh case was subsequently adopted in the Sackett case, supra, decided by this court on a set of facts similar to those in the Drawbaugh case except that the motion to seal the record was made after the court’s decision on the merits had been rendered.

In the Sackett case, this court stated [136 F.2d 249]:

“Distinction has long been made between the requirements of secrecy relating to judicial records and those which are merely official records. Distinction has also been made in some cases between the right to inspect judicial records before trial and the right to inspect the record of the court after trial. We know of no authority which would warrant a court such as this one in making an order denying public inspection of its records in a case like the one at bar.” (Emphasis added.)

While the language quoted above is not as broad as that used in the Drawbaugh case, it certainly is inconsistent with a narrow interpretation of the words “any applicant.”

Thus in two cases, one decided by this court and the other by the predecessor of this court in patent jurisdiction, in each of which a substantially identical rule was involved, the courts ascribed a broad meaning to the phrase “any applicant.”

Such an interpretation is consistent with what we feel to be the majority and better rule at common law in regard to judicial records. In Excise Commission of Citronelle v. State ex rel. Skinner, 179 Ala. 654, 60 So.

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248 F.2d 956, 45 C.C.P.A. 701, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 140, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-motion-of-ellsworth-h-mosher-ccpa-1957.