John J. Goodrich v. Arnold C. Harmsen and Burke P. Lokey, Burke P. Lokey v. Arnold C. Harmsen and John J. Goodrich

442 F.2d 377, 58 C.C.P.A. 1144
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1971
DocketPatent Appeal 8463, 8464
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 442 F.2d 377 (John J. Goodrich v. Arnold C. Harmsen and Burke P. Lokey, Burke P. Lokey v. Arnold C. Harmsen and John J. Goodrich) 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
John J. Goodrich v. Arnold C. Harmsen and Burke P. Lokey, Burke P. Lokey v. Arnold C. Harmsen and John J. Goodrich, 442 F.2d 377, 58 C.C.P.A. 1144 (ccpa 1971).

Opinions

RICH, Judge.

These appeals are from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences in a three-party interference involving only pending applications in which priority was awarded to Harmsen,1 the junior-most party, as against Lokey,2 the intermediate party, and Goodrich,3 the senior party. We reverse and find that Lokey is entitled to priority on the present record.

THE INVENTION

The subject of the interference is a multi-ply, gusseted, stepped-end, pinch-bottom paper bag. Fig. 20 of Goodrich’s application is reproduced below. In this

figure, the plies as well as the gussets and front and back surfaces of the bags are horizontally (i. e., from bottom to top in Fig. 20) stepped, a feature not [379]*379recited by the counts.4 As far as stepping in what we have termed the horizontal direction is concerned, the counts require only that the front wall, the front part of the gussets, the back part of the gussets, and the back wall be stepped. However, it should be noted that the fold line 102 (center front of Fig. 20) is below the top of the front surface as permitted by count 2,5 whereas count 1 calls for “the axis of closure of the end * * * [to be] substantially coincident with the upper edge of the front wall * *

THE DECISIONS BELOW

In its initial decision, the board held that Harmsen had conceived and reduced to practice in 1957, that Lokey had conceived in 1960 and reduced to practice in 1961, and that Goodrich, who took no testimony, was restricted to his 1962 filing date. On reconsideration, the board held that Harmsen had not “abandoned, concealed or suppressed” his invention within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 102(g), as contended by both Goodrich and Lokey, and reaffirmed its holding that both Harmsen and Lokey had reduced the invention to practice prior to Goodrich’s filing date, rejecting an argument made by Goodrich which in substance was that “proof of commercial utility should be a requirement for a reduction to practice,” to quote the board.

OPINION

Although the parties have argued a number of other issues, our determination of priority requires us to consider only (I) Harmsen’s conception, (II) the contention that Lokey did not conceive the invention but derived it from Harm-sen, and (III) Lokey’s reduction to practice. Accordingly, we will discuss only those issues and in that order.

I. Harmsen’s Conception

At the time when Harmsen asserts he conceived and reduced to practice the invention in issue, he was manager of a multi-ply bag manufacturing plant located in Mobile, Alabama, and owned by Arkell & Smiths, a manufacturer of paper products with its principal office in Canajoharie, New York. He was and always had been employed in production rather than in research, and his professional education consisted of three years of study in civil engineering at Purdue University. His own testimony and that of his witnesses indicate the limited facilities for product development with which he had to work in Mobile. Nevertheless, the evidence does indicate that in February of 1957 Harmsen conceived some sort of stepped-end, open-mouthed bag and that he thought enough of his conception to prepare a notarized conception statement concerning it and to have made up and have sent to his superiors in Canajoharie a dozen or so bags embodying his idea, whatever it was. Additionally, a letter to Harmsen from the home office following receipt of the embodiments of his idea indicates that Harmsen’s superior was favorably impressed by the bags, although the letter included a suggestion for modification thereof “to prevent sifting out of the corner.” The superior considered Harm-sen’s idea to be novel although his letter states that Harmsen’s bags were “close in construction” to bags then being manufactured by the company at its Hudson Falls, N. Y„ plant.

Harmsen produced neither examples of the bags sent to Canajoharie nor of a later-made group of bags which the board found to have been the necessary reduction to practice of his conception. His contemporaneous physical evidence consists of the above-mentioned notarized conception statement, a copy of a [380]*380contemporaneous letter from Harmsen to his superior at Canajoharie, the above-mentioned letter from his superior about a month later acknowledging receipt of the bags, and three pages of a copy of a letter (the contents of which are unimportant aside from the date since it was used only for the paper) which had been cut and folded to resemble one end of a three-ply bag embodying the invention in issue (Exhibit 3).

In the notarized conception statement, Harmsen stated in relevant part that:

On the date of February 14, 1957, I received [Harmsen testified he meant “conceived”] an idea for the manufacture of a stepped end sewn open mouth bag, both flat tube and with a gusset. This bag incorporates the following features:
1. The ends of the bag are shingled in such a way that they can be folded over and either pasted or sewn through * * *.

Harmsen’s contemporaneous letter is similarly vague, stating only that he had had “a couple of ideas with regard to a stepped end sewn open mouth bag, both flat tube and gusset bag,” and the letter to Harmsen from his superior refers only to “the stepped-end bags which you submitted” without further description. This point is critical, for the evidence shows that stepped-end, open-mouth bags of various constructions, either pasted or pasted and sewn, were known in the industry well before the date of Harmsen’s alleged conception. Additionally, we note that in both Harmsen’s notarized conception statement and his letter to Cana-joharie he states that his idea is employable with either flat-tube or gusseted bags, which militates against the conclusion that he was writing about bags conforming to the counts in issue because stepped front and rear gussets set between stepped front and rear bag walls are essential limitations in the counts. Thus, Harmsen’s case really comes down to his Exhibit 3 letter-model and to his testimony and the testimony of his witnesses, taken more than nine years after the fact.

Harmsen’s Exhibit 3 is a crude but recognizable model of one end of a cut and folded bag blank embodying count 1. It consists of three pages of a copy of a letter to Harmsen dated January 23, 1957, and Harmsen testified that he had made it himself and used it

* * * to show my foreman and supervisors and especially the boy who was going to make up the sample bags how he wanted the bags made.

Both the foreman who made up the samples for Harmsen and the assistant superintendent of the plant, to whom Harmsen showed the model from which the sample bags were made, testifying in 1966, identified Exhibit 3 as the model they had seen in February or March of 1957. Additionally, (1) the assistant superintendent, the man who had been vice president in charge of sales at Arkell & Smiths at the time Harmsen had submitted his sample bags,6 and the then-secretary to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
442 F.2d 377, 58 C.C.P.A. 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-j-goodrich-v-arnold-c-harmsen-and-burke-p-lokey-burke-p-lokey-v-ccpa-1971.