Jungersen v. Cohen

129 F.2d 714, 29 C.C.P.A. 1188, 54 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 308, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 29, 1942
DocketNo. 4625
StatusPublished

This text of 129 F.2d 714 (Jungersen v. Cohen) 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
Jungersen v. Cohen, 129 F.2d 714, 29 C.C.P.A. 1188, 54 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 308, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 90 (ccpa 1942).

Opinion

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the United States Patent Office awarding priority of invention of the subject matter defined in the counts in issue, Nos. 1 to 5, inclusive, to appellees Cohen and Evans.

The invention relates to the casting of articles of jewelry, and particularly to a process of producing molds in sections — plural part molds — within which a pattern of an article of jewelry may be cast, as more fully set forth in the counts in issue of which count 1 is sufficiently illustrative. It reads:

1. A process of the character described consisting in placing a model of the ultimate article to he cast between mold easing sections having registering depressions forming a space surrounding said model, blocking out all of said space with a plastic material, except that portion of the space which is adjacent a portion of the model for which a mold section is to be made, and then pouring [1189]*1189a casting material into said- portion of said space to form a mold section for said portion of the model, then while leaving the model and mold section already cast in place, removing an adjacent portion of the blocking- out material to expose a different portion of the model and pouring the casting material into the space formed by removing the blocking out material to form a separate mold section for said last portion of the model contiguous to the first mold section. [Italics ours.]

Tlie interference is between appellant’s application No. 284,985, filed July 17,1939, and appellees’ patent No. 2,078,562, issued April 27, 1937, on an application, No. 115,964, filed December 15,1936. Appellant’s involved application is a division of an earlier application, No. 139,629, filed April 28, 1937, which matured into patent No. 2,201,131, May 14, 1940.

The counts originated in appellees’ patent.

Appellant is the junior party and, as his application No. 139,629, of which his involved application is a division, was filed subsequent (one day) to the issuance of appellees’ patent, the burden was upon appellant to establish priority of invention beyond a reasonable doubt, not by a preponderance of the evidence as held by the board.

Appellees submitted no evidence, and are, therefore, restricted to their filing- date — December 15, 1936 — for conception and constructive reduction to practice.

Appellant.submitted evidence for the purpose of overcoming appel-lees’ filing date.

The primary issue, as presented here, relates to the italicized portions of the quoted count, which cover the first and third steps of the. process defined therein.

The board held that appellant had failed to establish conception of the invention prior to appellees’ filing date, and, accordingly, awarded priority of invention to appellees. In so holding, the board discussed appellant’s physical exhibits Nos. 2, 8, 10, 21, 37, 38, and 39, his documentary exhibit No. 35, and the evidence relating to such exhibits, it apparently having been contended by counsel for appellant that each of such physical exhibits had been successfully operated prior to ap-pellees’ filing date and that by such operation appellant had successfully reduced the involved invention to practice.

Apellant’s exhibit No. 2 comprises a flat metal plate and two flat metal mold sections, each of the mold sections having an oblong opening or cut-out j>ortion extending completely therethrough.

Relative to that exhibit, the board held that the testimony of appellant’s witnesses John Horvath (production manager and foreman of the casting department of one Sigmund Cohn, apparently a manufacturer of jewelry in New York City) and David J. Kaplan (“production man in the factory” of Morris Kaplan & Sons of New York City, manufacturers of jewelry), and the stipulated testimony of Sid[1190]*1190ney Cohn (apparently associated with Sigmund Cohn) established that exhibit Ño. 2 had been successfully operated in this country by appellant at least as early as February 1936, and stated that in the process of operating that device, rubber mold sections were produced and used to “cast wax patterns which were then embedded in investment material to form investment molds for casting the final product.” The board described the process as detailed in the testimony of the witness Kaplan as follows:

* * * it appears that one of the apertured metal frames of apparatus like exhibit 2 was placed on the flat metal plate and plaster of paris was poured into the hole in the frame and leveled off. A model of the article ultimately to be produced was partially embedded in the plaster of paris and a sprue former was also partially embedded adjacent thereto to form a channel leading to one edge of the frame. After the plaster of paris had set and hardened the second frame was fastened on top of the first and a sheet of rubber was laid within the second frame and over the entire area of the plaster of paris. Heat and pressure were applied to melt the rubber and cause it to flow into all the irregularities of the model and generally conform to the exposed surfaces of the model, the sprue former, and the plaster of paris. The rubber was cooled and thoroughly solidified by immersing the assembly in water. The assembly was then inverted, and the flat plate and the first frame were removed. After removing all of the plaster of paris, the first frame was replaced and a second sheet of rubber was placed over the half exposed model and spruce former within the hole in the first frame. Heat and pressure were applied as before to form a second separable rubber mold section. The two rubber mold sections were then taken from the frames, separated to remove the model and the sprue former, and used to cast a wax duplicate of the original model. The wax casting was then used to form an investment mold for easting the finished article.

The board then called attention to the fact that the first step in the process defined by each of the involved counts consists in “placing a model of the ultimate article to be cast between mold casing sections having registering degressions forming a space surrounding said model” [italics quoted from the board’s decision], and held that as the mold casings or frames in appellant’s exhibit No. 2 had registering openings or cut-out portions extending completely therethrough, it could not be said that the casing sections of that exhibit had registering depressions between which a model of the ultimate article to be cast could be placed, and that, therefore, the operation of exhibit No. 2, in the manner set forth in the quoted-excerpt from the board’s, decision, did not conform to the first step in the process set forth in each of the involved counts.

In so holding, the board stated that the mold casing sections disclosed in appellees’ patent were materially different from the mold casing-sections or frames of appellant’s exhibit No. 2, and that appellees’ casings, as disclosed in their patent, were very similar to appellant’s exhibit No. 8, in which two metal mold casings are provided with “hollowed out portions” and in which “the model is practically com-[1191]*1191jfietely enveloped by the two casing sections, the depressions [hollowed out portions] of which respectively form bounding walls of solid metal.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 F.2d 714, 29 C.C.P.A. 1188, 54 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 308, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jungersen-v-cohen-ccpa-1942.