Landon v. Ginzton

214 F.2d 160, 41 C.C.P.A. 950, 102 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1954 CCPA LEXIS 146
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1954
DocketPatent Appeal 6006
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 214 F.2d 160 (Landon v. Ginzton) 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
Landon v. Ginzton, 214 F.2d 160, 41 C.C.P.A. 950, 102 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1954 CCPA LEXIS 146 (ccpa 1954).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Judge.

Landon, the junior party, has appealed here from the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the United States Patent Office awarding to appel-lees, Ginzton and Salisbury, the senior party, priority of the invention defined by the two counts in issue.

The interference involved appellees’ application No. 102,276, filed June 30, 1949, as a division of their parent application No. 474,016 previously filed January 29, 1943, which date stands in the interference as appellees’ date of record effective for conception and reduction to practice.

Appellees’ parent application matured into patent No. 2,503,256 and is not reproduced in the record.

Appellant Landon was involved in the interference on the basis of his application No. 512,149 filed November 29, 1943, which matured into his patent No. 2,243,-506, granted July 8, 1947. This patent embodied claims for “a new and useful Improvement in Wavemeter for Centimeter Waves,” and “more particularly to wavemeters for measuring centimeter waves in waveguide transmission systems.”

The subject matter of the counts originated as claims 1 and 2 of Landon’s patent. They were copied and asserted for purposes of interference as claims 1 and 2 in appellees’ divisional application hereinbefore described. Count 1 is representative and reads as follows:

“1. A microwave wavemeter for a waveguide.transmission system in-r eluding a cavity resonator comprising two hollow conductive elements disposed in adjustable telescopic relation, means for introducing microwave energy from said waveguide into said resonator, *161 means for adjusting said telescopic relation of said elements to establish standing microwaves in said resonator in response to said microwave energy, means including a concentric line loosely coupled to said resonator to induce in said line signal currents in response to said standing waves, a detector connected in said line to rectify said signal currents to provide signal demodulation currents, and indicator means coupled to said line and responsive to said demodulation currents for indicating resonance of said cavity resonator to said microwave energy.”

The real parties in interest are the Radio Corporation of America, assignee of appellant, and the Gyroscope Corporation, appellees’ assignee. Both parties took testimony, filed briefs, and appeared at the final hearing. The junior party was under the burden of proving priority through actual reduction to practice by a preponderance of the evidence, Pines v. McAllister, 188 F.2d 388, 38 C.C.P.A., Patents, 981, 983. On that point the board held appellant had not met his burden of proof.

The question here is whether certain described uses and tests which were made of and with appellant’s device pri- or to appellees’ date of record constituted an actual reduction to practice of the invention defined by the counts. That device was generally described by the board as “a wavemeter of the type employing a resonant cavity which is tunable by a relative movement of inter-fitting parts to adjust the physical dimensions of the cavity. Means is provided to electrically couple the interior of the cavity to a waveguide which may be carrying electric wave energy, and another means is provided to couple the interior of the cavity to a sensitive detector and indicator. The movable parts which determine the physical demensions of the cavity are provided with a graduated scale, or scales, and an index. For use, the device is compared with a primary frequency standard through the range of the scale to be used, and a graph or chart showing correspondence between the reading of the index and frequency is prepared.”

The board cited the patent to South-worth No. 2,106,771 from Landon’s file history for a disclosure that the use of an adjustable cylinder resonant cavity as a wavemeter was prior art of record. Southworfh’s invention “relates to the transmission of ultra-high frequency electromagnetic waves and more especially, but not exclusively, to methods and apparatus for the generation and utilization of high frequency electromagnetic waves in dielectric guides.”

Referring to the subject matter of the counts, to the drawings accompanying the patent to Southworth, and to the invention defined in his specification, appel-lees make these pertinent and emphasized statements which are supported by the disclosures of record:

“A generally similar prior cavity wavemeter [to that of Landon] had been provided with a disc piston with friction contact arrangements in the high-current region directly at its periphery. * * * The improvement over said prior microwave cavity wavemeter as defined in counts 1 and 2 related to special resonator configurations with hollow pistons for avoidance of direct friction contact in the high-current regions. This is the sole distinction of count 1 over Southworth. Count 2 further specifies the feature of the mating threads of the piston and outer body of the wavemeter, through which the micrometer-type adjustment action and vernier scale features are obtainable, for minute adjustments and precise readings of piston position. These improved wavemeters were to provide very high Q (for sharp, highpeaked tuning response) and reliable repeatability of their positions of resonance, with freedom from the erratic performance which results if there are spurious modes of response.
* * * * * * *162 “ * * * Count 1 of this ■ interference reads squarely on said Southworth wavemeter, element for element, except for the lack of the recited hollowness of the piston, Southworth’s piston 2 being a disc arranged for friction contact directly at the periphery of the disc face. The recited feature of Count 1 that both the cylinder and the piston be hollow — the sole distinction over Southworth — is the feature that relates the count back to the recitation of features in the Landon specification * * *. Note also the recitations of objects relating to Q and to freedom from undesired mode responses * * *. The stated objectives of Ginzton et al. are to like general effect.”

The board also described the chief differences between appellees’ device and that disclosed by appellant and, among other things, pointed out that in the combination defined by the specifications of the respective parties, the modes of connecting the waveguide and the detector to the resonating cavity are different in detail but perform the same function.

Appellant concurs in the following finding made by the board and relies thereon as the basic ground for the reversal of the involved decision:

“The applicant Landon was, at the time of the alleged inventive acts referred to in the testimony, employed by Radio Corporation of America in its research laboratory. He was working with several other engineers, two of whom testified as corroborating witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
214 F.2d 160, 41 C.C.P.A. 950, 102 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1954 CCPA LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landon-v-ginzton-ccpa-1954.