MacLaren v. Stoetzel

38 F.2d 125, 17 C.C.P.A. 857, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 204
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 1930
DocketNo. 2204
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 F.2d 125 (MacLaren v. Stoetzel) 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
MacLaren v. Stoetzel, 38 F.2d 125, 17 C.C.P.A. 857, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 204 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

Lenkoot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Pat-, ents in an interference proceeding. The invention in issue relates to automatic air control valves for use in pneumatic tube dispatch systems, such as are employed in department stores for dispatching cash slips, change, etc.

There are 11 counts comprising the issue. Count 1 is representative and reads as follows:

Pneumatic dispatch apparatus comprising a conduit and an exhauster connected therewith, a controlling valve located in the conduit, a minimum flow of air through the conduit being permitted when the valve is in closed position, a pneumatic exposed at one side to the pressure obtaining in the conduit and permanently exposed at the opposite side to atmospheric pressure, said pneumatic being adapted to open the air controlling valve when the pressure within the conduit is reduced due to the checking of said minimum flow by introducing a carrier into the conduit, and means responsive to increased flow of air-through the conduit such as occurs when the carrier is discharge,d for equalizv ing the pressure upon opposite sides of the pneumatic to permit the valve t» close.

All of the tribunals of the Patent Office, the examiner of interferences, the examiners in chief and the Commissioner of Patents,, united in awarding priority to Stoetzel, the appellee herein.

[858]*858The facts in the case relevant to the question- before us are as follows:

Appellant is an employee of the Lamson Co., his assignee, and appellee is an employee of the G. & G. Atlas Systems (Inc.), his assignee. Both assignees are manufacturers of pneumatic dispatch tube apparatus, and are actively in competition with each other.

The interference is between the issued patent of James G. Mac-Liaren, the appellant, granted May 19, 1925, on an application filed January 28, 1925, and a pending application of Joseph J. Stoetzel, the appellee, filed October 17, 1925.

The interference was originally declared September 4, 1925, between appellant’s patent and an application of one Edmund Weigele, an officer of the Atlas Co., filed December 9, 1924, who had assigned his rights to said company. The Weigele application, it is conceded, covered the subject matter of the invention here involved. A patent having issued to appellant while the Weigele application was pending, such issue was inadvertent. Appellant, being the first to file, is the senior partju Appellee, having filed after the declaration of the interference between appellant and Weigele, he was on November 20, 1925, added to the interference. Weigele conceded priority to appellee, whereupon said Weigele was eliminated, and the interference proceeded between appellant and appellee.

All of the tribunals of the Patent Office have found that appellee conceived the invention and reduced the same to practice in 1921. We concur in that finding, and, he being the first to conceive and •the first to reduce to practice, is entitled to an award of priority, unless an equitable estoppel exists against, him to assert such priority, arising from the following facts, as shown bjr the record :

. In May or June, 1921, appellee in Brooklyn, N. Y., constructed and tested a device embracing the invention here involved. This particular form of device was never commercialized by appellee or his assignee, the Atlas Co. In July, 1922, appellee in Chicago completed a second embodiment of the invention and gave it to Weigele, who took it to his home in New Jersey and kept it there until some time in 1924. On Juty 17, 1922, appellee filed an application for which patent No. 1589998 was issued on June 22, 1926, which embraced the invention here involved except that it omitted a vane mechanism which is embraced in the counts here in issue, and because of such omission said counts do not read on the application upon which said patent was issued. Appellee gives the reason for such omission that such mechanism was old in the prior art, a patent upon the same being owned by his assignee, the Atlas Co.

In August, 1923, appellant independently conceived the invention .and in November of the same year reduced it to uractice. At that [859]*859time he -was vice president and general manager of the Standard Carrier Co. (Inc.), which manufactured and installed pneumatic tubes and carriers, being the same business as that of both assignees of the parties herein. In January, 1924, said Standard Carrier Co. manufactured 75 valves embodying appellant’s invention, 53 of which were installed in the store of Goddard Bros., of Lynn, Mass., 16 in the store of A. E. Trautman Co., Greensburg, Pa., and 3 in the Bridgeport Gas Light Co. building, Bridgeport, Conn.

In June or July, 1924, the Standard Carrier Co. went out of business and its patents, tools, and fixtures were acquired by the Lamson Co., appellant’s assignee. Said Standard Carrier Co. manufactured no more than the 75 devices above referred to, and the Lamson Co., assignee of appellant, has never manufactured or placed in commercial use any of the devices embodying the invention here involved.

In June, 1924, the Atlas Co., appellee’s assignee, installed the device embodying his invention in the Slattery store in Boston in place of devices which had been held in preceding litigation to infringe the Libby patent owned by the Lamson Co., appellant’s assignee. By January, 1926, more than 1,500 devices embodying appellee’s invention had been placed in commercial use by the- said Atlas Co. In July, 1924, said Atlas Co. sent to the attorneys of' said Lamson Co., at their request, a sample of appellee’s device which, had been placed in the Slattery store.

In the fall of 1924 the Lamson Co. brought contempt proceedings against the Atlas Co., contending that the device here involved was also an infringement of the Libby patent owned by it, but the court held-that there was no infringement. Lamson Company v. Slattery Company et al., 2 Fed. Rep. (2d) 1017.

In August, 1924, appellant entered (he employ of his assignee, the Lamson Co., and soon thereafter called to the attention of its management his device, for which application for patent was filed on January 28, 1925. On December 9, 1924, the Atlas Co. filed the application of Weigele, as hereinbefore stated. On May 19, 1925, patent to appellant was issued, but as Weigele’s application was then pending, such issue was inadvertent. On September 4, 1925, an interference was declared between appellant on his patent and Weigele. On October 27, 1925, appellee filed his application, copying claims of appellant’s patent, and asked that he be made a party to the interference between appellant and Weigele, which was granted on November 20, 1925. Thereafter, Weigele conceded priority to appellee and the interference proceeded between appellant and appellee.

It appears from the testimony that after appellee had conceived and tested his invention, his assignee, the Atlas Co., being charged by the Lamson Co. with infringement of its Libby patent, considered [860]*860the placing into commercial use of appellee’s device as a means of avoiding infringement of said Libby patent, but concluded that a device covered by another patent owned by it was preferable, and therefore appellee’s device was not utilized at that time. Upon marketing the device so chosen, the Lamson Co. served notice upon the Atlas Co.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F.2d 125, 17 C.C.P.A. 857, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclaren-v-stoetzel-ccpa-1930.