Mengue v. Fuerst

86 F.2d 436, 24 C.C.P.A. 741
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1936
DocketNo. 3702
StatusPublished

This text of 86 F.2d 436 (Mengue v. Fuerst) 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
Mengue v. Fuerst, 86 F.2d 436, 24 C.C.P.A. 741 (ccpa 1936).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

On April 6, 1933, the appellant filed an application for patent in the United States Patent Office on an alleged new, original, and ornamental design for a bottle. On April 10, 1933, the appellee, Edwin W. Fuerst, also filed in that office an application for a design for a bottle. While there are some slight differences, it is conceded by the parties that the designs are, for all practical purposes, identical. Thereupon an interference was declared in the office between said applications. The appellant, being the senior party, relied upon his application for proof of conception and reduction to practice. The appellee took testimony in order to attempt to establish a prima, facie case sufficient to overcome the seniority of the appellant’s application. The appellant took no testimony.

In his preliminary statement, the appellee alleged that he conceived the invention, the subject matter of the interference, on or about April 15, 1931, disclosed the same to others on April 18, 1931, and that the invention was reduced to practice on or about July 3, 1932, The Examiner of Interferences found that the appellee was the first to conceive and reduce to practice the design at issue, and awarded him priority. On appeal, the Board of Appeals affirmed this decision. The party Mengle has appealed.

The issue has been somewhat simplified by the concessions of the parties. The appellant admits that the design of the bottle, the subject matter of this interference, was conceived, reduced to prac-tise, and commercially produced prior to April 6, 1933, his filing-date. It is also conceded by the appellant that bottles embodying the design shown in the drawing of the appellee’s patent application, filed April 10, 1933, were commercially produced prior to apellant’s date of filing, and that the drawings for said bottle, and the various [743]*743models thereof, were all made prior to appellant’s filing date. It is also admited that these bottles were made by the Owens-Illinois Glass Company, of Toledo, Ohio, and sold to Wizard, .Inc., of Chicago, Illinois.

The single contention made by the appellant on this appeal is that the bottles in question, together with the working plans therefor, and models, were not the result of the activities of the appellee Fuerst; that the original conception of the party Fuerst, upon which he relies largely for a date of conception, is represented by what is known as Fuerst Exhibit No. 1-A, and that this is an entirely different design from the design which was used in the manufacture of the bottles which have been commercially produced and sold; that the record shows that Fuerst did not conceive the design which was finally used in production of said bottles, and which was embodied in the working drawing therefor, known as Fuerst Exhibit No. 25; that this design was not the conception of Fuerst, but of someone else in the employ of the Owens-Illinois Glass Company, presumably the draftsman, Harste, who made said working drawings.

Counsel for the appellant thus state the contentions made by them:

(1) Is appellee’s Exhibit 1-A, in view of the prior art, the same design as appears in his patent applications?
(2) If appellee’s Exhibit 1-A is a different design, did appellee or some other person create the design shown in appellee’s patent application Serial No. 47,744 involved in this interference?
(3) If some other person created the design shown in appellee’s patent application ■ Serial No. 47744 can appellee avail himself of this creation in establishing priority?

The facts shown by the record are, substantially, as follows:

The appellee was a designer in the employ of Owens-Illinois Glass Company, being first employed there in 1929. In April, 1931, Fuerst, who was then in the New Uses and Research, Art Division, of his company, received a request from the Sales Department of the company, made by LaPompadour Company, for a design for a new bottle. This request was received by Fuerst on April 6th, and on or about April 15th he produced a design which has been introduced in evidence herein, and a photostat of which is known as Exhibit 1-A. The office number of the design was D-740. This design was submitted to LaPompadour Company, and thereafter to five other prospective customers, but was not adopted by any of them. In 1932, Wizard, Inc., by correspondence, requested a design for a new type of bottle to be made up for it by the Owens-Illinois Glass Company. This request was turned over to David Y. Benner, of the Sales Division of the company, and by him was transmitted to Lorain A. Blake of the Production Planning Division, whose duty it was to order mold equipment and to follow up the making [744]*744of the samples, and to perform other similar duties. In transmitting this request to Blake, Benner directed Blake as follows: “L. A. Blake order wood mold Have Ed Howe see Fuerst for design DVB 6/29.”

Blake then directed Edward W. Howe, who was then employed in the Model Design Department, and had charge of making up. wooden models, to confer with the appellee about the design of this proposed bottle. The witness Howe testified that he then “contacted Ed. Fuerst and received instructions from him.” He states that he received verbal instructions as to the model shown on the photostat numbered D-I40, and was told by Fuerst to make up a model “coming as close as manufacturing conditions would permit,” to that particular sketch. Howe then delivered this sketch to another employee by the name of Adolph Harste, who made a working draAY-ing, which is in evidence as Fuerst Exhibit 25, and which shows the design which is the subject of the application for patent here. This drawing was made July 1, 1932, and thereafter a model Avas made from which a sample Avas produced, and which it is admitted embodied the subject matter of the controA*ersy here.

Harste testified that he Avas a draftsman for the Owens-Illinois Glass Company in 1931, and that it Avas his business, to make up drawings for wood models; that he made the drawing, a blueprint of which is knoAvn as Exhibit 25, on July 1, 1932. He stated that he had a photostat, Exhibit 1 — A, to work from, which he received from the witness Howe, and which he followed. The appellee stated that the witness Hoavs had talked to him about preparing a design for the Wizard bottle, and he had referred Mr. HoAve to sketch D-740. He also stated that he had seen blueprint, Exhibit .No. 25, and that he had approved the final model before it went out.

Tt appears that no one connected with the Owens-Illinois Glass Company, and with the production of this particular design for a bottle, makes any claim to authorship of the design, except Fuerst. The witness Benner, when asked who designed the bottle which is the subject of the controversy here, stated that the design was created by the appellee. A similar statement was made by the witness Blake. These witnesses were certainly in a position where the details of creation of this design were well known to them. All the circumstances surrounding the transaction lead to the conclusion that this was the general understanding throughout the plant at the time of the creation of this design, and at the time manufacture of the commercial bottles following this design was begun. Since that time large quantities of these particular bottles have been manufactured and sold.

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Bluebook (online)
86 F.2d 436, 24 C.C.P.A. 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mengue-v-fuerst-ccpa-1936.