Miller v. Hayman

46 F.2d 188, 18 C.C.P.A. 848
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1931
DocketPatent Appeal 2534
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 188 (Miller v. Hayman) 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
Miller v. Hayman, 46 F.2d 188, 18 C.C.P.A. 848 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

LENROOT, Associate Judge.

This appeal is taken from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office in an interference proceeding which affirmed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention to appellee.

The invention involved is an interlocking seam for stovepipes. The issue is in two counts, which read as follows:

“1. A lock of the character described comprising a tubular structure doubled upon itself to form three thicknesses of material, two of which are on the axis side of the tube, the innermost thickness of the doubled portion having a raw and a folded edge, a cut in said portion between said edges forming a raw locking edge, said tubular structure having a cooperating edge portion adapted to lie and bo enclosed between the doubled thicknesses so that the innermost thicknesses of the doubled portion lies in the axis side of the cooperating edge portion, and an offset look in said edge portion projecting toward the tubular axis, said lock engaging the raw locking edge and preventing separation of the parts.
“2. A lock of the character described comprising a closed sheet metal structure, one edge portion of said sheet being doubled back and forth on itself to form three thicknesses of material, two of which are on the inside of the structure, a lock between the edges of the innermost fold, said structure having a cooperating edge portion adapted to lie and be enclosed between the doubled thicknesses, a lock in the cooperating edge portion projecting toward the inside of the structure, said lock being adapted to engage the first mentioned lock to prevent separation of the structure edge portions.”

Appellee, the senior party, filed his application on February 15, 1927. Appellee took no testimony, but it was stipulated by the parties that, for the purposes of this interference, in deciding priority of invention, the Examiner of Interferences might accept as proven the dates set up in appellee’s preliminary statement. By reference to said preliminary statement, therefore, appellee was entitled to conception as of March 1, 1926, and reduction to practice as o'f July 1, 1926, and said dates were accorded to him by the Examiner and by the Board of Appeals.

Appellant filed his application on April 5, 1927, and introduced testimony in his behalf.

The Examiner of Interferences found that appellant was the first to conceive the invention in issue, and also that he had reduced it to practice prior to the entry of appellee into the field; ho further held that appellant had suppressed and concealed the invention and was finally spurred into activity upon acquiring knowledge of the activity of *190 appellee. He thereupon awarded priority of invention to appellee on the authority of Mason v. Hepburn, 13 App. D. C. 86. He further held that, if the tests made by appellant should be regarded as an abandoned experiment, rather than as a reduction to practice, then appellant had not shown such diligence during the critical period as to entitle him to priority.

Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals, the decision of the Examiner was affirmed, the Board affirming the finding of the Examiner that the case came within the doctrine of Mason v. Hepburn, supra.

Thus both the Examiner and the Board concurred in finding that, although appellant had been first to eoneeive and first to reduce to practice, his conduct with respect to the invention from the time of his reduction to practice until after appellee had entered the field precluded him from being awarded priority. We believe that the findings of the Patent Office tribunals with respect to prior reduction to practice by appellant are justified by the record. Therefore, there is left for consideration the question of the conduct of appellant subsequent to his reduction to practice, and the effect of such conduct on his right to an award of priority of invention.

It is established by the record that appellant conceived and reduced to practice the invention in issue prior to the year 1914. Appellant testified that this occurred in May, 1913, but the earliest corroborating testimony of invention and reduction to practice fixes the time as “prior to 1914.”

It appears that appellant was, at the time of his conception of the invention and its reduction to practice, in the employ of the Ohio Stovepipe & Manufacturing Company of New Philadelphia, Ohio; that his brother-in-law, one R. A. Metzger, was the general manager of said company; said Metzger died in 1924, prior to the filing of the applications of the parties in this interference. Appellant testified that he turned his invention over to said Metzger and told him that whatever he did with the pipe he would share in it, and that if there was any expense connected with the pipe, he (appellant) would pay his share of it. Appellant also testified as follows:

“Q. State whether or not you or Mr. Ralph A. Metzger, with your knowledge and consent, did anything to protect this invention of yours prior to the,time you instituted the present patent application. A. I talked it over with Mr. Metzger at the time that the joint of pipe was made and Mr. Metzger showed me a copy of the Rules of Practice in the Patent Office, in which there was what was called a caveat mentioned. He told me to read that over. He said, “That is what we ought to do with this,” and I told him to go ahead and do whatever he thought best, and ,1 was of the impression that Mr. Metzger had filed this caveat at that time.
“Q. State whether or not you were also under the impression that he had been keeping the so-called caveat alive since that time. A. I was of the impression that he did.”

The witness produced a copy of the Rules of Practice referred to, and it was received in evidence. It is dated December 1, 1879, thirty-four years before the date of his invention.

It appears that in the latter part of 1914 the Ohio Stovepipe & Manufacturing Company sold out its business to the Reeves Manufacturing Company, and that appellant and his said brother-in-law Metzger thereupon went into the employ of said last-named company, said Metzger remaining with said company practically continuously to the time of his death in 1924; appellant remained in the employ of said company until about 1917, when he left, returning to its employ six years later, and then remained continuously in its employ to the time of taking the testimony in this proceeding.

There is no testimony that appellant, prior to the spring of 1927, ever personally disclosed his invention to more than two persons, said Metzger and one Snyder, both fellow employees with appellant of the Ohio Stovepipe & Manufacturing Company, and both of whom died before the testimony in this case was taken. The fact that appellant thought a caveat had been filed in the Patent Office, together with his positive testimony when, asked if he had any reasons for not showing it to anyone else, he replied: “Yes, I didn’t care to disclose it to just anyone at that time,” tends to show that it was appellant's intention to withhold his invention from the public until he secured a patent upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
46 F.2d 188, 18 C.C.P.A. 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-hayman-ccpa-1931.