Northcutt v. Loesch

44 F.2d 859, 18 C.C.P.A. 706, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketNo. 2512
StatusPublished

This text of 44 F.2d 859 (Northcutt v. Loesch) 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
Northcutt v. Loesch, 44 F.2d 859, 18 C.C.P.A. 706, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 115 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an interference declared by the Patent Office between the applications of the appellant, Robert T. Northcutt, serial No. 61840, filed October 10, 1925, and the appellee, Hugo E. Loesch, serial No. 74626, filed December 10, 1925. The issue in the interference is contained in six counts, which are as follows:

1. A new article of manufacture consisting of a concentrated syrup carrying pectin in suspension, but not in solution therein.
2. A new article of manufacture consisting of a concentrated syrup carrying pectin in suspension, and winch, by the addition of water and a further amount of carbohydrate will cause the pectin to go into solution and form a jelled mass.
3. A new article of manufacture consisting of a concentrated fruit syrup carrying pectin in suspension, but not in solution therein.
4. As a new article of manufacture, a concentrated fruit syrup carrying sugar and an acid and pectin, the relation between the sugar, the acid and the pectin being such that the pectin introduced is in suspension but not in Solution.
5. The method of forming a concentrated fruit syrup containing pectin in suspension which consists in forming a. concentrated fruit syrup, determining [707]*707the percentage of the carbohydrate carried by the syrup and the percentage of acidity then regulating the amount of the carbohydrate and acidity until a point is reached where the pectin introduced is in suspension, but not in solution.
6. The method of forming a concentrated fruit syrup carrying pectin in suspension, which consists in first concentrating a fruit to a syrup, then introducing an acid in such amount that the relation between the carbohydrate present and the acid added shall be such that the subsequently added pectin is in suspension, but not in solution.

Testimony was taken by both parties to the record, and thereafter the acting examiner of interferences rendered a carefully prepared decision awarding priority to Loesch on counts 1 and 2 of the interference, and to Northcutt on counts 3, 4, 5, and 6 thereof.

The acting examiner based his decision upon his findings that the appellee had shown by his testimony that he had conceived the subject matter of counts 1 and 2 as early as November, 1922, and that he had reduced the same to practice in the early summer of 1925. He further found that there was no evidence in the record to show that either party had conceived or practiced the invention as shown in counts 3, 4,, 5, and 6 of the interference, prior to their respective filing dates, and that, therefore, Northcutt, being the senior party, was entitled to priority on counts 3, 4, 5, and 6.

This decision wras sustained by the Board of Appeals. Both tribunals found that while Loesch had demonstrated that he had conceived and reduced to practice the invention of a concentrated sirup carrying pectin in suspension but not in solution, as stated in the first and second counts, neither party had shown any conception and reduction to practice, prior to their filing dates, of a concentrated fruit sirup carrying pectin in suspension but not in solution therein.

Northcutt has appealed to this court, and contends that priority should also be awarded to him on the record as to counts 1 and 2. A brief examination of the record testimony is necessary in order to determine whether he is, in fact, .entitled to such priority.

• Northcutt supported the issues in his behalf by his' own testimony and by the testimony of three witnesses. From Northcutt’s testimony it appears that he has been worldng on the extraction of pectin since December, 1907; that in 1918 he made his first experiment with the view of furnishing a commercial article consisting of a crystal-lizable sugar in solution,- with or without fruit sirup in which powdered pectin was suspended but not in solution. During the year 1918 he talked this matter over with the witnéss, Reilly, but was unable to obtain sugar and hence did nothing more at it.

In 1923 or 1924 he organized a company known as the Calvin-Thomas Co., together with .Mr. Reilly, .and so,on thereafter they began to market a product known as’pectin concentrate, which, he [708]*708states, bad powdered pectin in suspension in water and crystallizable sugar in the presence of an acid. This concentrate, he claims, held the pectin in suspension and not in solution. The company’s designation was changed from time to time, and thereafter the services of the Dubelle Grape Co. in Silver Creek, N. Y., were utilized and this company made for the appellant and his associates on his formula several hundred cases of a pectin concentrate.' North-cutt states that in November, 1923, his company, the Citrus Fruit Products Co., put out to the public a concentrate known as “ Mission Grape.” He claims this concentrate was composed of grape juice to which was added sugar, and which had sufficient powdered pectin in suspension to cause the mass to jelly when'diluted with three parts of water and heated and combined with a sufficient amount of sugar. The name of the product was afterwards changed to “ Minute Maid,” which name was registered as a trade-mark.

The witness Julian S. Cohen testified that sometime after the 1st of September, 1923, he talked with Northcutt and was informed by him that Northcutt desired to purchase pectin, but that he wanted it in solution. About November 6, 1923, Northcutt disclosed to the witness, as he states, “ that the acidity of the solution was so high and the sugar content so high that it was not possible to get sufficient pectin in solution to get that pectin to make a jelly, and that it was only on dilution that the sugar and the acid were reduced sufficiently to allow the pectin to go into the solution. That was the real basis of their whole invention and, as I thought at that time, they had a patent application on.”

He further stated that he sold considerable quantities of raw pectin to Northcutt and Reilly during his association with them, which pectin was in a powdered form. It also appears from Cohen’s testimony that Northcutt and Reilly were engaged in selling grape juice blended in imitation of certain wines and which was called “ fruit concentrate,” and which was used for the purpose of making wine. These concentrates, however, according to the witness, had no added pectin.

The witness John C. Reilly, testifying for Northcutt, stated, in substance, that he had been associated with Northcutt-in business for nine years, and in 1918 made a working arrangement with him regarding the development of a soft drink which was thereafter put on the market by them. He states that Northcutt talked to him in 1918 about putting a jelly-juice concentrate on the market. This was explained to be concentrated fruit juices combined with pectin. In 1923 they were attempting to interest others in the sale of a jelly-juice concentrate, and were inquiring in various localities for pectin in either powdered or liquid form. They also, thereafter, bought pectin in a powdered form from the witness Cohen.

[709]*709August H. DuRocher was also called as a witness by Northcutt. The .witness was a salesman and had acted in that capacity for North-cutt’s companies. He states that he had sold

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Bluebook (online)
44 F.2d 859, 18 C.C.P.A. 706, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northcutt-v-loesch-ccpa-1930.