Potts v. Coe

140 F.2d 470, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 297, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 226, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3969
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 1944
Docket8189
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 140 F.2d 470 (Potts v. Coe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Coe, 140 F.2d 470, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 297, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 226, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3969 (D.C. Cir. 1944).

Opinion

ARNOLD and MILLER, Associate Justices.

This is a suit (under R.S. § 4915, 35 U.S.C.A. § 63) to obtain a patent. The invention claimed is an automatic stock quotation board for use in stock brokers’ offices. It is operated from a central station and is capable of giving nationwide service. It is a substitute for the older type of board on which quotations are written by hand.

The board can be operated over a single wire, using the equal length electrical impulses which are familiar in telegraphy. Its novelty consists of elaborate mechanisms for selecting these impulses so that they will produce the proper letters and figures on the board. It is the first automatic stock market board which has had any commercial success. Patents were granted on some of the claims made in the application. These are not before us. The rejected claims which are in issue in this case attempt to cover a communications system which uses single impulse signals to display letters and figures on the board.

Applicants in their brief set out two claims which they rely on as typical and show the novel features by italics:

“147. A communication system comprising a transmitting station, a receiving station, and a single channel of communication between said stations, means at said transmitting station for sending isochronous messages made up of equal length impulse intervals, certain of said intervals predetermined for primary selection, certain others for secondary selection, and certain others for ultimate operation, a plurality of groups of indicators at said receiving station representing a number of groups of stock classifications, means responsive to the first mentioned of said impulse intervals for selecting one group of the plurality of groups of indicators, means responsive to the second mentioned of said intervals for selecting one of the indicators of the selected group, and mechanism responsive to the last mentioned of said intervals of impulses for operating the selected indicator.

“172. In a stock quotation distribution system, a plurality of character carrying devices for each stock item whose quotation is to be displayed with certain devices allocated to range classifications of the quotation, means responsive to a quotation message comprising groups of equal length code combinations of signal intervals, one group of which conveys information relative to the stock item to be qiwted, another group of which conveys information relative to the price thereof, and a further group of which conveys information relative to the range or character of the item, means operated by said responsive means for translating said first and third recited groups into selective conditions for selecting a character carrying device for operation, and means for translating said second group into mechanical operations for actuating the selected character carrying device.”

In rejecting appellants’ claims the Patent Office held that they represented simply a combination of ideas disclosed in former patents. It found that the improvements which had been added to make the design commercially profitable required a high degree of skill in the art of communications, but not invention. The findings of the District Court are in agreement with those of the Patent Office.

This Court has held that where a trial court finds lack of invention, thereby sustaining the decision of the Patent Office, that finding will not be disturbed unless actually inconsistent with the evidence. Therefore, the only question before us is whether the evidence here is sufficient to rebut the strong presumption in favor of the Patent Office and the trial court. The record shows that the appellant Potts, who claims to be the inventor, is an employee of the Teletype Corporation and has assigned his patent rights to that corporation. Public records disclose that the Teletype Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of West *472 ern Electric. Western Electric, in turn, is a manufacturing subsidiary owned and controlled by the American Telephone & Telegraph Company. Since 1920 the appellant has been a member of the research staff of a subsidiary of the Bell System.

The organization, activities, and control of the Bell System are matters of public record. 1 It is an interlocking group of companies, controlled by the American Telephone & Telegraph Company. Through its subsidiaries it controls between eighty and ninety per cent of local telephone service and ninety-eight per cent of the long distance telephone, wires of the United States. It furnishes nearly all the wire facilities used in radio program transmission. Through its patents on teletypewriter machines, it dominates a service which to a large extent has supplanted ordinary telegraph service. News telephoto service is dependent on Bell plants. Telephone service across the ocean is a monopoly with the Bell System.

The dominance of the Bell System extends beyond the regulated field of communications. Through its subsidiaries it manufactures more than ninety per cent of the telephone equipment in the United States. It owns and controls a large number of patents not only for instruments used in communications but also in the electrical arts, including radio transmitting and receiving equipment, therapeutic devices, audiphones, public address equipment for outdoor and indoor use, photoelectric cells and race timing equipment. In many of these products the Bell System has a dominating position and sometimes a controlling position by virtue of the control or exclusive licensing of patents.

This position both in and outside the communications field has been maintained in part through the expenditure of vast sums on engineering research. $242,541,-569 was spent for these purposes between 1916 and 1935, which is probably more than the total budget of any university in the United States during this period. Electronic physics, chemistry, applied mathematics, optical phenomena and other fields of inquiry are under constant study.

All patents on devices discovered in its laboratories are assigned to some unit of the Bell System. Thus in large part through its research facilities the Bell System has come to own or control over 9,000 United States patents. It is licensed under nearly 7,000 more. In these research laboratories about 4500 people are employed, half of whom are engineers, chemists, metallurgists and physicists. They represent nearly all the best talent in the field. In addition to research in laboratories the Bell System has made arrangements with other groups for mutually exclusive exchange of information which is available to no independent inventor.

In determining whether an invention 2 has been made the character of the article or process, its novelty, and its advance over the prior art are merely evidentiary. The ultimate question is the character of the contribution made by the inventor. There is no invention without inventive genius. The objective advance does not identify or evaluate the individual achievement. 3 The individual achievement is becoming more and more difficult to identify and evaluate as organized research becomes our greatest source of invention. And so the trend of recent decisions has *473

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Bluebook (online)
140 F.2d 470, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 297, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 226, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-coe-cadc-1944.