Ranney v. Bridges

188 F.2d 588, 38 C.C.P.A. 1044
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1951
DocketPatent Appeals 5733
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 F.2d 588 (Ranney v. Bridges) 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
Ranney v. Bridges, 188 F.2d 588, 38 C.C.P.A. 1044 (ccpa 1951).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the United States Patent Office, awarding priority to the party Bridges, in an interference proceeding between patentees, involving three counts which relate to a fluorescent tube lighting system, as illustrated by count 1, which reads: “1. A fluorescent tube lighting system, comprising a high leakage reactance transformer having a primary winding and two secondary windings mounted on a common core, a fluorescent gas discharge tube connected in circuit with one of said secondary windings, a second fluorescent gas discharge tube connected in circuit with the other of said secondary-windings, shunt core means magnetically between the primary winding and one only of said secondary windings to limit the current in said winding, and a condenser in circuit with said other of said secondary windings and the tube connected thereto to limit the current in that winding to substantially that of the first-mentioned secondary winding.”

We take the following from the decision of the board: “This interference concerns a system of energizing two fluorescent discharge tubes by a transformer having one secondary winding for each tube; one secondary circuit controlled by a magnetic shunt in the transformer and the other secondary closely coupled to the primary and having the current limited in its circuit to substantially that in the other secondary winding by a condenser in series with the secondary winding and tube. The condenser thereby serves the dual purpose of current regulator and power factor corrector.”

The following explanatory matter is taken from the brief on behalf of Bridges: “The essential elements of the system and apparatus here involved, as noted in the count cited, comprises ‘a high leakage reactance transformer having a primary winding and two secondary windings mounted on a common core’. Also, ‘a fluorescent gas discharge tube connected in circuit with one of said secondary windings’. Additionally, ‘a second fluorescent gas discharge tube connected in circuit with the other of said secondary windings’. Moreover, it comprises ‘shunt core means magnetically between the primary and one only of said secondary windings’. And finally, ‘a condenser in circuit with said other of said secondary windings * * * to limit the current in that winding to substantially that of the first-mentioned secondary winding’.”

On August 1, 1944, a patent, No. 2,354,-879, was issued to the party Ranney upon an application filed March 20, 1942, and on March 6, 1945, another, No. 2,370,635, was issued to the party Bridges upon an application filed June 25, 1942.

On June 22, 1945, a few days more than three months after the patent to Bridges issued, Ranney filed application, serial No. 600,893, for the reissue of his patent 2,354,-879, copying into it three claims, which became the counts at issue.

The record discloses that appellant Ranney copied some claims from the Bridges patent which was assigned to Boucher Inventions, Limited, and some from a patent granted to C. P. Boucher and F. A. Kuhl (hereinafter referred to as the Boucher-Kuhl patent) March 6, 1945, on an application filed October 21, 1941, which also was assigned to Boucher Inventions, Limited. Two interferences were declared — one, No. 82.182, between Bridges and Ranney, and the other, No. 82,183, between Boucher-Kuhl and Ranney. Motions to dissolve were made on behalf of Bridges and on behalf of Boucher-Kuhl as a result of the decision of which only three counts were set up and there being a common assignee of the Bridges and Boucher-Kuhl patents, Patent Office Rule 78 (old Rule 43), 35 U.S. C.A.Appendix, was applied, and all three counts are included in Interference No. 82.182. The situation so described is al *590 hided to in the decision of the board. No question of Bridges’ right to make the counts was raised before the board, nor was any question raised as to the applicability of Patent Office Rule 78, and we have no issue concerning those questions before us.

Since the original applications oí the respective parties were copending, two patents for substantially the same subject matter were inadvertently issued, and the junior party, Bridges, has the burden of establishing his case 'by a preponderance of the evidence.

Priority in fact, with no ancillary questions, is the sole ultimate issue before us.

The board awarded Bridges actual reduction to practice as of May 22, 1941, which was prior to Ranney’s entry into the field.

It may be said that the patent to Bridges stands assigned to Boucher Inventions, Limited, a patent-holding corporation of Delaware, which was closely connected with National Inventions Corporation, another patent-holding corporation of Delaware. Both were intimately associated with National Transformer Corporation, a manufacturing corporation of Delaware, which apparently succeeded a similarly named corporation of New Jersey.

One of the witnesses called on behalf, of Bridges, Lovell G. Mickles (age not stated), a resident of Montreal, Canada, at the time of testifying, seems to have been President and General Manager of all three corporations. The board stated in its decision, “Boucher and National were closely connected, and for the purpose of this case it is not necessary to make a distinction.” This statement, is quite correct and we have mentioned the organizations merely to furnish a background relative to the relationship of the witnesses for Bridges to the real party in interest — National Transformer Corporation, which hereinafter is referred to usually as National.

Bridges himself (age 50 at the time he testified) is described by Noble as a sales engineer for National. He, as found by the board, “was interested in having National produce a transformer that could be sold to fixture manufacturers for use in fixtures for hot cathode lamps.”

In addition to the testimony of Bridges and Mickles there was taken the testimony of (ages of witnesses stated as of time the testimony was taken) Bertrand H. H. Noble (age 58); Russell W. Keiser (age 44); William H. Skeels (age 48) ; Frederick A. Kuhl (age 32); and, as a rebuttal witness, William K. Feiler (age 43). All the witnesses, except Feiler, testified in May 1947. His testimony in rebuttal was given September 29, 1947.

It appears that a Mr. C. P. Boucher of Boucher Inventions, Limited, often referred to in the record in connection with the Bridges development and other activities, who was himself an inventor and who was employed by National as its Chief Engineer for many years, died about a year before the taking of testimony in the case began in May 1947, and his testimony was not taken.

Noble, who was the Vice President of the National Transformer Corporation, testified that his duties “included everything, with the exception of inventing.” “More specifically,” he said, “I had complete charge of the operation to get production, to get sales, arrange financing.” He served the company “For the period of about 1938 until December 31, 1941.” He had no connection with the corporation at the time he testified in May 1947, nor at any time after December 31, 1941.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F.2d 588, 38 C.C.P.A. 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ranney-v-bridges-ccpa-1951.