Rhinevault v. Pfiester

65 F.2d 161, 20 C.C.P.A. 1112, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1933
DocketPatent Appeal 3151
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 161 (Rhinevault v. Pfiester) 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
Rhinevault v. Pfiester, 65 F.2d 161, 20 C.C.P.A. 1112, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 88 (ccpa 1933).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office in an interference proceeding involving two counts taken from PfiestePs patent, issued June 25, 1929, the application for which was filed on March 30, 1928, and an application of Rhinevault filed October 5, 1929.

The invention relates to blocks in square form for parquetry flooring. The squares are formed of short pieees of tongued and grooved flooring, arranged side by side in tongue and groove engagement and bound together by metallic strips or splines sunk within aligned grooves across the ends of the blocks. The metal splines hold the pieees in a rigid assembly for shipping, handling, and laying into floor, ceilings, or walls. The blocks are usually of hardwood, and short waste or scrap pieees may be used in this manner advantageously.

The two counts involved follow?

“1. A composite block composed of pieees of lumber having the grain of each piece in alignment one with another, and with tongue and groove connections uniting the individual pieees together, said composite block having lateral edge grooves with metal cleats inserted within the grooves, said cleats being of such width as to provide reinforcement for the thin overhanging portions or the pieees at the ends thereof provided with grooves.
“2. A composite block composed of pieees of flooring having end grooves and being bound together with metal eleats at end edges thereof, said cleats being countersunk within the end grooves of the pieces, said'cleats being of such width as to support overhanging portions of the pieees adjacent the end grooves.”

There is no disagreement between the parties as to the dates claimed, although there is sharp disagreement as to the effect in law which shall he given to the happenings which occurred on the admitted dates.

*162 The Examiner of Interferences held that Pfiester conceived the invention October 5, 1927, and constructively reduced the same to practice by filing his application on March 30, 1928, and that Rhinevault is entitled to June 28, 1927, for conception, and to his filing date of October 5, 1929, for constructive reduction to practice; that neither party had reduced the invention to practice prior to their respective filing dates, since he concluded that making one or more of the blocks without testing it under conditions of use was not a reduction to practice; and that although Rhinevault was first to conceive he did not reduce to practice for more than a year subsequent to the constructive reduction to practice of Pfiester. He also held that there was no excuse shown in the record for Rhinevault’s long delay in filing his application, and that he had not sustained the burden of proof resting upon him of establishing his case beyond a reasonable doubt.

The Board of Appeals concurred in the finding of the dates by the Examiner of Interferences, except that it concluded that Rhine-vault’s construction of the blocks and the hand tests given them were a reduction to practice, and that such reduction'to practice occurred during the summer of 1927, which'was prior to Pfiester’s date of conception on October 25,1927. Concerning Rhine-vault’s reduction to practice, the board said: “ « * * Exhibits 1 and 9 are of the usual or full size of parquette blocks and in every way as fully complete as they would be made and sold commercially. The three pieces of tongued and grooved flooring are very rigidly and securely held together in perfect alignment. They resist separation by any ordinary pulling force applied manually and would obviously stand any amount of handling during shipment and application to the floor. Parquette blocks made on this principle of uniting several pieces was a well established subject of invention before the parties here involved entered the field. We consider the problem of making such block fully solved when Rhinevault made Exhibits 1 and 9. It appears to us to be conclusive on mere inspection of these exhibits that they would stand shipment and application to the mastic foundation and remain fixed as well as any prior composite blocks. The tongue and groove operative on all four sides as well as the metal spline and other means would serve to hold them in place in the floor when once applied. There can be no doubt but that such rigid block would be fully satisfactory. We regard it as being of that type of device

not needing further test that can be given to it manually and by inspection.”

The Board of Appeals awarded priority to Pfiester on the ground that Rhinevault had forfeited his invention under the doctrine of Mason v. Hepburn, 13 App. D. C. 86, since it concluded that after his reduction to practice in the summer of 1927, his invention was laid aside and apparently forgotten until he filed his application October 5, 1929. Concerning this phase of the case the board said: “Considering the comparative simplicity of the device here involved, there appears to be no reasonable explanation of the long delay by Rhinevault from the time he reduced the invention to practice in the summer of 1927 until October 5,1929, .before applying for a patent. During this delay Pfiester had made the invention and in good faith applied for and received his patent, thereby placing the invention before the public.”

The record shows, among other things, that about 1924 or 1925, the E. L. Bruce Company, appellant’s assignee, which was a manufacturer of lumber of different kinds, started experimental work looking to the manufacture of wooden blocks; that it did manufacture and sell blocks represented by Exhibit 6, which does not meet the requirements of the counts involved; that it selected the S. A. Woods Machine Company of Boston to make the necessary machinery for it and sent samples of its strip flooring to the W. B. Mershon Company, Saginaw, Mich., a subsidiary of the Woods Company, where Rhine-vault was employed; that Rhinevault was, by his company, assigned to making the ■ blocks, and made Exhibits 1 and 9, meeting the requirements of the counts, some time in the spring or summer of 1927; that one of the blocks he made was mailed to the Bruce Company and one was retained by Rhine-vault; that Rhinevault disclosed his invention to one Pelkey, a fellow employee, who held the block in the vise while Rhinevault pressed the splines at both ends; that Rhine-vault also disclosed the invention to one Mason, a draftsman for the Mershon Company, some time in May, 1927; that one of the members of the Bruce firm received the block in the early part of July, 1927; that the block was tested by Rhinevault in order to note the holding qualities of the splines and also by attempting to bend them by hand; that he also tested them further by attempting to see how much of a pull it would take to pull the different pieces off the block, and also dug out a couple of the splines from the end grooves in order to learn how firmly they were *163 gripping the edges of the grooves.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 161, 20 C.C.P.A. 1112, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhinevault-v-pfiester-ccpa-1933.