Robert D. Brand, Capital MacHine Co., Inc., and Indiana Forge, LLC v. Thomas A. Miller, Darrel C. Pinkston, and Miller Veneers, Inc.

487 F.3d 862
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 2007
Docket2006-1419
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 487 F.3d 862 (Robert D. Brand, Capital MacHine Co., Inc., and Indiana Forge, LLC v. Thomas A. Miller, Darrel C. Pinkston, and Miller Veneers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert D. Brand, Capital MacHine Co., Inc., and Indiana Forge, LLC v. Thomas A. Miller, Darrel C. Pinkston, and Miller Veneers, Inc., 487 F.3d 862 (Fed. Cir. 2007).

Opinion

DYK, Circuit Judge.

Appellants Robert D. Brand, Capital Machine Co., Inc. and Indiana Forge, LLC (“Brand”) appeal from the judgment of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (“Board”) of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) in Interference No. 105,215, entering judgment for appellees Thomas A. Miller, Darrel C. Pinkston, and Miller Veneers, Inc. (“Miller”) on the issue of priority. The Board concluded that Brand derived the subject matter of the single count from Miller. We hold that the Board impermissibly relied on its own expertise in determining the question of derivation and that the Board’s conclusion is not supported by substantial record evidence. We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

The invention here relates to methods of cutting veneer from logs of wood. Typically logs are cut lengthwise into a pair of “flitches,” which are then mounted onto the rotating “staylog” of a veneer cutting machine. The flitch is held in place on the staylog by clamping “dogs.” The veneer-cutting knife then cuts off slices of veneer from the flitch as it rotates on the staylog.

Because logs are typically thicker at their base than at their end, traditionally the butt-ends of the resulting tapered flitches were cut off in order to make them more uniform in cross-section from end to end. The ends that had been cut off were then discarded. The invention at issue allows a tapered flitch to be mounted on a staylog such that the flitch’s veneer-producing face (the uppermost surface region of 16 in the diagram below from U.S. Patent No. 5,865,232 (“'232 patent”)) is parallel to the veneer-cutting knife. This results in more efficient use of the flitches.

*865 [[Image here]]

Traditional dogs could not be used to mount a tapered flitch (16) onto a staylog (10) because traditional dogs did not allow the length of the dog extending from the staylog to vary based on the flitch’s taper. The inventors here used different types of dogs to solve that problem.

During the relevant period Robert Brand was the Chief Engineer for Capital Machine Co. (“Capital”), which makes machines for cutting veneer. He is now retired from Capital and works as an unpaid consultant with Miller Veneers. Brand is the named inventor of U.S. Patent Application No. 09/377,120 ('120 application). Thomas Miller was Production Manager of Miller Veneers, a customer of Capital. Miller is the named inventor of the '232 patent. The two companies had a close working relationship, and Thomas Miller on occasion communicated new design concepts to Capital.

On April 28, 2004, the Board declared an interference with a single count to determine whether Miller or Brand should have priority. The count, which is claim 1 of Miller’s '232 patent and the identical claim 38 of Brand’s '120 application. The count reads:

A method for cutting veneer sheets from a tapered flitch, comprising the steps of
providing a staylog for a veneer slicing machine having a veneer slicing knife;
attaching a flitch having a tapered veneer producing face to the staylog with the tapered veneer producing face affixed in a stable, parallel relationship with the veneer slicing knife; and
cutting veneer sheets with the veneer slicing knife from the tapered veneer producing face of the flitch.

While the same claim appears in both the '232 patent and the '120 application, the inventors used different methods to solve the problem of attaching a tapered flitch to a staylog. Miller’s '232 patent employs radially-expandable round “collett dogs” (depicted below at left) to support the flitch while Brand’s '120 application uses multi-headed tall pin dogs (depicted below at right) for the same purpose.

[[Image here]]

In the interference proceeding, Brand was the Senior Party, having filed his application on May 31, 1995. 1 Miller, the *866 Junior Party, made two arguments for priority. Miller argued it was entitled to priority as the party first to conceive and first to reduce to practice, and also argued it was entitled to priority because Brand derived the invention from Miller. The Board first addressed Miller’s argument that it was first to conceive and first to reduce to practice, and determined the respective conception and reduction to practice dates of Brand and Miller. The Board held that Miller’s conception date was no earlier than October 27, 1994, and denied Miller’s attempt to amend its priority statement to claim an earlier date. The Board held that Miller failed to prove an actual reduction to practice prior to Brand’s May 31, 1995, benefit date. The Board concluded that, since Junior Party Miller failed to prove it reduced to practice first, it failed to establish that it was entitled to an award of priority as the party first to conceive and first to reduce to practice. Miller has not raised this issue on appeal.

The Board then turned to Miller’s other argument, that Miller was entitled to priority because. Brand derived the invention from Miller. Miller’s case for derivation was based primarily on two drawings that Miller allegedly showed Brand before Brand’s own conception. The first, Miller Exhibit 2001 (“MX2001”), depicts an end view of a tapered flitch:

[[Image here]]

The Board found that Miller showed Brand and Koss (the Executive Vice President of Capital), the drawing in MX2001 at a meeting held sometime between October 7, 1994 and October 12, 1994, well before Brand’s conception date of May 31, 1995. The drawing in MX2001 does not depict any dogs or any holes in the flitch for receiving dogs.

The second drawing that Miller alleged supported its case for derivation was Miller Exhibit 2002 (“MX2002”), which the Board found was contained in a fax from Miller to Brand on October 7, 1994, and which depicts a type of screw called a “bugle headed screw dog:”

The Board addressed whether Miller had proven that Brand derived the inven *867 tion from Miller based on the information in Miller Exhibits [“MX”] 2001 and 2002, either separately or taken together. While Brand was aware that the bugle-headed dogs depicted in MX2002 were intended as substitutes for standard dogs, the Board rejected as uncorroborated the testimony of Miller that he explicitly told Brand how to practice the invention of the count by using the bugle-headed dogs to support a tapered flitch. The Board nonetheless held that Miller had established derivation based on the combination of MX2001 and 2002. The Board reasoned that “one skilled in the art ... would have recognized [the] suitability [of Miller’s bugle-headed screw dogs MX2002] for securely supporting a tapered flitch in the position depicted in [MX2001].” J.A. at 62. The Board did not cite any testimony or record evidence to support its conclusion. The Board further held that “[t]he ability of the bugle-headed screw dogs to tightly clamp the flitch would have been readily apparent.” Id.

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Bluebook (online)
487 F.3d 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-d-brand-capital-machine-co-inc-and-indiana-forge-llc-v-cafc-2007.