Robert Harvey Rines v. Harry C. Morgan

250 F.2d 365, 45 C.C.P.A. 743, 116 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 145
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 1957
DocketPatent Appeals 6304
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 250 F.2d 365 (Robert Harvey Rines v. Harry C. Morgan) 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
Robert Harvey Rines v. Harry C. Morgan, 250 F.2d 365, 45 C.C.P.A. 743, 116 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 145 (ccpa 1957).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences of the United States Patent Office awarding priority of invention of the subject matter in issue in Interference No. 83,544 to the senior party Harry C. Morgan, the appellee here.

The invention in issue relates to a television system in which radio waves reflected from the object to be televised are focused on an antenna array com *366 prising a large number of pick-up units of a material such as uranium oxide, the resistance of which varies dependent upon the magnitude of radio frequency energy received. The antenna array is scanned with an electron beam and the resultant signals are rectified and amplified and caused to form a visible image on a cathode ray tube.

The invention in issue is defined by the following counts:

“1. A system comprising means for propogating ultra high-frequency electromagnetic energy modulated with a high-frequency wave of electro-magnetic energy, a receiving antenna array including a plurality of closely spaced conductors, an antenna array load impedance connected to said conductors, means for focusing the point of emanation of the propagated energy on a small portion of said antenna array, means for projecting a narrow beam of electrons against said antenna array, means for causing said beam of electrons to scan said antenna array, means for rectifying the electro-magnetic energy received by said antenna array, circuit means forming a close circuit including said beam of electrons, said antenna conductors, said load impedance and said rectifier means in which electron current flows, amplifier means, means for feeding the rectified component of said electromagnetic energy to said amplifier, and means for utilizing the amplified output of said amplifier.
“2. An electric system having, in combination, an oscilloscope-like • member having a mosaic of absorbing-and-rectifying radio-receiving elements and means for producing an electron stream for impinging on the elements, means for focusing radio energy on the mosaic, means for causing the electron stream to scan the elements, means controlled by the radio waves focused on the mosaic for producing varying potentials on the elements of the mosaic, and means controlled by the electron stream, as it scans the elements, for indicating variations in the current of the electron stream.”

The application of appellee, Morgan, was filed on February 23, 1944, and that of appellant, Riñes, on March 18, 1944, less than one month later. Neither party alleges an actual reduction to practice of the invention in issue and accordingly each is restricted to his filing date for constructive reduction to practice.

The Board of Patent Interferences found that Morgan could be accorded no date of conception prior to December 1, 1943, that being the date on which he first disclosed the use of the rectifier which is required by each of the counts. We find that holding to be correct and, since it is not controverted here by Morgan, it will not be further discussed. We also agree with the further holding of the board, not disputed by Morgan, that the record shows Riñes disclosed the invention here involved to his father, a patent attorney, as early as May 1943.

From the foregoing, it follows that Riñes was the first to conceive and the last to reduce to practice, and the sole issue is whether he continuously exercised reasonable diligence, beginning just prior to Morgan’s entry into the field, in preparing and filing his application here involved. In considering that question we shall assume that Morgan has established conception as of December 1, 1943, as found by the board, although Riñes contends that Morgan should be awarded no date of conception prior to his filing date, February 23, 1944.

The record shows that from June 1943 until March 1944, when his application was filed, the party Riñes was an officer in the Signal Corps and was stationed in Florida, while his father, who prepared and filed the application, resided in Massachusetts. The father, David Riñes, will hereinafter be referred to as the attorney.

Riñes testified that in May 1943 he was in doubt as to the practical value of *367 the invention here in issue, in the form in which he had then conceived it, and accordingly did not take steps to file an application for a patent on it. However, he gave the matter further consideration and, on September 4, 1943, mailed to his attorney a sketch and description (Riñes Exhibit 35) of the invention with the notation “Best I can do on Mosaic. We’d better file.”

The circumstances surrounding the preparation and filing of the Riñes application here involved are summarized in the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences as follows:

“Notwithstanding the heavy work load which he carried as an officer in wartime in the Signal Corps, by ■October 12, 1942 Riñes had evolved a number of ideas as improvements ■on his basic idea of a means for displaying the image of a distant objective. Some of these ideas were closely related to the subject matter now in issue, and some were more remote. In his letter of October 12, 1943 ,(nc>t in evidence) Riñes sent to his father final drawings on four different systems referred to as (1) Gas display system (2) Condenser iconoscope display (3) wave guide-horn method and (4) original dipole system. (Riñes Rec.P. 170-171). The gas display system (1 above) became the subject matter of a patent application filed January 29, 1944, wThieh matured into Patent No. 2,673,343 (R.Ex. 43) and the condenser system (2 above) with modifications became application Ser. No. 519,376, filed January 22, 1944. The record shows (P. 178) that the father was actively preparing patent applications on 2 and 4 as of October 26, 1943. The procedure seems to have been that the father prepared rough drafts and submitted them to Riñes who made extensive revisions thereon.
“About October 28, 1943 a rough draft of part of the disclosure of what became application Ser. No. 519,376, was sent to Riñes who decided to add thereto a modification showing a wave guide, which is shown in Fig. 2 of said application. The rough draft with this additional material was sent back to the father on November 22, 1943, who on December 2, 1943 prepared another rough draft incorporating the added material.
“By December 23, 1943, Riñes had prepared a further addition to the rough draft of Ser. No. 519,376, which additional material incorporates the subject matter of Riñes’ Exhibits 5 and 35 (R.Rec.P. 194-5) and constitutes a disclosure of the subject matter now in issue. It does not appear that any effort was made to incorporate this subject matter in an application prior to this time, notwithstanding the fact that Riñes on September 4, 1943 in Ex. 35 had written his father that ‘We’d better file’ on this subject matter because, ‘aside from Neon Mosaic this is next best’; and had again urged preparation of an application on this subject matter in a letter dated September 30, 1943 (R.Ex. 40), the father decided that the proposed additional material would make the application top heavy so proceeded to prepare a separate application thereon.”

Except as hereinafter indicated we find the above summary to be accurate.

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250 F.2d 365, 45 C.C.P.A. 743, 116 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-harvey-rines-v-harry-c-morgan-ccpa-1957.