Robert S. Kravig and Arnold E. Johnson v. David J. Henderson

393 F.2d 1017, 55 C.C.P.A. 1182
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1968
DocketPatent Appeal 7862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 393 F.2d 1017 (Robert S. Kravig and Arnold E. Johnson v. David J. Henderson) 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 S. Kravig and Arnold E. Johnson v. David J. Henderson, 393 F.2d 1017, 55 C.C.P.A. 1182 (ccpa 1968).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This case is here on Kravig’s petition for further review, having been previously before us as reported at 362 F.2d 1015, 53 CCPA 1534, to which reference is made for background. The parties re-briefed the case in March 1968 and re-argued it on April 3, 1968.

In the opinion by the late Judge Martin, July 14, 1966, we reported our unanimous decision to reverse the award of priority by the Board of Patent Interferences to Henderson on counts 3 and 6 and to remand to the board on those counts. On remand, the board awarded priority to Kravig. As to counts 1 and 2, however, we affirmed the board’s award *1018 of priority to Henderson. Only the latter two counts are here involved.

Henderson, as junior party, had the burden of proving priority beyond a reasonable doubt, the counts having come from Kravig patent 2,933,223, which issued before Henderson’s application was filed. The board concluded that Henderson had established introduction of a machine, illustrated in Exhibits 3A and 3B, 1 which the board thought embodied the invention of all four counts, into the United States from Canada in the spring of 1956. In consequence, the board held Henderson had a reduction to practice in the United States at that time. Henderson had to overcome at least the filing date of the Kravig patent, July 23, 1958.

We formerly reversed only as to counts 3 and 6 on the ground that the machine of Exhibits 3A and 3B did not support those counts. It was not disputed that it supported counts 1 and 2 and we affirmed as to them because we, like the board, accepted the proofs as to the date that the machine was in the United States.

In making our prior decision, we remanded the case to the board for further consideration of evidence in the record with respect to counts 3 and 6 which it had not deemed it necessary to consider. Before the board rendered any decision on that remand, Kravig came to this court with a motion to recall our mandate and vacate the judgment on the ground of fraud, with respect to counts 1 and 2, submitting in support copies of depositions taken, subsequent to our prior decision, in Canada. Appellant’s as-signee, 3M, prosecuting a suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, in Utica, New York, entitled Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company v. Aranac Ribbons Inc. and David J. Henderson (Civil Action No. 65 CV 134), obtained an order therein for a rogatory commission, confirmed by order of the Superior Court of the District of Montreal, pursuant to which the depositions were taken before William S. Tyndale, Q. C., as Commissioner, at the Harrington Tool and Die Co., Ltd., plant in Lachine, Quebec. Henderson, appellee herein, was present and represented by counsel. There are three volumes of stenographic reports of the depositions totalling 348 pages plus numerous exhibits. After we had considered them on the motion, by order of February 6, 1967, we granted Kravig’s motion to the extent that we enlarged our final order (or mandate) on the prior appeal “to include a remand to the Board of Patent Interferences for consideration of the evidence in the above mentioned depositions.” At that time we expressed no opinion on the evidence or on Kravig’s allegations of fraud, desiring, as a court of review, not to pass on any matter relating to priority, or the evidence relating thereto, which had not first been considered by the board.

Pursuant to our mandate, the board, on March 10,1967, without seeking or having briefing or argument from the parties on the question raised by the new evidence, rendered a decision on our original remand with an extensive opinion in which it found nothing in the original evidence to support an award of priority to Henderson on counts 3 and 6 and therefore awarded priority thereon to Kravig.

Responsive to our enlarged remand to consider the new deposition evidence obtained in Canada, the board made only the following brief statement:

In accordance with the Court’s mandate we have considered the evidence in the depositions and related exhibits relating to fraud and we find that it is insufficient to support any action by us. [Our emphasis.] 2

*1019 Henderson has not appealed from the award of priority against him on counts 3 and 6 and the decision on them is final.

As to counts 1 and 2, Kravig asks us, on the basis of the deposition evidence taken in Canada subsequent to our prior decision, which has now been reviewed by the board, which took no action thereon, and which has now been certified to us by the Patent Office as part of the record, to set aside the earlier award of priority to Henderson and award priority to appellants. Error is alleged in the board’s failure to do this. Kravig’s petition briefs this question and Henderson has filed a reply brief making only the following points: (1) the decision of the board saying it found nothing to support any action by it is not a decision on priority and there is no basis in statute or rules for our considering it; (2) the decision of the board is only “procedural” for which reason we are not authorized to review it; (3) the question before us is not “ancillary” to priority and so not reviewable; (4) the priority issue is also involved in the suit in the District Court for the Northern District of New York and 3M will have ample opportunity to prove its contentions there for which reason, we presume he thinks, we should consider the issue no further; (5) no reason has been given why the deposition evidence was not presented previously. We see no merit in any of these arguments. In reviewing them we have noted with interest that there has been no refutation of Kravig’s primary contention now before us that the new evidence shows that the machine allegedly brought into the United States from Canada in 1956 was not built until 1958, a point which has a vital bearing on the central issue of priority and which we shall now consider.

As above indicated and as our former opinion shows, our affirmance of the board’s award of priority on counts 1 and 2 to Henderson was based entirely on our acceptance of evidence that the machine depicted in photographic exhibits 3A and 3B was introduced into the United States from Canada at least as early as 1956, thus antedating any date asserted by Kravig as an actual reduction to practice. The evidence, as the board initially recognized, was oral testimony of the party Henderson corroborated by the oral testimony of two of his own employees, all given eight or nine years after the alleged events.

The crux of the matter now before us is that the evidence Kravig subsequently obtained in Canada flatly contradicts the evidence on which we relied in reaching our prior decision. We shall review the essential points.

Henderson, a Canadian, operated two companies: Beacon Ribbon Mills Ltd. and Aranac Ribbon Mills Inc., the former owning the stock of the latter. Beacon was a Canadian corporation located at Valleyfield, Que. and Aranac a New York corporation located’at Plattsburgh, N. Y. He testified, “you might say it is a one man’s business.” The business was ribbon and bow manufacturing.

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Related

Krenzer v. Stoffel
551 F.2d 1214 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1977)
Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Berwick Industries, Inc.
393 F. Supp. 1230 (M.D. Pennsylvania, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
393 F.2d 1017, 55 C.C.P.A. 1182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-s-kravig-and-arnold-e-johnson-v-david-j-henderson-ccpa-1968.