Rogers v. Willoughby

1 F.2d 824, 55 App. D.C. 65, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1897
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
DocketNo. 1662
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 F.2d 824 (Rogers v. Willoughby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Willoughby, 1 F.2d 824, 55 App. D.C. 65, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1897 (D.C. Cir. 1924).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents awarding a patent to Willoughby and Lowell for a speeial kind of loop antenna designed for vessels of metal and particularly for submarines.-

The interference in this case was declared on the following claims taken from patent No. 1,303,709, issued to James Harris Rogers on May 13, 1919, and copied by Willoughby and Lowell in the application filed by them for a patent on October 31, 1919:

• “1. The combination with a vessel of a radio conductor extending longitudinally thereof but insulated therefrom and from the water except at its ends which make electrical connection with the vessel, an electrical connection between said ends of the radio conductor through said vessel, and electromagnetic signaling instruments associated with said radio conductor at a point between its ends.

“2. The combination with a submarine vessel having a metallic hull of an insulated radio conductor extending longitudinally thereof and connected electrically at its ends with said hull, whereby a loop oscillating circuit is provided, and electromagnetic signaling instruments associated with said looped oscillating circuit.

“3. The combination with a submarine vessel having a metallic hull of an insulated radio conductor extending longitudinally thereof and connected electrically at its ends with said hull, whereby a loop oscillating circuit is provided, a tuning condenser in said oscillating circuit, and electromagnetic signaling instruments associated with said looped oscillating circuit.

“4. The combination with a submarine vessel having a metallic hull of an insulated radio conductor extending longitudinally thereof and connected electrically at its ends with said hull, whereby a loop oscillating circuit is provided, electromagnetic signal instruments associated with said radio conductor between its ends, and a tuning condenser in circuit with said conductor.”

On the record and evidence submitted in the interference proceedings, the Examiner of Interferences found, first, that Rogers was the first to conceive the invention; second, that Rogers disclosed the invention to Lyon, and that Lyon upon the suggestion of Rogers tested the invention on a submarine at Key West in March, 1918; third, that the test made by Lyon was not a success, and must he regarded as an abandoned experiment, and not a reduction to practice; fourth, that the experiments on a simulated submarine, even if the use of the loop eondenser had been established, did not constitute a reduction to practice for the reason that it was impossible to tell just what part of the signals received were due to the coils in the laboratory, and just what part came over the loop; fifth, that there was no evidence in the record showing that Willoughby and Lowell conceived the specific device of the issue prior to Juno 5, 1918, which device is represented by Figure 5 of their application; sixth, that as Willoughby and Lowell testified that they were joint inventors that relation must bo considered as fairly established; seventh, that Willoughby and Lowell having proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the invention in issue was reduced to practice on June 5(?), 1918, and prior to Rogers’ filing date, the prima facie presumption attaching to Roger’s patent was overcome, and that the burden of proving that Rogers was entitled to a, patent, and that Willoughby and Lowell were not, devolved on Rogers.

The Board of Examiners, on appeal to it, expressly found, first, that the invention was communicated by Rogers to Lyon between February and April, 1918 (the Board made no finding as to the date of conception by Willoughby and Lowell and held that it was not material whether Willoughby be given the date of April 26 or June 20, 1918, for conception and reduction to practice); second, that the test made by Lyon at Key West of the invention of antennae grounded to the bow and stern of a submarine was not a success, and that for that reason, and for the additional reason that the test was made while the submarine was not submerged, the test was not a reduction to prac[826]*826tice; third, that from April to December, 1938, Rogers was not active in making tests of his invention under service conditions and that he was not diligent in filing his application for a patent; fourth, that Willoughby and Lowell were joint inventors.

The Commissioner, on appeal to him, held, first, that the evidence did not establish that Rogers’ conception of the invention was prior to that of Willoughby and Lowell, and did not prove that Rogers disclosed his invention to Lyon or to any one else prior to the date of conception by Willoughby and Lowell; second, that the tests of the invention made by Lyon were not made at Rogers’ request, or because of the disclosure by Rogers to Lyon; third, that to reduce the invention to practice it was necessary to test it on a submarine submerged, and that the test made by Lyon at Key West in March, 1918, was not a reduction to practice, but an abandoned experiment; fourth, that Rogers was lacking in diligence, and did not actually or constructively reduce his invention to practice until after Willoughby and Lowell had entered the field.

It appears from the evidence submitted in the interference proceeding that Rogers is a man well advanced in years and a scientist, who from youth to old age has devoted himself to electrical research and the study of electrical phenomena. As early as 1908, Rogers entertained the theory that messages and signals eould be sent and received by means of ground antennae and by actual tests made in that year, established that they could be so sent and received. The messages and signals received by ground antennae were, however, weaker than those carried by elevated antennae, and Rogers thereafter made only occasional tests of his discovery until the World War brought him to the realization that it might be used with good results in dugouts, on submarines, and as a valuable adjunct to coast defense. Incited by that realization, he actively resumed his experiments with ground antennae and made arrangements with Harry H. Lyon, a young man 19 years of age, to assist him in making the necessary tests. The tests of Rogers and Lyon.proved the practicability and utility of ground antennas and on an application filed by them November 10,1916, joint patent No. 1,220,005 was issued to them on March 20, 1917, for the wireless transmission and reception of messages and signals by means of underground antenna insulated substantially throughout their length.

Having developed the practicability and utility of insulated underground antennas, Rogers and Lyon then proceeded to test the efficiency of uninsulated antennas, whether laid underground or under water on the bottom or above the bottom and beneath the surface of the water. A test was also made with insulated wires laid on the bottom of a lake, and communication was established between the lake and Rogers’ home at his laboratory. This last test was repeated for the information of navy experts, and for the purpose of showing that such a system could be used on submarines.

An application for a patent for a wireless system for signaling by electromagnetic waves comprising antennae under the surface of the earth and in intimate contact therewith, and for antennae on a boat or vessel, such antennae being laid parallel to and under the surface of the water and in contact therewith, was filed by Rogers and Lyon November 10, 1916, and patent No. 1,322,622, was issued to them November 25, 1919.

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1 F.2d 824, 55 App. D.C. 65, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-willoughby-cadc-1924.