Schwartz v. Graenz

81 F.2d 767, 23 C.C.P.A. 883, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1936
DocketNo. 3528
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 F.2d 767 (Schwartz v. Graenz) 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
Schwartz v. Graenz, 81 F.2d 767, 23 C.C.P.A. 883, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 48 (ccpa 1936).

Opinion

Hateield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in an interference proceeding from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office reversing the decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention to appellant.

The invention in issue relates to a non-run knitted fabric, and a method for making the same.

The fabric is made up of the usual courses and wales, with certain of the loops shifted lengthwise and laterally into an adjacent wale in an adjacent course.

[884]*884Of the eleven counts in issue, 1 to 11, inclusive, counts 1 and 7 .are illustrative. They read:

Count 1. A non-run knitted fabric formed of courses and wales of loops, with substantially each wale containing a multiplicity of loops each of which has a bight portion thereof displaced from an adjacent existent wale and from an adjacent course, and the courses wherein such displaced loops occur being in such close proximity as to render substantially the entire extent of the fabric of a non-run character, by limiting the breaking effect of any loop of the fabric to a very small number of loops in the wale in which the break occurs.
Count 7. That method of rendering a knitted fabric of a substantially non-run character throughout, during the fabrication thereof, which consists in knitting the fabric in course after course of loops, and in substantially every existent wale, in a multiplicity of courses substantially throughout the fabric, laterally shifting predetermined loops each to an adjacent wale in an adjacent course.

The interference is between appellant’s application, serial No. 618,289, filed June 20,1932, and appellee’s patent No. 1,856,053, issued April 26, 1932, on an application filed October 8, 1931.

The counts in issue originated in appellee’s patent No. 1,856,053, and were copied by appellant for interference purposes.

As appellant’s application was not filed until after appellee’s patent issued, appellant is the junior party, and the burden was upon him to establish priority of invention beyond a reasonable doubt.

It appears from the preliminary statements of the parties that appellant claimed conception, disclosure to others, and reduction to practice on or about October 9, 1923; and that appellee claimed conception, disclosure to others, and reduction to practice on or about April 30, 1931.

Preliminary to a discussion of the issues and the evidence in the •case it may be said that appellant received patent No. 1,470,490, issued October 9, 1923, on an application filed September 25, 1919, for a non-run knitted fabric, and a method for making the same.

Appellant’s patented non-run knitted fabric is made up of the usual courses and wales, with certain of the loops stretched laterally so that they extend over two wales in the same cowrse in which they originated.

The fundamental difference between the fabric at issue and that covered bjr the Schwartz patent is that in the former certain loops are shifted lengthwise and laterally into an adjacent wale in an adjacent course, whereas in the. Schwartz patented fabric certain of the loops are stretched laterally so that they extend over two wales in the same course in which they originated.

It appears from the record that the Berkshire Knitting Mills, a manufacturer of hosiery, located at Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, is [885]*885making non-run hosiery under the Schwartz patent No. 1,470,490, probably as a licensee; and that the Textile Machine Works of Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, engaged in manufacturing- full-fashioned knitting machines and parts, and the Berkshire Knitting Mills, although separate corporations, are controlled, as stated in the brief of counsel for appellant, by the “same interests.”

Appellant Schwartz testified that he conceived the present invention about one year subsequent to the filing of his application— September 25, 1919, on which patent No. 1,470,490 issued October 9, 1923; that he disclosed the present invention to his attorney, Mr.-Denes, who at that time was prosecuting his 1919 application; that Mr. Denes was of opinion, as was Mr. Root, who succeeded Mr. Denes as appellant’s attorney in the prosecution thereof, that the involved invention was fully covered by that application (neither Mr. Denes nor Mr. Root was called as a witness) ; that he explained the present invention to his attorneys — Mr. Denes and Mr. Root — orally and by the motion of his fingers, no drawings thereof having been made by him until sometime, in 1931, and stated to Mr. Root “that in case it is not mechanically advantageous to make form No. 1, form No. 2 may be easier adaptable to a full fashioned machine”; that subsequent to the issuance of his patent, and prior to June, 1926, he made several unsuccessful attempts to interest various hosiery manufacturers in his patent, such as the Phoenix Hosiery Mills, Julius Kayser, Van Raalte, Osborn, the Rivoli Hosiery Mills, and others whose names he did not remember, and .disclosed to them samples of his patented fabric and the fabric of the present invention, sometimes one, sometimes the other, and sometimes both (no witness was called from any of those concerns to corroborate appellant’s testimony); that, in the early summer of 1926, he disclosed the present invention to' the witnesses Emil Max Müller, an employee of the Textile Machine Works of Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, supervisor of the erection of. full-fashioned hosiery machines and attachments therefor, Christian F. Meyer, chief draftsman of the same company, and Mr. Emil Richter, foreman of the Berkshire Knitting Mills; that he showed those witnesses a sample of his patented non-run fabric — Exhibit No. 4, as well as a sample of a non-run fabric disclosing the present invention — Exhibit No. 5, hereinafter described, and, after fully explaining the arrangement of, and the difference in, the stitches used in producing those fabrics, on July 26, 1926, entered into an “option agreement” with the Berkshire Knitting Mills — appellant’s Exhibit No. 14 — for the sale of all his rights, title, and interest in and to his patent No. 1,470,490 for the sum of $7500, one thousand dollars of which was paid at the time of the signing of the agreement, and the balance, $6500, was to be paid [886]*886within 30 clays thereafter, in the event the Berkshire Knitting Mills ■desired to exercise its rights under the agreement to the consummation of the sale and the execution and delivery to it of a formal .assignment of appellant’s patent rights.

It may be observed at this point that the balance of the purchase price was not paid by the Berkshire Knitting Mills, and the patent was not assigned to it.

Relative to the meeting on July 26, 1926, of the parties to the '“option agreement,” the witness Christian F. Meyer stated that he ■dictated a memorandum, introduced in evidence as appellant’s Exhibit No. 20, wherein it appears that, in addition to appellant Schwartz, the following persons were present: Messrs. F. Thunn, ■Gr. Grastrich, M. Zwicky, M. Mueller, Wm. F. Mueller, H. Hemme-rich, E. Richter, and C. F. Meyer (only two. of whom — Richter and Meyer. — were called as witnesses by appellant) ; that the subject of the discussion at that meeting had to do with the purchase of ■appellant’s patent, and, among other things, “the practical workability as well as the cost of the attachment

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Bluebook (online)
81 F.2d 767, 23 C.C.P.A. 883, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-graenz-ccpa-1936.