KEECH, District Judge.
There are before the court two actions under R.S. § 4915 [1952 Revision, 35 U.S. C.A. §§ 145, 146], Shell Development Co. v. Pure Oil Co., Civil Action No. 2434-51, wherein Shell seeks issuance of a patent, and Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Incorporated v. Pure Oil Co., Civil Action No. 2776-51, wherein Socony seeks issuance of a patent. These actions grew out of applications filed by Zublin, assignor of Shell, Cauley, Assignor of Socony, and Bond, assignor of Pure Oil, for a patent on the same subject matter. An interference proceeding followed in the Patent Office, resulting in the award of a patent to Pure Oil. The two court actions were consolidated for hearing by a consent order.' Hearing of these causes extended over a period of five days, and the matter was argued at length by counsel for the respective parties, all of-whom have filed briefs.
These actions, by statute and judicial pronouncement, are not in the nature of an appeal, but are de novo proceedings.
As permitted by the statute
there are before the court for its consideration not only large portions of the record before the Patent Office, but also substantial additional testimony offered for the first time before this court. Socony shifted the emphasis in its case from an alleged actual reduction to practice, relied on and rejected by the Patent Office, to prior conception, which had -been alleged but not urged in the Patent Office proceedings. At the outset, Pure Oil objected to admission of any evidence which was or could have been available at the time of the Patent Office proceedings, but was not introduced there.
New evidence may be received which strengthens contentions already fully made and supported by testimony before the Patent Office,
where there has been no suppression, bad faith, or gross negligence on the part of the party offering it.
The court found that the circumstances in this case did not indicate any bad faith, suppression, or gross negligence on the part of Shell or Socony, and that the proffered evidence tended to strengthen contentions already made in the Patent Office. Hence, there’ was no estoppel, and the new evidence was admitted.
Counsel for the respective -parties have been of real assistance to the court in the presentation of their contentions and authorities in support thereof. Indeed, counsel have substantially agreed upon the basic legal principles applicable.
The claimed invention or “count”, as it is known in an interference proceeding, reads:
“In the treatment of hydrocarbon oils containing heavy mercaptides for the removal thereof which comprises contacting oil containing heavy mercaptides with aqueous alkali metal hydroxide reagent containing an effective amount of soluble organic oxidation promoter itself capable of oxidation and an amount of mercaptides sufficient to protect said promoter to extract said mercaptans and to produce a fat reagent containing heavy mercaptides, separating said fat reagent, regenerating said fat reagent by passing oxygen-containing oxidizing gas there-through to oxidize a portion of said mercaptides to disulfides and to retain sufficient of said mercaptides to protect said promoter, separating said disulfides to produce a lean reagent, and contacting hydrocarbon oil containing heavy mercaptides with said lean reagent, the improvement which comprises contacting hydrocarbon oil containing predominantly heavy mercaptans with aqueous alkali metal hydroxide reagent containing an effective amount of soluble organic oxidation promoter itself capable of oxidation and an amount of mercaptides sufficient to protect said . promoter to extract heavy mercaptans and to produce a fouled reagent containing heavy mercaptides, introducing light mercaptans into said fouled reagent in an amount sufficient to ensure substantially complete oxidation of said heavy mercaptides to disulfides whilst oxidizing a portion of said light mercaptides during regeneration and to retain sufficient mercaptides comprising substantially only light mercaptides to protect said soluble organic oxidation promoter after regeneration, regenerating said fouled reagent by passing oxygen-containing oxidizing gas there-through to oxidize substantially all of said heavy mercaptides and a portion of said light mercaptides to disulfides whilst retaining an amount of mercaptides comprising substantially only light mercaptides sufficient to protect said promoter, and separating said disulfides to obtain a lean reagent containing a protective amount of mercaptan sulfur comprising substantially only light mercaptides.”
In lay language, the invention in substance is an improvement in the art of treating hydrocarbon oils with an aqueous alkali metal hydroxide reagent for the purpose of removing mercaptans
from the oil. The fouled or “fat” reagent, which contains an organic oxidation promoter or catalyst, is regenerated for recycle by-passing an oxidizing gas through it, which oxidizes the mercaptides to disulfides which may be separated from the reagent. A certain amount of mercaptans must be retained in the reagent during regeneration in order to prevent loss of the organic oxidation promoter, which is itself capable of oxidation. Mercaptans are classified as “heavy” and “light” mercaptans, according to molecular weight It is known that the light mercaptans have a higher partition or distribution coefficient than the heavy mercaptans, ■ that is, they are more easily extracted from the gasoline by the treating solution; that the light mercaptans have a correspondingly lower re-entry value than the heavy mercaptans, that is, they re-enter
the gasoline from the regenerated treating solution less readily than the heavy mercaptans; and that the heavy mercaptans in general oxidize more readily than the light mercaptans. There is an accord among the parties that the new feature of the interference count, in lay language, is the adding of light mercaptans to a fouled treating solution containing predominantly heavy mercaptans so that substantially all of the heavy mercaptides may be oxidized and removed therefrom during regeneration, while enough light mercaptides remain unoxidized to protect the promoter from oxidation. Such an improvement is important from an economic standpoint, since it permits removal of substantially all the heavy mercaptides and protects the oxidation promoter from loss by oxidation through the retention of only light mercaptans, which will re-enter the gasoline less readily from the regenerated treating solution.
The parties are agreed that priority of invention should be awarded to the party who was either the first both to conceive and to reduce the invention to practice or, in lieu thereof, was the first to conceive the invention and was proceeding with reasonable' diligence to a reduction to practice from a time just prior to the time his opponent entered the field up to the completion of his own reduction, actual or constructive.
The respective conception dates now claimed by the parties are: Cauley, March 15, 1943; Zublin, October 25, 1943; and Bond, January 26, 1944. The respective dates of constructive reduction to practice, through filing of the patent applications, are: Bond, March 4, 1944; Cauley, April 6, 1944; and Zublin, April 15, 1944. None of the parties rely in this action on an actual reduction to practice.
The Board of Interference Examiners in its final decision found that Cauley, had failed to establish March 15, 1943, as his conception date and restricted him to April 6, 1944, for conception and reduction to practice; that Zublin had proved October 25, 1943', and Bond had proved January 26, 1944, as their conception dates; but held that Bond was entitled to the patent because he first reduced to constructive practice and Zublin was found to be lacking in diligence from December 3, 1943, to February 7, 1944.
The plaintiff in any interference proceeding under § 4915 has the heavy burden of overcoming the decision of the Patent Office “by testimony which in character and amount carries thorough conviction.”
On the record in this case, the court is convinced that the right of Pure Oil to the patent issued, has been overcome by evidence which in character and amount carries thorough conviction, and that, if the count be patentable, Socony is entitled to the patent. ■ ;
Cauley bases his alleged conception date on a memorandum of March 15, 1943, to Mr. L. T. Doiron, chief chemist at Socony’s East St. Louis refinery, and an accompanying drawing, entitled “Proposal C,” of a suggested modification of the East St. Louis plant.
The memorandum does not expressly state that it is proposed .that light mercaptans ¡be added' to ' a fouled treating solution containing heavy mercaptans before regeneration by oxidation, so that substantially all of the heavy mercaptans may be extracted while enough light mercaptans remain unoxidized to protect the catalyst from oxidation; but the diagram of “Proposal C” shows fouled treating solution from a vapor phase cracked gasoline, which would contain a predominant amount of light mercaptans, combined with the fouled treating solution from straight run gasoline, which would contain a predominant amount of heavy mercaptans, and regeneration together of the fouled treating solution from the two phases, the regenerated treating solution being thereafter divided and returned to the two phases for treatment of furthér gasoline. Thus, while no express statement of the invention is made, the diagram pictures
a practical application of the principle of the invention.
Although the diagram includes a caustic prewash settler, which would remove some of the light mercaptans from the vapor phase cracked gasoline, so that some of the light mercaptans would be removed from the gasoline and discarded with the first stage prewash solution, the purpose of the prewash was to remove hydrogen sulfide and a portion of the light mercaptans would remain in the fouled reagent from the vapor phase gasoline which was combined with the fouled reagent from the straight run gasoline.
The memorandum and diagram were prepared by 'Cauley at the East St. Louis refinery, where he had been sent at the request of East St. Louis personnel for the purpose of assisting them in certain problems being encountered in their sodium cresylate treating operation and to discuss the application of the caustic tannin process to their operations. At that time the East St. Louis refinery was treating Illinois crude oils which contained varying amounts of heavy mercaptans.
From about June, 1942, to about February, 1943, Cauley, under the direction of Dr. John Happel, had been engaged in experiments on mercaptan extraction which resulted in’ T.A.C. Report GPG-1, dated September 30, 1943, and released by the Petroleum Industry War Council under date of October 21,-1943, to members of the petroleum industry as a restricted bulletin, entitled “The Tannic Acid Sweetening Process,”
describing a new process developed by So-cony for the treatment of gasolines and combining mercaptan removal with regeneration of treating solutions by air blowing in the presence of an alkali-soluble oxidation catalyst. Doctor Happel testified that Cauley worked on the GPG-1 project under his general supervision, that they collaborated on the general description of the processes and summary in the report, discussed the results of Cauley’s work together, and that it would be difficult to say where one left off and the other began, except that Cauley performed all the experimental work, upon which Happel relied, and that the tables appearing in the report were the work of Cauley alone. Tables in GPG-1 show the minimum mercaptan sulfur concentrations required for protection of the oxidation catalyst and the variance in the regeneration rates of different mercaptans. When Cauley went to the East St. Louis plant in March, 1943, he therefore approached the problem there not only with a wide general knowledge of mercaptan extraction processes and .the use of organic oxidation promoters, but with the specific knowledge of the relative rates of oxidation of the different mercaptans later incorporated in GPG-1.
Cauley testified that the purpose of mixing the two spent solutions was to get an improved type of regeneration which would give better extraction efficiency on the raw straight run gasoline, and that he discussed the proposal with the witness Ferguson at the time it was made. Mr. Ferguson, who was manager of the light oil treating department in the East St. Louis refinery, which extracted mercaptans from gasoline, and who was faced with the problem of modifying the existing plant for efficient treatment of varying crude oils with a heavy mercaptan content, testified that Cauley fully disclosed to him the purpose of the proposed modification, including the invention stated in the interference count.
“A complete conception, as defined in an issue of priority of invention, is matter of fact, and must be clearly established by proof. The conception of the invention consists in the complete performance of the mental part of the inventive act. All that remains to be accomplished, in order to perfect the act or instrument, belongs to the department of construction, not invention. It is therefore the formation, in the mind of the inventor, of a definite and permanent idea of the complete
and operative invention, as it is thereafter to be applied in practice, that constitutes an available conception within the meaning of the patent law.”
Inasmuch as there must be some objective evidence of the inventor’s conception, “a priority of conception is established when the invention is made sufficiently plain to enable those skilled in the art to understand it.”
The testimony of 'Cauley and Ferguson as to the completion of Cauley’s disclosure of his conception in their discussion of “Proposal C” is far more persuasive than the combination of oral and written evidence on which the Board of Interference Examiners made its award of January 26, 1944, as Bond’s conception date. Cauley was a man who had done a great deal of prior experimental work on mercaptan removal, was the originator not later than February, 1943, of the data on relative oxidation rates of various mercaptans subsequently incorporated in GPG-1, and went to the East St. Louis refinery to deal with the specific problem of improving mercaptan extraction in crude oils containing predominantly heavy mercaptans. His testimony as to his disclosure is corroborated by the memorandum of March 15, 1943, with its attached diagram, as well as by the testimony of Ferguson. Ferguson’s testimony is credible. He was manager of the refinery department which treated gasoline to extract mercaptans; he was the man faced with the problem Cauley was called upon to solve; he saw Cauley make a rough working sketch of “Proposal C”; he saw the memorandum to Doiron and the finished drawing of the proposed modification at or about the time they were prepared; he was familiar with the general methods then in use for removal of mercaptans; it would be natural for Cauley to explain and discuss his suggestions with Ferguson; and it would he more natural for Ferguson to remember the substance of' their discussions than for him to forget it. His testimony as to the purpose of Cauley’s trip to East St. Louis is supported by contemporaneous written memoranda.
In a supplemental brief, Shell argues strongly that Socony failed to reduce to practice, although it attempted to do so in November, 1943, at a pilot plant in Vernon, California, and that this shows lack of conception on the part of Cauley at that time. In answer to Shell’s argument, it should be noted, first, that none of the parties introduced in the de novo proceeding in this court the evidence before the Patent Office on the issue of actual reduction to practice by Socony, and, second, that there is nothing in the record which shows actual reduction to practice by any of the parties. Thus, all this court has before it is a conclusion in the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the Patent Office that Cauley had failed to establish actual reduction to practice, without the evidence on which the conclusion was based. The decision, however, indicates that much of the evidence which was offered by Cauley in support of the alleged actual reduction to practice, the Board held inadequate on the ground of hearsay. Further, a memorandum of November 9, 1943, to D. R. Lamont of Socony from Myron J. Burkhard, Socony’s patent attorney in New York, makes a full written disclosure of the invention by Cauley.
This court is aware of the generally unsatisfactory nature of oral testimony as to prior unpatented disclosures which are set up as anticipation.
However, from Cauley’s memorandum of March 15, 1943, to Doiron, its accompanying dia
gram of “Proposal C,” as supplemented by the oral- tesfi'mony of the witnesses Cauley and Ferguson,-and with the background of Cauley’s work on the GBG-1 project, the court finds' that Socony has proved March 15. 1943, as Cauley’s conception date. This, finding does not overrule a Patent Office finding on the same evidence, since the court has before it much additional evidence' not introduced before the Board of Interference Examiners. Further, since the Board took the view that Cauley had abandoned the conception date of March 15, 1943, alleged in his preliminary statement, because the matter was not urged in his brief for final hearing, and that he was "“apparently” content to rest his case on a claim of actual reduction to practice, the Board’s, statement as to Cauley’s conception date may be considered in the nature of dictum.
The' court finds that Shell -has -proved Zublin’s conception date as October 25, 1943. , . ■ -
The court finds that Pure Oil’s evidence of disclosure of Bond’s invention on January 26, 1944, at a conference with Messrs. Lang, Henderson, and Ross of Pure Oil, is unsatisfactory. The original application of Pure Oil was filed by Bond' and one Nelson B. Russell as co-inventors, on the theory that it was based on Disclosure 4-2 of January 17, 1944.
Thereafter, as the result of a laboratory conference on May 27 or 28, 1946, at which it was decided to amend the application to make Bond the sole inventor, a disclaimer- was obtained from Russell, dated May 27, 1946. Another disclaimer by Russell was obtained January '20, 1953. The evidence as to why Russell was dropped as co-inventor is conflicting and confusing.
However, as late
as December, 1952, Bond testified in a deposition that hé and RuSSell were joint inventors of the subject matter of the disclosure- contained " in :the - interference count!
This evidence was not before the Patent Office. Further, Pure Oil’s attor-1
ney, Lang, who was present at the January 26 conference when Bond’s invention is claimed to have been “evolved”, states in a memorandum that the improvement of the interference count is a deduction which would be obvious to one skilled in the aft from a reading of Disclosure, 4 — 2, together with the report of the January 26 conference.
This memorandum further states that the interference count is based on the invention in Disclosure 4-2 and that Disclosure 4-4 deals with an entirely different concept. On the basis of Bond’s own testimony, confirmed by the statements of Lang, the court finds that Russell was Bond’s co-inventor, which fact is not changed by Russell’s disclaimers; and that Bond and Russell probably conceived their invention on or about January 17, 1944, at which time a partial disclosure was made in Disclosure 4-2.
Although the evidence before this court may show a lack of diligence on the part of Cauley and Socony from Cauley’s conception until Shell’s letter of October 30, 1943,
prodded Socony into investigating just what Cauley had done,
since Socony’s conception and constructive reduction to practice both antedated those of Shell, it is unnecessary to consider Shell’s application further.
As between Socony and Pure Oil, the court finds there was no lack of diligence on the part of Socony after Socony became aware in November, 1943, that Cauley had conceived the invention here involved. It was testified by Socony’s New York patent attorney, Burkhard, that he discussed the matter promptly with Cauley
and that it was determined that an inquiry should be made at the East St. Louis refinery to make sure 'Cauley was the sole inventor. The re
port of March 15, 1943, and drawing of “Proposal C,” which constitute the tangible evidence of Cauley’s conception, were prepared during his trip to East St. Louis, where he was in contact with men likewise skilled in the art, who might well have collaborated with him in originating “Proposal C.” Good faith required an investigation as to who, in fact, originally conceived the idea.
In this court’s view, Socony’s delay demonstrated good faith rather than lack of diligence.
It is true, as Pure Oil points out, that Cauley was working at the Socony laboratories in Brooklyn, New York, during the period including October, 1943, to- April, 1944, and was available to Burkhard. However, confirmation of the fact that Cauley was the sole inventor could be obtained only from those at the East St. Louis plant at the time of the conception. Common sense indicated the practicality of an investigation on the scene rather than attempting to make such a determination on the basis of correspondence or telephone conversations, and such an investigation was made at the earliest practicable date in the light of existing conditions.
In 1943 and 1944 the United States was engaged in a great war, and the members of the petroleum industry were concentrating their efforts on providing the sinews of war, particularly aviation gasoline. The different plants of Socony were spread across the continent. While the need for visiting these plants existed in wartime as well as in peace, the government demanded that travel be curtailed to a minimum, and Socony made every effort to comply. It was therefore determined, early in November, 1943, that Burkhard should make the investigation as to Cauley’s inventorship when he went to the East St. Louis plant in February, while on a tour of the various refineries following a “manufacturing group meeting” which had already been scheduled to begin on February 14, 1944, in Kansas' City. Socony’s delay in preparation of the Cauley patent application from November, 1943, to the end of February, 1944, was therefore not due to any lack of diligence, but' was directly attributable to the wartime restriction on travel, a circumstance over which neither Cauley nor Socony had any control. This is not a case where the applicant is heard to1 claim his lack of diligence should be excused merely because of the existence of a war which in no way affected his activities.
“There is no hard and fast rule by which to determine the question of diligence. Each case must depend upon its own circumstances.”
“The diligence required is not extraordinary. It needs to be only reasonable under the circumstances of the case; nor does it ‘involve uninterrupted effort nor the concentration’ of all the applicant’s energies upon the single enterprise.”
The patent application was prepared by Burkhard for Cauley within a reasonable time after his return from East St. Louis to New York. Under the extraordinary circumstances prevailing during the crucial period in this case (shortly before January 26, 1944, to April 6, 1944),. the court finds Cauley and Socony were not guilty of any lack of diligence.
For the foregoing reasons the court finds that, if the interference count be held patentable, Socony is entitled to the patent on the basis of Cauley’s priority of conception.
While counsel were unanimous in the view that patentability is not an issue in this case, the court raised the issue during the course of the trial. It has been held
that in actions under R.S. §; 4-915 growing out of interference proceedings in the Patent Office wherein a patent has issued to one of several applicants, the question of patent-ability, when raised by any of the parties, is an issue which must be considered and determined by the court.
Even though the parties to an action under § 4915 are willing to ignore the question of patentability and to litigate merely the question of priority, the court cannot overlook the question of patentability, since, no adjudication can be made in favor of any applicant unless his alleged invention is a patentable one.
Inasmuch as the court finds that Socony is entitled to priority rather than Pure Oil, the issue of patentability must be determined in this case.
There were introduced in evidence certain publications over the period from 1935 to 1940
which show that a great deal of progress had been made at that time in processes for mercaptan extraction, and particularly the knowledge of the re-entry values of mercaptans. The Happel and Cauley paper, T.A.C. Report GPG-1,
the data for which was completed in February, 1943, deals with a process for treating gasoline containing mercaptans with an aqueous alkali metal hydroxide reagent containing an effective amount of solub
e organic oxidation promoter, itself capable of oxidation, for the purpose of removing the mercaptans, and regeneration of the fouled reagent by air-blowing. It further discloses that a certain amount of mercaptans must be retained in the reagent during regeneration in order to prevent loss of the organic oxidation promoter,
and that heavy mercaptans generally oxidize more readily than light mercaptans. Tables I, II, and III deal with the regeneration rates of various mercaptans in different treating solutions, and. Table V gives the minimum mercaptan sulfur concentrations required for protection of the regeneration catalyst. As stated earlier, the report was released as a restricted document to the oil industry by the Petroleum Industry War . Council at a time when every effort was being made to speed up production of gasoline.
Patents have been obtained by Happel and Cauley on a number of the disclosures included in GPG-1,
but none of these include the information that the heavier mercaptans generally oxidize more readily than the light mercaptans in regeneration of fouled treating solutions. Doctor Happel testified that he had never seen any source of information other than Cauley’s tables in GPG-1 on the relative rates of regeneration of light and heavy mercaptans; that he might have seen some papers based on this data, but he had not seen any other original data. There was no evidence presented that there was prior original data on the subject.
The only two expert witnesses whose testimony on the issue of patentability is included in the record before this court are Doctor Happel and Dr. Vladimir A. Kalichevsky. Doctor Happel, in response to specific questions put by the court, testified that one skilled in the art, with the information contained in GPG-1 could arrive at the invention set forth in the interference count. Dr. Kalichevsky stated in his deposition that GPG-1 contains data from which, the count may be deduced, and explained how it might be deduced from such data.
The evidence showed that Bond, Pure Oil’s inventor, had seen GPG-1 and discussed it with Russell at about January 17, 1944, the date Bond and Russell made the first partial disclosure of the invention embodied in their Disclosure 4 — 2. Shell’s inventor, Zublin, died in the Spring of 1945, prior to the interference proceedings in the Patent Office. Shell’s witness Gratama, manager of its patent department, in his deposition testified that Socony had sent to Shell several applications prepared by So-cony on the solutizer tannate process; that' he did not remember ■ whether he had received GPG-1 before October 25, 1943, Zublin’s conception date; and that he did not know whether Shell had done any work on the respective rates of oxidation of different mercaptans or the source of the figures mentioned in Zublin’s application. However, Zublin’s Tables I apd II, appearing at page 6 of his application, are a partial reproduction of Cauley’s Tables I and V at pages 4 and 5 of GPG-1. Although Zublin did not include all the. figures in Cauley’s Tables I and V, the columns used by Zublin are, figure for figure, identical with Cauley’s tables. It is inconceivable that this could have occurred if Zublin had not had GPG-1 at hand:
It is significant that the conception date claimed by Cauley in March, 1943, is shortly after he completed the work which resulted in GPG-1, and the conception dates claimed by Zublin and Bond are, respectively, shortly after release of GPG-1 and a few months thereafter, at which time the information in GPG-1 was available to the petroleum industry. This raises an ■ inference that the invention was a natural deduction from that information. The fact is that three persons skilled in the art— Cauley, Zublin, and Bond — knowing that a’ minimum amount of mercáptan sulfur must be retained to protect the organic catalyst from oxidation and that the lower re-entry value of light mercaptans made their retention in the regenerated treating solution preferible to retention of heavy mercaptans, within a relatively short time after the information in GPG-1 as to the varying oxidation rátes of mercaptans was available to them, reached the conclusion that it would be á useful improvement to add light mercaptans in regenerating a fouled treating solution containing predominantly heavy mercaptans. This conclusion was not the result of long toil and experimenta
tion,
but rather a natural advance in the art. > ...
A logical step forward to be considered by anyone experimenting in the field, which accomplishes no new and unexpected result, although of economic importance, is not a patentable improvement.
For anticipation, it is not necessary to show that the inventor had actual knowledge of the prior art.
There is no invention where prior scientific publications reveal knowledge sufficient to teach men skilled in the field or to suggest to them what is claimed to be invention.
As to Zublin and Bond, therefore, the invention would not.have been patentable, since prior inventions and scientific publications disclosed sufficient knowledge to suggest the invention to men reasonably skilled in the art.
As-to Cauley, a different question is presented, since the contribution in the field of mercaptan extraction which, added to other known principles, suggested the invention of the interference count, namely, the varying oxidation rates of the different mercaptans, was the work of Cauley. The question therefore arises whether the interference count is sufficiently distinct from prior patents issued to Happel and Cauley not to result in duplication and to warrant issuance of a separate patent.
Since it was the view of the Patent Office that the subject of the interference count is patentable, the Patent Office must have determined that the disclosure is not included in any prior patent issued to Happel and Cauley. The strong presumption of the correctness of the decision of the Patent Office as to patentability must be overcome by evidence that it is clearly erroneous.
There is no such evidence in the instant case.
For the foregoing reasons, the court holds that the interference count is patentable as to -Cauley, and therefore in Civil Action No: 2776-51 Socony is entitled to a judgment for issuance - of a patent. The complaint in Civil Action No. 2434-51 will be dismissed.
Counsel will present promptly appropriate findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order in each case.