Thompson v. Pettis

44 F.2d 420, 18 C.C.P.A. 755
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketPatent Appeal 2505, 2506
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 F.2d 420 (Thompson v. Pettis) 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
Thompson v. Pettis, 44 F.2d 420, 18 C.C.P.A. 755 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

LENROOT, Associate Judge.

This is an interference ease and comes before us on cross-appeals of the parties.

The interference involves certain patents granted to Thompson and an application filed by Pettis, the latter copying into his application sixteen of the various claims which had been patented to Thompson. The interference, as declared, involved sixteen counts. Four of those were eliminated upon a motion to dissolve the interference, and it was reformed, the remaining counts becoming respectively counts numbered 1 to 12, inclusive, which are now before the court. All of the counts relate specifically to molds for making castings, especially brake shoes.

Thompson took testimony, but Pettis did not, and he relies upon the filing of his application in the Patent Office.

Upon final hearing, the examiner of interferences awarded to Thompson priority of invention as to counts 2, 3, 5, and 12, and awarded priority of invention to Pettis as to counts 1, 4, and 6 to 11, inclusive.

Upon cross-appeals from the decision of the Examiner of Interferences, the Board of Appeals affirmed his decision as to counts 3, 5, and 6 to 12, inclusive, and reversed it as to counts 1, 2, and 4, awarding priority of invention to Thompson as to counts 1 and 4, and to Pettis as to count 2.

Thompson appeals from the decision awarding priority of invention to Pettis as to counts 2 and 6 to 11, inclusive, and Pettis appeals from the decision awarding priority of invention to Thompson as to counts 1, 3, 4, 5, and 12.

We will first consider those counts upon which the Board of Appeals and the Examiner of Interferences concurred in awarding priority of invention -to the respective parties. These are counts 3, 5, and 6 to 12, inclusive. Of these, as above stated, Thompson was awarded priority as "to counts 3, 5, and 12, and Pettis was awarded priority as to counts 6 to 11, inclusive.

*421 The well established rule is that concurring decisions of the Patent Office tribunals upon questions of fact will not be reversed unless manifestly wrong. Pengilly v. Copeland (Cust. & Pat. App.) 40 F.(2d) 995, and cases therein cited.

Count 3 reads as follows: “A mold for casting a brake shoe, and comprising a metal drag and a metal cope having a mold cavity therein, said cope having an opening extending therethrough and communicating with the mold cavity, a sand plug seated in said opening and forming a part of the top wall of the mold cavity, and means carried by the plug and projecting into the mold cavity for securing in place in the cavity the parts to be embedded in the shoe casting.”

As to this count, both the Board of Appeals and the Examiner of Interferences found that Thompson was first to- conceive and the first to reduce to practice the invention covered thereby. Pettis claims, however, that there is no testimony that Thompson ever reduced to practice that feature of the count calling for “means carried by the plug and projecting into the mold cavity for securing in place in the cavity the parts to be embedded in the shoe casting.” Pettis specifically contends that a wire extending through the sand plug referred to in the count, but not supported by it, is not “carried by the plug,” and that Thompson’s test was of that character.

In view of the rule that claims once granted must be given the broadest interpretation that their terms will reasonably permit, we think that a wire passed through a sand plug, as described by Thompson in bis testimony, responds to that part of the count-requiring “means carried by the plug.”

Counts 5 and 12 each have the same requirement of “means carried by said plug,” and what we have said with reference to count 3 upon this point is equally applicable to counts 5 and 12. With this construction of the counts, we cannot say that the findings of the tribunals of the Patent Office awarding priority of invention to Thompson were clearly wrong.

As to counts 6 to 11, inclusive, as to which priority of invention was awarded to Pettis by both the Board of Appeals and tile Examiner of Interferences, Thompson contends that Pettis has no right to make the counts, and Pettis contends that there is no testimony that Thompson reduced the invention to practice prior to Ilia (Pettis’) filing date, and no testimony establishing that prior to that filing date Thompson was diligent in reducing to practice the invention covered by the counts.

Count 6 is illustrative of this group, and reads as follows: “A mold for making brake shoes and other castings, comprising a metal drag member and a metal cope member and having a mold cavity therein, a refractory section seated in one of said members and having a face thereof forming a wall surface of the mold cavity, and a rib formed integrally with the. metal of said member and disposed at the parting lino of said member to protect an edge of said face forming a wall surface of the mold cavity.”

As to Thompson’s contention that Pettis has no right to make the counts, we find no error in the holding of the Patent Office tribunals to the contrary. We think the words “parting line” are descriptive of the construction shown by Pettis’ disclosure as well as that shown by Thompson.

As to lack of diligence in reducing to- practice the inventions covered by counts 6 to 11, inclusive, we agree with the tribunals of the Patent Office that the testimony shows that Thompson did not reduce the invention to practice until after the date on which Pettis filed his application, and that there is no evidence that Thompson was diligent in reducing his invention to practice at the time that Pettis entered the field, which, for the purposes of this case-, was his filing date, April 19, 1923.

Thompson contends that the Board of Appeals made an error of law in its decision wherein it stated that “ * * * the elapsed time between the conception of Thompson of February 19, 1923, and the reduction to practice in October, 1923, indicates lack of diligence on the part of Thompson.” The mistake of law complained of is the implied holding that Thompson was chargeable with diligence from February 19,1923, to the date of his reduction to practice, whereas, as a matter of law, he was chargeable with diligence only from immediately prior to the time of Pettis’ entry into the field, April 19, 3923, and continuing thereafter to reduction to practice, actual or constructive. This contention is well founded, for the law is well settled that, where one is the first to conceive, but the last to reduce to- practice, ho is chargeable with diligence only from immediately prior to the time the subsequent inventor entered the field. Beidler v. Caps (Cust. & Pat. App.) 36 F.(2d) 122.

*422 So here, if Thompson was, immediately prior to April 19, 1923, the date of Pettis’ entry into the field, exercising diligence in reducing the invention or inventions covered by counts 6 to 11, inclusive, to practice, and was reasonably diligent thereafter until his actual reduction to practice, he is entitled to prevail, even though he may not have been diligent between the date of his conception and immediately prior to Pettis’ entry into the field on April 19, 1923.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F.2d 420, 18 C.C.P.A. 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-pettis-ccpa-1930.