Torsten Hasselstrom and Malcolm C. Henry v. Blaine C. McKusick

324 F.2d 1013, 51 C.C.P.A. 1008
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 7032
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 324 F.2d 1013 (Torsten Hasselstrom and Malcolm C. Henry v. Blaine C. McKusick) 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
Torsten Hasselstrom and Malcolm C. Henry v. Blaine C. McKusick, 324 F.2d 1013, 51 C.C.P.A. 1008 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

*1014 WORLEY, Chief Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences, one member dissenting, awarding priority of invention in Interference No. 90,025 to Mc-Kusick, the senior party. 1 Hasselstrom and Henry, the junior party, 2 have appealed.

The subject matter is a process for irradiating ammonium acetate for conversion to and recovery of amino acids as defined by the single count:

1. A process for converting ammonium acetate into amino acids which comprises, irradiating ammonium acetate with ionizing radiation equivalent to at least about one million electron volts until a dosage of at least about 20 x 10° roentgen equivalent physical units have been absorbed, and subsequently recovering amino acids from the irradiated material.

McKusick took no testimony and is restricted to his filing date. Hasselstrom and Henry allege nine dates of actual reduction to practice, the earliest being January 3, 1956. Thus they took testimony to discharge their burden of proving priority by a preponderance of the evidence. The issue here is whether the board erred in finding that they failed in that respect.

The witnesses on behalf of Hasselstrom and Henry include the applicants themselves, and a Dr. Degering, all employees of the U. S. Army Quartermaster Research and Development Command; one David Francis, a technician employéd by the High Voltage Engineering Corporation, and one Brown Murr, Jr., an army G.I. assigned to work with Hasselstrom and Henry.

The background of this matter is substantially as follows:

In 1954 the Quartermaster Corps of the U. S. Army was assigned to investigate the use of ionizing radiation for food preservation. In particular Hasselstrom, head of the Organic Chemistry Laboratory of the Pioneering Research Division of the Quartermaster Corps, was directed to investigate the chemical action of ionizing radiation on organic compounds. He began that project by arbitrarily choosing organic compounds and observing what happened when they were subjected to irradiation.

The general procedure developed by the laboratory for having organic compounds irradiated was to fill “Mylar” polyester film bags with solutions of the compounds to be irradiated, seal and label each bag with the name of the contents and the irradiation dosage to which the bags were to be subjected. Degering would pick up the bags at the laboratory in Natick, Mass., where the work was done, and take them to Cambridge, Mass., where they were irradiated under his direction by Francis. After the irradiating process, Degering would return the samples to Natick where they were analyzed by Henry or Murr.

Late in the fall of 1955, at a conference attended by Hasselstrom, Henry, Murr and one or two other assistants, the idea of irradiating ammonium acetate for the purpose of obtaining amino acids was discussed. Sometime before December 20, 1955, polyethylene bags of aqueous ammonium acetate were prepared for irradiating in accordance with the established procedure at the laboratory. On December 20, 1955, Murr left on Christmas leave. When he returned on January 5, 1956, Henry showed Murr a page in Henry’s personal notebook which contained a small sample of the amino acid glycine, purportedly obtained from an irradiated sample of ammonium acetate. Identification of the glycine was performed by Henry during Murr’s absence. 3 On February 2, 1956, Henry determined the approximate quantities *1015 of amino acid obtained from irradiation of ammonium acetate. Thereafter, during March and April of 1956, Murr adapted an analytical procedure which was described in the literature 4 for the quantitative determination of amino acid. Between May 1 and July 20, 1956, Murr performed quantitative analyses of solutions of ammonium acetate taken from “Mylar” bags which had been marked for irradiation in accordance with the procedure at the laboratory. On July 20, 1956, Murr was separated from his command and left the laboratory permanently. The results he had obtained from his analyses of the ammonium acetate solutions to determine the amount of amino acid present were tabulated .and incorporated as a “Table” in an article printed in “Science” on February '22, 1957. 5 On May 14, 1957, McKusick filed his application. Hasselstrom and Henry filed October 10, 1957. This interference was declared February 3, 1959.

The members of the board carefully .analyzed the evidence but disagreed in their evaluation of that evidence. The majority noted seemingly conflicting testimony between Henry and Murr as to who gave the samples to Degering for irradiation, stating:

“ * * * Significantly, Henry testified that it was he who bagged the samples for irradiation and gave no testimony regarding Murr’s help. Also pertinent to this issue is the total absence of testimony by Murr regarding to whom he gave the .samples he prepared, to Henry or to Degering. Presumably, in view of Henry’s testimony, it was Henry who gave the samples which he and Murr prepared to Degering. ******
“ * * * it is a fair inference from the record that it was Henry who gave to Degering the samples that he and Murr prepared.

The statements by Henry to which the board referred are:

“Q. 37 How did Dr. Degering get this bag containing this ammonium acetate to irradiate?
“A. I would fill up the bags with the solutions of materials that I wanted to have irradiated. I would seal the bags myself, label them, put them in aluminum containers separated by cardboard and hand them to him in a single unit in this metal tray. Then when he got to the place in Cambridge, he would take each bag out, look on the bag to see what the dosage was and pass it under the accelerator beam.”

In evaluating that testimony we note that the questions immediately preceding Q. 37 had directed Henry’s attention to that page of his notebook containing the glycine sample, which page bears the date January 3, 1956. A further indication that the answer to Q. 37 is based on activities connected with that date lies in Henry’s response to the next three questions:

“Q. 38. And this solution was in one of these bags you gave him? [Referring to Degering.]
“A. That’s right. On several occasions I went with him and irradiated my own samples.
“Q. 39 Do you remember when you gave him that bag?
“A. No, I am not sure when this one you are referring to on January 3rd—
“Q. 40 Yes.
“A. I don’t know when he radiated [sic] that. It must have been on the date, whatever previous date that he went to Cambridge previous to 3 January.”

On cross examination Henry testified:

“XQ. 15 You ran blanks. Did Mr.

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324 F.2d 1013, 51 C.C.P.A. 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torsten-hasselstrom-and-malcolm-c-henry-v-blaine-c-mckusick-ccpa-1963.