White v. Syvertsen

46 F.2d 364, 18 C.C.P.A. 897, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 226, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1931
DocketNo. 2514
StatusPublished

This text of 46 F.2d 364 (White v. Syvertsen) 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
White v. Syvertsen, 46 F.2d 364, 18 C.C.P.A. 897, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 226, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 59 (ccpa 1931).

Opinions

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in an interference proceeding from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the decision of the examiner of interferences awarding priority of invention to appellee, Harald Syvertsen.

The invention relates to an improvement in hydraulic turbines “ of the type wherein water is delivered to the runner past an annular series of guide vanes * * * simultaneously adjustable about, parallel axes * * * adapted to direct the water tangentially toward the runner blades.” It involves the idea of arranging stop-pins so that they project into cored-out or open spaces in the guide-vanes, in such' position as to permit free motion of the guide vanes-during normal operation, and, in the event of accidental breakage of the connection between the guide vanes and the shifting ring— [898]*898the means connecting 'the guide vanes to the operating mechanism— prevent them moving beyond a predetermined position and striking the vanes of the runner.

We quote counts 1 and 2 of the five counts involved in the issue:

Count 1. The combination with a turbine and runner, of gate means mounted to have pivotal swinging operation and provided with an open space therein with opposite wall portions, and stop means secured to a part of the turbine and projecting into the open space of the gate means and concealed within the latter and operative with relation to said wall portions to limit the movement of the gate means in the event of breakage of the operating devices therefor.
Count 2. The combination with a ^turbine installation including a runner and pivoted gates having an end portion with walls of stop pin means extending into the gates between the said walls without interfering with the normal opening and closing movements of the latter but preventing abnormal free movement thereof relatively to the runner.

Appellee, Syvertsen, the senior party, filed his application on February 20, 1925, and a patent, No. 1570536, was issued to him on January 19, 1926.

, Appellant, White, the junior party, filed his application on May 27, 1926, more than four months after a patent had been issued to appellee. Accordingly, appellant had the burden of establishing priority of invention beyond a reasonable doubt.

Considerable testimony was introduced by the parties.

The tribunals below, in exhaustive opinions, in which the testimony is carefully analyzed and considered, concurred in holding that appellee conceived and disclosed the invention in 1919; that appellant conceived and disclosed the invention in September, 1924; that the evidence submitted bjr appellant was not sufficient to establish reduction to practice prior to appellee’s filing date; and that, as appellee was the first to conceive and reduce the invention to practice, he was entitled to an award of priority.

With reference to appellant’s claim that he reduced the invention .to practice, prior to appellee’s filing date, the examiner of interferences said:

During the latter part of 1924 two large units for tile Copco Plant of the California-Oregon Power Co. were built in the Allis-Chalmers plant, which units were assembled and inspected for shipment as early as the early part of February.
During the process of construction of these gates the turbine units were subjected to the certain shop tests consisting of manually swinging the gates from open to closed position very violently. This swinging was done beyond the normal open and closed position in order that the pins could be brought into action. There were no other tests of the invention within the knowledge «f Gross, who testified to the above-mentioned tests.
There appears to be considerable diversity of' opinion between the parties in interference as to the effectiveness of these shop tests, it being the view [899]*899of Wliite that such tests constitute a reduction to practice of the invention, while such a contention is opposed by Syvertsen, on the ground that such a test is not an ai>proximation to the action of the forces operating against these gates under normal working conditions.
It will be noted at this point that after the Copco units were installed no difficulties were experienced from the same. Whether this satisfactory operation on the part of the turbine shipped by the AUis-Chalmers Co. was due to the fact that the gates had never been moved to a position where the stops came into play or not is not clear.
It is believed by this tribunal that such shop tests do not constitute a reduction to practice of the invention. While the invention on its face may be considered simple in structure, the action of these gates when under the extreme hydraulic pressures and currents to which they are subjected is rather complex, and to violently swing the gates against the pins does not appeal sufficient approximation to the normal working conditions to which these gates would'be subjected as to constitute a reduction to practice. Theoretically calculating the water pressures and using a safety factor upon which factor the size of the stop is based can not be considered a reduction to practice.

However, the examiner of interferences did not base his decision entirely upon his holding that appellant had failed to reduce the invention to practice until after appellee’s filing date. But, assuming, as he did for the purposes of his decision, that appellant had successfully reduced the invention to practice, he held, after stating and analyzing the testimony pertaining thereto, that appellee was diligent from the time appellant entered the field — September, 1924 — until he reduced the invention to practice by filing his application on February 20,1925.

The Board of Appeals rested its decision squarely upon the proposition that appellant’s shop tests were not sufficient to demonstrate that the invention would function properly in actual use, and that he had not reduced the invention to practice prior to appellee’s filing date.

Counsel for appellant contends that the invention had been completed by an actual reduction to practice for the following reasons: First, the invention in issue was actually constructed and made a part of a hydraulic turbine, the stop pins being so arranged as to permit free motion of the guide vanes during normal operation; second, the stop pins, it is claimed, were designed by competent hydraulic engineers to withstand the strain of the forces produced by the great pressure and velocity of the water rushing past the guide vanes in actual use, although these forces could not be calculated with assured accuracy; third, the stop pins were tested in the shop by swinging the guide vanes violently against them.

It is conceded that the invention was not tested in actual operation of the turbines. In this connection, appellant testified as follows:

[900]*900X Q.- The stop pins, to be practically operative and useful for their intended purpose, would therefore need sufficient strength in the pins themselves and also in the securing of these pins in their sockets, would they not?
A. Yes .
*******
X Q.

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46 F.2d 364, 18 C.C.P.A. 897, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 226, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-syvertsen-ccpa-1931.