Wilson v. Goldmark

172 F.2d 575, 36 C.C.P.A. 849, 80 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 508, 1949 CCPA LEXIS 274
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1949
DocketNo. 5499
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 172 F.2d 575 (Wilson v. Goldmark) 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
Wilson v. Goldmark, 172 F.2d 575, 36 C.C.P.A. 849, 80 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 508, 1949 CCPA LEXIS 274 (ccpa 1949).

Opinion

Johnson, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in an interference proceeding from a decision of the Board of Interference Examiners awarding priority of invention to appellee on each of the four counts involved.

The interference concerns an application of John C. Wilson deceased), Serial No. 355,547, filed September 6,1940, and an application of appellee, Serial No. 355,840, filed September 7,1940.

Count 1 is considered sufficiently illustrative. It reads as follows:

1. An interlaced multiple-color television scanning system comprising, means for periodically scanning the image to be transmitted or reconstructed in frames of n interlaced fields, and means for periodically changing the color of illumination associated with successive fields not greater than m times per field and in ■a series of m colors, the ratios of n to m and of m to n both being nonintegral so that corresponding fields of successive frames are associated with illumination of different colors.

The invention in issue is for an interlaced multiple-color television scanning system comprising a plurality of interlaced field scansions together with a plurality of primary colors in a manner and relation such that reproduction of the images is secured with good color rendition and good detail without requiring the use in transmission of an excessive band width.

The party Wilson died before the interference was declared, and proceedings are prosecuted by his administrator, Charles E. Dean, in behalf of Wilson’s assignee, the Hazeltine Corporation (also variously referred to as the Hazeltine Service Corporation, Hazeltine Research Corporation, and the Hazeltine Electronics Corporation). For convenience the name of Wilson will be used in referring to the appellant hereafter in our discussion of the case.

Wilson was the senior party and Goldmark the junior party, so on the latter rests the burden of proof.

The Board of Interference Examiners held that Wilson conceived the invention in issue on March 25, 1940, and that he had a constructive reduction to practice through the filing of his application [851]*851for a patent on September 6, 1940; tbat appellee established conception of the invention on May 28,1940, and reduction to practice prior to September 6, 1940. The holding of the board was that Wilson’s case must fail for a lack of adequate and satisfactory showing of diligence, and the board awarded priority of invention of the subject matter in issue to the appellee.

Appellant does not traverse the board’s finding that Goldmark is entitled to May 28,1940, as the date of conception, or that Goldmark actually reduced to practice prior to appellant’s filing date of September 6,1940.

The record shows that appellee reduced the invention in issue to practice on May 28, 1940. This is shown by the testimony of Gold-mark and by his notebook entries of that date, as well as by the testimony of Mr. Adrian N. Murphy, a vice president of the Columbia Broadcasting System, and the testimony of Mr. John N. Dyer, a colleague of Goldmark’s in the television laboratory at Columbia Broadcasting System.

The pertinent portions of Goldmark’s testimony are as follows:

Q. 131. Dr. Goldmark, will you look at the entry appearing in your notebook at page 12059, under date of May 28,1940, and explain if you will the significance and meaning of the statements and, as well, the sketches and computations as they appear on that page? And, of course, first I will ask you to state whether or not you made that entry on May 28,1940?
A. That entry was made on May 28,1940. On that date, as shown on the top of the page, I realized that the triple interlacing unnecessarily reduced the available definition for given band widths, in so far as not each line of the picture is covered in all colors. So I proposed double interlacing and three colors, retaining the 120'fields per second, * * *
* * * :¡t * * *
This scheme was immediately tried out, using the values for the synchronizing generator as shown on the bbttom of the page, and this scheme was found to be most satisfactory with 343 lines, because this gave maximum utilization of the 4.25 megacycle video band. By the observers, and by myself, this scanning scheme was found to be most satisfactory and was retained from there on.
Q. 132. I show you the drawings which accompany your application here involved in interference, Goldmark Exhibit 1, filed September 7, 1940, Serial No. 335,840, and direct your attention to Fig. 2 thereof, and I will ask you to compare that with the sketch appearing at the top of page 12059 of yo.ur notebook, immediately under the phrase “double interlacing required as follows and tried out.”
A. Yes, this drawing, Fig. 2 of the patent application referred to is substantially the same as the sketch shown at page 12059 of my notebook.
Q. 136. Do you recall demonstrating the operation of the equipment in accordance with the mode indicated at page 12059 of your notebook to any of your associates in the laboratory?
A. Yes, I do.
Q. 137. Can you name the gentlemen to whom you have referred?
A. Dr. Piore, John Hollywood, John Dyer, and Adrian Murphy.
[852]*852Q. 152. Now, Doctor, will you keep in mind the arrangement that you have described at page 12059 of your notebook under date of May 28, 1940, Goldmark Exhibit 14 for identification, and tell me on what day that arrangement was actually operated in an apparatus and demonstrated to others? And I call your particular attention in that connection to the words “tried out” which appear on your notebook page of that day.
A. It was tried out on May 28th.
Q. 153. Now, can you characterize the results obtained with the arrangement described at page 12059 on the apparatus as you have described it with respect to the appearance of the image and the presence or absence of color flicker?
A. The scheme shown on page 12059, namely double interlacing, 120 fields per second, showed freedom from flicker and fairly good interlacing and seemed like the most satisfactory solution obtained thus far.

Tbe pertinent portions of Mr. Adrian Murpby’s testimony are as follows:

Q. 84. Now was there any demonstration made to you, Mr. Murphy, between the date which you have stated, which is some time in March, 1940, and the date which you say was July 30, 1940, at the time the color television development of Dr. Goldmark was exhibited to Chairman Ely?
A. Yes. There was a demonstration made to me by Dr. Goldmark at the end of May, 1940.
Q. 85. How do. you fix that date, Mr. Murphy?
A. On May 29th I travelled to Washington with my then direct superior, Paul W.

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Bluebook (online)
172 F.2d 575, 36 C.C.P.A. 849, 80 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 508, 1949 CCPA LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-goldmark-ccpa-1949.