274 F. 575 | 6th Cir. | 1921
Bill filed under R. S. § 4915 (Comp. St. § 9460), to procure for Clements the patent issued to Kirby May 23, 1916, No. 1,184,459. Clements and Kirby were contesting applicants in the Patent Office with reference to an improvement in vacuum cleaners, whereby the suction intake could be diverted from the regular nozzle to a more distant hose-connected nozzle. The primary elements of such a structure are the pump or fan chamber and the suction chamber. The two are divided by a partition having an opening. The suction chamber is provided with a suitable intake nozzle, and the pump chamber has a tangential outlet to the dust receptacle. By the suction effect of the pump, the dust is pulled through the intake nozzle suction chamber and the partition opening into the pump chamber, and is therefrom blown out to the dust receptacle. Each of the contesting applicants improved this old structure by making an opening in the outer shell of the suction chamber, directly opposite and registering with the partition opening, and inserting .through the outer shell opening and tightly into the partition opening an open-ended tube for a hose connection, whereby the suction pull was cut off entirely from the normal suction chamber,
It is quite obvious that the possible presence of the inserted tube is an essential part of this invention; for, without it, the invention did not exist. How this conception should be formulated is a matter of arbitrary rule; and while such rules are convenient or even necessary in the Patent Office practice, their application'ought not to go to such an extent as to divert the patent from the true inventor to another. When the matter of formulation is considered in connection with the structure here described, it appears that the Patent Office procedure forbade uniting in the same claim two elements which do not simultaneously co-operate, but which have alternative and successive use. Accordingly, it was required that the inserted hose tube should not be named as a positive element of the claims, but that the inventive thought should be expressed in terms of the basic structure adapted to receive the inserted tube. Whatever language is selected for this purpose, confusion at once arises. If it has the broadest meaning, referring to any construction having oppositely disposed openings into which such a tube miglii have been inserted, without regard to whether the desired transfer of function was accomplished, it at once is apparent that there can be no valid patent to either contestant, because so broad a construction would cover earlier structures. If it is confined to a precise adaptability- — which may be called the moderately broad construction— to receive such a particular tube in such a manner as to operate successfully for the purpose now desired, there might or might not be pat-entability, depending (perhaps) on whether any earlier such precise adaptability was analogously purposeful or merely accidental. If it is given the narrow meaning, implying that a suitable tube is present ready for use and that provision for changing is the essence of the invention, patentability is not challenged upon this record — though it is difficult to comprehend how there is substantial distinction between the optional insertion of the tube thereby implied and the actual presence of the tube as a named element in the combination. It is not easy to see why a claim should not have been permitted including both an element like this removable tube, which has an active function when it is in place, and an element like the suction chamber which co-operates with the tube to furnish its setting, although the chief function of the suction chamber is temporarily dormant. However that might be (a subject later mentioned), it is this confusion — -which later became worse confounded — which has caused the trouble in this case.
Clements was the senior applicant. His attorneys conceived that the inserted tube was an element of his invention, and drew claims upon this theory. They were rejected, and the examiner said:
“Applicant can only cover, in this application, such a construction, com-pleto in itself without any additions to or substructions from it, as adapts it to any desired class of work or to such classes of work as may be done by it by the mere changes of adjustment of the parts, without removing any of the parts or adding other parts or substituting one part for another.”
In the meantime, Kirby had come into the office, the structure of one of his drawings being substantially identical with Clements in the respects now involved. His claim which called for the suction chamber with its nozzle and the hose with its connection, was rejected as an aggregation. He then adopted, at the suggestion of the office, Clement’s claims 1 and 2, and an interference was declared with these two claims as the two counts of the issue. The parties both regarded the use of the substitutable hose connection, passing through the suction chamber and cutting it off, as the invention in controversy. Kirby’s preliminary statement (his pleading on the interference issues) claimed conception in May, 1911, followed by reduction to practice and filing of application on August 19, 1911. Clements claimed conception in October, 1910, reduction to practice in January, 1911, followed by application filed June 14, 1911. The proofs seem to show without question that Clements had an operative, experimental device in February, ordered castings in April, and made his first commercial machines as early as May, 1911. These embodied the alternative hose connection. Kirby testified that in September, 1910, he was manufacturing a vacuum cleaner which had the customary opening in the dividing wall between the suction chamber and pump chamber, and which had in the outer wall of the suction chamber and directly in line with tire partition opening, a removable cap; this removable cap being for the purpose of permitting access to the interior for cleaning purposes. Eater and about December, 1910, he made a hole in the cap and fastened therein a tube or suction hose and closed his suction chamber nozzle by a separate plug. He says:
“Then, later on, by extending this cap in far enough to reach the dividing wall, it automatically shut off the suction nozzle and connected the hose with the fan chamber. This idea of extending the cap in deeper was the thought that I had about the 1st of May, 1911.”
Obviously, upon the preliminary statements and this testimony and the conception of the meaning of the issue held by both parties, there was no escape from a decision in favor of Clements. Some testimony taken was said to have suggested to Kirby the question whether the issue ought not to be interpreted broadly enough to reach the construction made by him in September, 1910. Accordingly, he proved this
The interference itself then came on for hearing before the examiner. He first considered Kirby’s motion to amend and date back his preliminary statement, and denied it, both on account o f the delay and because the evidence which Kirby had taken was not sufficient to sustain his case, even upon the broad interpretation of the issue which he wished to have adopted. In substance, the examiner gave to the claim what we have called the moderately broad construction, and held that Kirby’s request to amend his statement was immaterial, since even with this relatively broader construction, Kirby must fail on the proofs — Kirby announcing that he did not care to take further proofs. Proceeding to the merits upon this moderately broad issue, the examiner awarded priority to Clements, upon jiroofs which seem to be too clear for controversy. On appeal, the Board took the third or narrowest view of the meaning of the issue, and observed that with the broadest view, which called merely for the existence of the two openings in general alignment, a patent must he refused, as the primary examiner had also held, because of earlier patents showing that general construction. The Board recommended that, after priority was determined, the successful applicant should be required to use a formulation including the removal tube as a positive element, in order that there might be no misunderstanding as to the .scope of the invention. Proceeding to the subject of priority, and with this view of the issue, the Board also affirmed the award of priority to Clements — as, indeed, it must.
Thereupon .Kirby, insisting that the broadest construction was the proper one and that the Board had held it unpatentable, asked that the matter be remanded to the primary examiner in order to redraft the issue so as to confine it to what was patentable. The Commissioner denied this application, for the reason that, when one construction of claims would make them unpatentable and another would make them valid, the latter construction is the one that should be adopted. Upon Kirby’s appeal from the decision of the Board denying the motion to amend and awarding priority to Clements, the Commissioner affirmed the Board. Pie held that the narrower construction confining the invention to a structure fitted for and intended for receiving the removable hose tube was the right construction; that the broadest one (and
“It is apparent that appellant’s motion to amend his preliminary statem'ent would have been granted, but for the interpretation placed upon the claim, and we are of the opinion that it should have been. His evidence very clearly establishes the fact that, several months prior to the earliest date which may be given the appellee, he manufactured and sold cleaners answering the requirements of the counts as we have construed them. The decision is therefore reversed and the case returned to the Patent Office for appropriate action.”
Thereupon the various tribunals of the Patent Office took the view that the interference had been finally decided by the Court of Appeals, and that an award of priority to.Kirby had been made by that court, and that a patent must issue to him, and not to Clements, containing the claims which formed the issues in the interference.. Clements moved that the claims be amended, so as to specify the narrow construction, and that priority be thereupon awarded to him. The Commissioner denied this motion upon the ground that the Court of Appeals decision was conclusive, both as to what was decided and as to what might. have been decided. Clements then moved to dissolve the interference upon the ground that under the broad construction the issue was un-patentable. The Commissioner refused to accept this view, holding again that the Patent Office had no further authority to consider the question of priority, and that there was no longer any existing interference. Clements then amended his application, inserting claims positively including the hose connection as an element. These claims were rejected on the interference record. Clements appealed to the Board, and the Board affirmed. Clements appealed to the Commissioner, and the Commissioner affirmed. In the meantime, and while this last appeal was pending before the Board, and on the 23d day of May, 1916, the patent issued to Kirby, containing the claims which had been in interference and five others, which included the removable tube as a positive element; and Clements, on June 16, 1916, filed this bill in the court below, under Revised Statutes, § 4915 (U. S. C. S. § 9460).
The parties made a stipulation that a copy of the interference record should be received in evidence, and, together with copies of patents and other proceedings, should constitute the entire record in the case. It being thus ready for final hearing, Kirby made a motion to dismiss, upon two grounds: Eirst, that sucia a bill was maintainable only after the refusal of the patent by the Court of Appeals, which refusal the bill did not allege; and, second, that, if there had been such refusal, Clement’s proceeding in the Patent Office was abandoned under Revised
The result reached by the Patent Office tribunals has worked a plain miscarriage of justice. It is beyond reasonable doubt that Clements, and not Kirby, was the first to use the inserted tube to shift the intake nozzle to the distant position, or to think of using it, or to make a device •which accomplished this result. It had been held by the primary examiner, by the Examiner of Interferences, by the Board, and by the Commissioner that this was the only patentable invention involved, and this conclusion was not criticized byr the Court oí Appeals; yet the patent therefor has been issued to Kirby and refused to Clements.
The question chiefly considered by the court below, and to which the arguments of counsel are largely directed, is whether an applicant, who is refused a patent by the Commissioner, must exhaust any existing remedy by appeal to the Court of Appeals, before he may resort to his remedy under section 4915. It is claimed for Clements that a resort to appeal is optional by the very words oC the statute, “refused, either by tlic Commissioner or by the * * * court,” that the legislative history of the law confirms this view, and that the decisions to the contrary are obiter or ill-considered,- while it is contended for Kirby that we should apply what is called the distributive theory, and hold that, in those cases where there is no appeal from the action of the Commissioner to the. Court of Appeals, his final action should be treated as the refusal contemplated by section 4915, while, in those cases which may be appealed, this remedy must be followed before the other remedy can be invoked. See Smith v. Muller (C. C.) 75 Fed. 612; McKnight v. Metal Co. (C. C.) 128 Fed. 51. We do not find it necessary to decide this question, and for the purposes of this opinion only we accept the distributive theory; and we come to consider the character of the action which the Court of Appeals took in this case.
It is not dear, on the face of its opinion, whether the Court of Appeals intended to adopt what we have called the broadest or what we have called the moderately broad construction'of the issue. We have concluded that the latter was its true intent. It seems quite obvious that there was nothing patentable in merely locating the two openings opposite each other for convenient access to the inner through the outer. The Patent Office tribunals had all held that this was not new with either party, and that to give the issue this broadest construction would make it unpatentable, and the Commissioner had expressly held that, where a broad construction of an interference issue would make it unpatentable and the narrow one would make it patentable, the narrow should be taken as the true meaning. The Court of Appeals did not criticize any of these conclusions. The cases upon which it relied (Miel v. Young, 29 App. D. C. 481; Lindmark v. Hodgkinson, 31 App. D. C.
A claim to that precise adaptability, which would permit the insertion of the tube so as to make a fairly close joint at each opening, and thereby, of itself, cut off the suction from one nozzle and transfer it to the other, was not anticipated upon this record, and that limitation is fairly called for by the language of the issue. The two openings do not “register,” nor is the inner opening “adapted to receive * * * a hose tube extending into the inner opening,” nor are the two' “openings adapted to receive an inlet tube” in the sense which the context fairly requires, unless the inner opening is hot only in suitable alignment with, but is at least no larger than, the outer one; for, if it is larger, no tube which can pass through the outer opening can be received in or extended into the inner opening in such manner as to cut off the suction and accomplish the sole object of the invention. True, the fan suction might have been powerful enough, so that a leak around the outside of the tube when it entered the inner opening would have only weakened and not destroyed the suction pull at the distant nozzle; but substantially to cut off the primary nozzle was the whole object of the invention, and this required the close adaptation and registration. A consideration of all the circumstances, aided by the strong presumption that the Court of Appeals did not intend to do a vain thing, requires that this meaning should be given to its reference to “the broadest interpretation which they will reasonably support” and to the structure which “would readily permit the change from one kind of cleaner to another.”
The question, therefore, is whether this application was abandoned by a failure to prosecute for more than a year. The mere recital of the
That inference of abandonment is as much without support in authority as in principle. In Gandy v. Marble, 122 U. S. 432, 7 Sup. Ct. 1290, 30 L. Ed. 1223, one year and four months more than the specified time had elapsed after the decision oí the appeal from the Commissioner, and no step of any kind had been taken. It was not denied that the application had been abandoned under section 4894, if that section applied at all to a suit under section 4915. In Westinghouse Co. v. Ohio Co. (C. C.) 186 Fed. 518, the facts in this respect are not stated, but it is assumed that the requisite time had elapsed without the taking of atiy step in prosecution — except the filing of a previous hill under section 4915, which was wholly ineffective because not filed against the right party; and manifestly whether certain action may properly'be characterized as prosecution of the claim presents materially and perhaps vitally different questions when it is taken in a tribunal with general jurisdiction gud when application is made in a forum which is open in one particular situation only.
In Colman v. American Co. (D. C.) 235 Fed. 531, the decision of the Court of Appeals was on June 3, 1913; the Supreme Court refused a certiorari on October 29, 1913; on February 24, 1914, the Commissioner gave to the applicant a formal notice, apparently to the effect that the case -was disposed of in accordance with the Court of Appeals decision; the bill, under section 4915, was, in effect, filed on February 1, 1915; and there was no suggestion that after October 29, 1913, the applicant had taken any step whatever in the prosecution of the application. The case holds, in effect, though not in words, that the formal notice by the Commissioner to the applicant in February, 1914, was not the “action therein” which section 4894 contemplates — a conclusion for which no reason is given, but whether right or wrong is immaterial here.
The present situation is not like a writ of error, which is followed in the wrong court until the statutory time for application to the right
As appears by the statement made on behalf of the Commissioner in Re Curtiss, 46 App. D. C. 183, at page 188,' it had been the practice of the Patent Office to permit second interferences between the same parties in special cases where the character of the claims before in issue had prevented a complete decision of the whole controversy. The decision of the Court of Appeals in Blackford v. Wilder, 28 App. D. C. 535, followed by Horine v. Wende, 29 App. D. C. 415, and Carroll v. Hallwood, 31 App. D. C. 165, had caused the Patent Office to change its practice and apply in all cases the sweeping rule that the Court of Appeals decision should be considered an adjudication as to eyery issue which might have been made upon the two° applications as well as to those which were made. These three cases were followed by the Patent Office as a rule of decision in its action in declining to consider all of Clements’ later applications, and were relied upon by the court below and in this court in support of this conclusion. They were reviewed and modified by the decision in Re Curtiss, and the earlier rule of the Patent Office was, in effect, approved. Paraphrasing that opinion to fit the facts of this case, it is held:
“The real test here is whether or not the granting of these narrow claims later asked by Clements would dominate the subject-matter upon which Kirby prevailed in the interference. * * * If Clements should be founds to be entitled to priority on these narrow claims, it would in no respect affect the prior rights of Kirby, acquired through the former interference.”
. It should be noted that this opinion was not rendered until March, 1917, but it nevertheless is applicable to the rightfulness of action which had been taken in 1916, and both by its reasoning and the force of its authority makes clear that the Patent Office ought to have entertained Clements’ later narrow claims, and, if necessary, declared an
We think it right to say that these later narrow claims were “refused by the Commissioner” before this bill was filed, although it is trite that the action of the Commissioner, in person, did not occur until a later date. After the Commissioner had twice decided that the whole matter was concluded, and that the Patent Office had no power to consider narrow claims which Clements might ask, the later presentation of them by Clements to the examiner was a formality, and so with the appeal to the Board and with the appeal to the Commissioner. It was held in McKnight v. Metal Co., supra, 128 Fed. at page 54, that even before the application had been formally refused, or the patent granted to the other contestant, there was a sufficient refusal to justify resort to section 4915, when it became apparent that the controlling question had been several times decided in the Patent Office. We, think that, under the circumstances of this case, Clements was at liberty, after the Commissioner had decided the substantial question and the primary examiner had decided the formal ones, to desist from further proceedings which the Patent Office officials were likely to consider as vexatious, and consider his application as refused. We have the less hesitation in reaching this result, because, in any event, the filing of a supplemental bill, after the Commissioner did act, would have cured this defect and demonstrated that it was in this case an unsubstantial formality.
“Whenever a patent is refused either by the Commissioner of Patents or by the [Court of Appeals] of the District upon appeal, or by any other court having any jurisdiction over the Commissioner,” etc.
.We conclude that the dismissal of the bill because the right to file it had never accrued or had been lost, was error. The court below did not consider the merits, but that does not affect our duty to do so. The record was complete and there was a final hearing. The settled policy of the law is against piecemeal appeals, and they are approved only in special cases. We see no reason why the case should go back for further hearing. It is true that the physical exhibits used in the interference were not shown to the court below, and those for Kirby have not been sent to this court; but the interference record makes it clear that they are cumulative and of no controlling importance.
If the patent had not issued to Kirby, there might be embarrassment about granting relief to Clements as to his narrower claitns, because they woidd not have been subjected to that revision and modification which ought to precede the action of the court, and mandamus might be necessary; but Clements is asking precisely and only the claims which the Patent Office has found properly formulated and allowable, as against all prior rights, and has included in the patent issued to Kirby. They are seven in number. The first two are those which were in interference. The remaining five are different formulations 'of the narrower conception, which include the hose connection or tube as a positive element. The formal objections of the Patent Office on the ground of aggregation have been overcome, either by a change of opinion on its part or by some particular wording which avoids the objections — it is not material to determine which.
1. A vacuum cleaner consisting of a easing provided with a pump chamber and a suction chamber separated therefrom by a dividing wall provided with an opening, the walls of the suction chamber terminating in a suction nozzle and the suction chamber provided with an opening registering with the opening in the dividing wall and adapted to receive a cap closing it or a hose tube extending into the inner opening, substantially as set forth.
2. A vacuum cleaner comprising a pump chamber, a suction chamber having an outlet opening to the pump chamber, a suction nozzle and an inlet opening, and a removable closure for said inlet opening, said openings adapted to receive a connecting inlet tube. ,
This is now the practice of the Patent Office, as appears by the Commissioner’s decision in Litle v. Armstrong, 232 O. G. 935 (1916).
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