32 App. D.C. 217 | D.C. Cir. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from three concurrent decisions of ‘the Patent Office tribunals, and the issues are stated in the following counts:
“1. In combination, a supply circuit, a motor armature connected to said supply circuit, a motor field connected to said ■supply circuit, a resistence connected in said field circuit, a second resistence connected in said armature circuit, a movable member for controlling said field circuit, and a second movable member for controlling said armature circuit, said second member movable in one direction to remove the resistence controlled thereby from the armature circuit, and said first member movable in an opposite direction to insert the resistence controlled thereby in the field circuit.
“2. In combination, a supply circuit, a motor armature connected in said supply circuit, a resistence connected in said field circuit, a second resistence connected in said armature circuit, a movable member for controlling said field resistence and a second movable member for controlling armature resistence, said second member movable in one direction to remove said armature resistence from circuit and said first member movable in an opposite direction to insert said field resistence in circuit, means tending to keep said second member in its initial position, and a magnet for retaining said second member in a predetermined position.
“3. In combination, a supply circuit, a motor armature connected in said supply circuit, a motor field connected in said supply circuit, a resistence connected in said field circuit, a second resistence connected in said armature circuit, a movable member for controlling said field resistence, a second movable*219 member for controlling said armature resistence, said second member movable in one direction to remove said armature resistence from circuit, and said first member movable in an opposite direction to insert said field resistence in circuit, a spring tending to keep said second member in its initial position, and a magnet for retaining said second member in a predetermined ■position.
“4. In combination, a movable member, a resistence controlled thereby, a second movable member, a resistence controlled thereby, a magnet to retain said second movable member in a predetermined position, means for causing said members to move together until said second member is grasped by said magnet and thereafter permitting said first member to move independently of said second member.
“5. In combination, a. movable element, a resistence controlled thereby, a second movable element, a resistence controlled thereby, means tending to keep said second movable member in its initial position, a magnet for retaining said second member in a predetermined position, and means whereby said first member will move said second member to a position to be grasped by said magnet and thereafter operate independently of said second member.”
Albert J. Horton’s application was filed November 2, 1904, and a patent was issued to him on June 20, 1905. On August 22, 1904, Emerson and Dorgeloh, who were connected with the General Electric Company, the assignee of Paul H. Zimmer, filed an application for this invention, which was subsequently put into interference with the Horton patent. The attorney for the General Electric Company subsequently determined that Zimmer, and not Emerson and Dorgeloh, was entitled to make the application, and on November 16, 1905, filed an application for Zimmer, and he was made the third party to the interference. Thereupon Emerson and Dorgeloh conceded priority of invention to Zimmer, and the case proceeded with Horton and Zimmer as the contending parties.
A patent having issued to Horton before Zimmer’s application was filed, the burden of proof is heavily upon Zimmer.
It is established that early in the year 1903 Zimmer, who was-employed by the General Electric Company as a skilled mechanic, and who was not only very familiar with rheostats for electric motors, hut had then devised other improvements thereon, exhibited sketches substantially embodying the issue to other-employees. It is established beyond question that thereafter,, probably early in 1904, Zimmer personally constructed a full-sized rheostat, which is in evidence as “Exhibit C” in the ease. Several witnesses testified to having seen this device while it was being tested, and that its operation was a success. Some of these witnesses are highly skilled in the art, and their testimony is clear and convincing. The point is made by Horton that it is not likely that- the test of this device was satisfactory, because-no record appears to.have been kept of such test. If the evidence of the test was conflicting and unsatisfactory, this point wotfld be entitled to great consideration. The evidence shows-that there was some little friction between Zimmer and other employees, and it is not unlikely that the value of his discovery was minimized at that time.
About the time Zimmer constructed Exhibit 0, Emerson, who-was connected with the power and mining department, wrote the designing engineer of the rheostat department that a demand existed for a compound starter and regulator, with a device similar to a sketch inclosed with his letter and to be used with 14 H. P. 230 volt motors on sensitive drills. This design was passed on to Dorgeloh, who was an electrical engineer in the rheostat department, with instructions to design a rheostat embodying the idea shown in the sketch. Dorgeloh thereupon designed a rheostat fully embodying the Zimmer Exhibit O. The-
After Zimmer’s Exhibit C was tested, Zimmer, accompanied by the superintendent of his department, took it to the patent department, and left it near the desk of the patent solicitor, who was not in his office at the time. Nothing appears to have been done with this exhibit until after the declaration of interference between Emerson and Dorgeloh and Horton. Zimmer protested that he was the inventor, when he learned of the Emerson and Dorgeloh application. In preparing for that contest, the counsel for the General Electric Company discovered the facts, and concluded that a mistake had been made, and thereupon filed Zimmer’s application. It appears that Zimmer at all times claimed to have been the originator of the invention. As his date of reduction to practice is earlier than the earliest
The decision of the Commissioner of Patents is affirmed, and the clerk of this court will certify this opinion and the proceedings in this court to the Commissioner of Patents, as required by law. Affirmed.