31 App. D.C. 205 | D.C. Cir. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the Court :
This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents awarding priority of invention of a “Means for Observing Dust-Laden Currents,” to David T. Kenney, in an interference proceeding with Augustus Lotz.
The issue is contained in the four following counts:
“1. In combination with a passage for a current of dust-laden air, means in said passage for intercepting the current, such means including a transparent chamber, in which the action of the intercepted current can be observed.
“2. In combination with a passage for a current of dust-laden air, means connected in said passage for changing the direction*207 of the current, such means including a transparent receptacle, in which the action of the current in its changed direction can be observed.
“3. In combination with a passage for a current of dust-laden air, means in said passage for intercepting the current and compelling it to change its direction, and a transparent chamber into which the intercepted current is admitted and from which it is discharged.
“4. In combination with a passage for a current of dust-laden air, a transparent chamber projecting at an angle to the general direction, of said passage, and means for compelling the current to enter said chamber and to leave said chamber and return to said passage.”
The original application of Kenny was filed November 29, 1901, and the application in the interference was filed as a divisional one June 1, 1905. Lotz filed June 3, 1904, and a patent was issued to him thereon, September 6, 1904, No. 769,618.
Augustus Lotz, in his preliminary statement, alleged conception on or about August 1, 1892, drawings made on or about February 1, 1893, disclosure to others on or about May 1, 1895, reduction to practice about July 1, 1900. Kenney’s preliminary statement is not produced in the record, for the reason, doubtless, that he took no testimony and rested his case on the date of conception and reduction to practice, claimed as obtained by the filing of his original application.
Testimony on behalf of Lotz tended to show the construction and use of a device about July, 1901, which, it is claimed, embodied the invention of the issue. It is also contended on behalf of Lotz that Kenney was not entitled to amend his original declaration, and, by means of his second application, carry back his date of conception and constructive reduction to practice to the date of the original application. The tribunals of the Patent Office, in succession, awarded priority to Kenney.
We will consider i¡he questions presented, beginning with the second one.
A part only of the specifications and drawings of Kenney’s original application is contained in the record. It does not ap
In the meantime, on June 1, 1905, the application of the interference was filed. In this he says: “In my prior application, filed November 29, 1901, serially numbered 84,058, I have shown an apparatus for use in such a system, and, in the said application, have shown in connection therewith an observation chamber having transparent walls, through which the dust-laden air was caused to pass on its way from the hand tool to the pump by which the vacuum was produced, whereby the amount of dust carried by the air can be ascertained, and in
It is quite clear that the invention of the issue was disclosed in the prior applications, though no specific claims therefor were made until after the issue of the patent to Lotz. The claims could have been inserted therein by amendment, but for the rule of the Patent Office which does not permit a patent to issue for two separate inventions. Under such conditions, nothing remained but to file a new and divisional application, or to abandon this part of the invention.
The first contention on behalf of the appellant, is that, as sec. 4888, Rev. Stat. U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 3383, requires that the application shall not only contain a full description of the invention, but also contain claims for the same, it is not permissible to amend by setting up a new claim to the invention or a part thereof not before claimed. The unsoundness of this proposition in a case where the subject-matter is contained in the application though not followed by a specific claim therefor, has been pointed out in the recent case of Phillips v. Sensenich, ante, 159.
Where the conditions of the original application require division, instead of its amendment, merely, to secure-a patent embracing the additional claims, the rule is necessarily the same, as held in the case last cited; and the new application dates back to the original one, securing to the applicant the benefit of a constructive reduction to practice as of that date. Duryea v. Rice, 28 App. D. C. 423, 435.
It is further contended that, by Kenney’s failure to make the specific claim of the invention of the issue under his original application, or by division, until after Lotz entered the office with an application therefor, he must be regarded, as to Lotz at least, as having lost his right now to make the claim. The following decisions are relied on to support this contention. Miller v. Bridgeport Brass Co. 104 U. S. 352, 26 L. ed. 184;
This brings us to the consideration of the other question, namely, whether the invention of the issue was conceived and reduced to practice by Lotz before Kenney’s original application was filed. If it was he is entitled to the award of priority. The device of the issue as described in the specifications and illustrated by the drawings consists of a comparatively small glass tube connected with the pipe bearing the dust-laden current, at a point between the hand implement used on the carpet and the chamber for receiving the deposit of the dust, in such manner as to intercept and partially arrest the dust-laden current and enable one to readily observe when the dust ceases to pass from the sweeper. This is the transparent chamber or receptacle of the issue, in which no dust is, or is intended to be, deposited. This is clearly shown in Lotz’s description, where it is said: “I discovered that, if means be employed in the tube, pipe, or hose for temporarily diverting the air current, the dust in the air will become visible through a suitable glass, and this without in any way affecting the main operation. * * * The diverted current expands into the glass chamber in a condition of disturbance, the effect of which is clearly visible in the eddying and whirling of dust, tending to precipitate, but unable to do so on account of the air pressure from behind and the suction ahead.” It is apparent, also, that the purpose of the observation chamber would not be accomplished if the dust was permitted to settle in it.
The testimony of Lotz tended to show the construction of a box in July, 1901, which is claimed as embodying the invention of the issue. The tribunals of the office found that this box was not used until about February, 1902, and two held that, even if it embodied the issue, Lotz had not used due diligence
We agree with the tribunals of the office that this device is not an embodiment of the issue. A dust-collector between the sweeper and the pump is an essential part of the carpet-cleaning apparatus. This compartment box seems to be nothing more than the dust collector of the former patent, before mentioned, with panes of glass inserted in one side of each compartment through which the collection of the dust could be seen. It is supplied with the same removable top for the removal of the dust collected therein. The first compartment evidently serves as a place for the settlement of the heavier particles, as described in the earlier patent before mentioned, while the lighter particles are successively deposited in the second and third compartments. The issue calls for a transparent device which temporarily arrests the velocity óf the current, and enables the operator or observer to ascertain when the dust and removable particles have been completely removed by the sweeper. It must not only be transparent, but of such size and construction that will not permit the deposit of any of the dust; otherwise it would not answer the required purpose. That it is intended not to be a part of the dust-collecting chamber, but to be located at some convenient point between it and the sweeping implement, is evident. Moreover, it must be a transparent chamber. We are not prepared to say that, if such a box had been used separately, and so constructed as to prevent the settlement of any dust on its way to the collector, it might not be regarded as a transparent chamber within the meaning of the issue. But, considering its construction as a compartment of the dust collector, and the fact that it precipitated and retained a part of the dust, we cannot regard it as the transparent observation chamber of the issue. Under favorable conditions of light, the observer might have been enabled to see the deposit of dust, but it is not the transparent chamber of the issue, in which no dust can be deposited, and which enables the observer, under all conditions, to determine when the extraction of dust from the fabric that is being swept has ceased.