47 App. D.C. 237 | D.C. Cir. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from an award of priority to Gray of an invention for the refining of high-boiling constituents of petroleum oils, particularly lubricating oils. The issues are defined in seven counts, of which counts 1, 4, ¿nd 6 are typical. They read:
“1. The method of purifying high boiling constituents of petroleum- which consists in heating the same in the presence of aluminum ehlorid to a temperature of from 150° F. to about 212° F. for a period of from two to six hours.”
“6. I’lie process of bleaching, stabilizing, and purifying lubricating oils which comprises producing an internal condensation attended with deposition of carbon and saturation of uusaturated groups by warming such oil with a catalytic chemical and thereafter treating the oil with sulphuric acid.” Stated in general terms, the invention embraces a process by which lubricating oil is purified and the color improved thereby.
Aimer McDuffie .McAfee and George William Gray, at the time of the invention, were highly educated chemists, both having received the degree of Ph. 1)., — one in 1910 and the other in 1S9<). They were employed by the Texas company, a concern engaged in the refining of petroleum, -with headquarters at Houston, Texas. It had a laboratory at Bayonne, New Jersey, and another at Port Arthur, Texas. McAfee was engaged at Bayonne duriug the summer of 1912, and while there made, as he claims, a special study of petroleum, particularly the lubricating fractions. Later be was transferred to Port Arthur, where, according to his .testimony, he made the invention in controversy. Gray asserts that McAfee was his assistant at Port Arthur, and that ho gave him, as such, a disclosure of the general plan of the invention, together with instructions from time to time sufficient to enable McAfee to work out the details revealed by the counts. McAfee, on the other hand, denies this and asserts that, so far at least as the invention is concerned, he was not Gray’s subordinate. He also urges that he disclosed the invention to Gray long before any of the dates on which the latter claims to have conceived it. The Examiner of Interferences decided in favor of Gray, and was overruled by the Examiners in Chief, who, in turn, were reversed by an Assistant Commissioner.
Gray, while asserting that lie conceived the invention, does not claim to have himself reduced it to practice, but contends that what McAfee did in that regard inures to Gray’s benefit, because McAfee, as be asserts, was bis assistant, acting in pur
McAfee, being the junior party, has the burden of clearly showing' that he, acting independently, is the inventor. He testified that on December 4, 1912, he conceived the invention when he observed the saturating action of aluminum chlorid on petroleum oil; that his conception was largely the result of work which he had done during the preceding summer; that the Texas company, for which he was working, was particularly "interested in the manufacture of lubricating oils with as little color as possible; that connecting his work of the previous summer with the aluminum chlorid reaction which he had noticed on December 4, he conceived the idea “that it might be possible to lower the iodine values of lubricating oils, and therefore improve their color, by warming with aluminum chlorid.” For the purpose of refreshing his memory with regard to this he produced a memorandum made by him at the time of the experiments related, later on, January 15, 1913, he treated “a comparatively large quantity of lubricating oil with a certain amount of aluminum chlorid to a certain temperature for a definite time, all of these conditions,” he said, “having been previously established as being the proper conditions from my preliminary work on hand samples.” Hpon this point he refreshed his memory also from a note book made at the time of the treatment. He further said that he received absolutely no instructions from Mr. Gray or any other person relating to the treatment of lubricating oil in any manner until after February 4, 1913, the date on which Gray conceived the invention, if his claim be correct. This testimony, as we understand the record, is in no material respect contradicted. Is there any corroboration of it? The memorandums used by McAfee, while strengthening his testimony, do not have the effect of corroborating it within the meaning of the law. It was the same witness who spoke through the memorandums and. in the person of McAfee.
This brings us to consider the testimony of George II. King, a Stillman under McAfee, who is put forward as a corroborating witness. He stated that on February 5, 1913, he assisted
As to the date on which the invention was reduced to practice, McAfee, in liis report to Gray March d, 1913, shows that he had accomplished-the reduction some time before. The exact date is not disclosed, nor is it material in the view which we take of the matter. Gray does not deny that McAfee reduced the invention to practice, nor does he contend that ho did any work on the process himself; liis theory being that the reduction to practice was accomplished by McAfee acting in pursuance of his directions, and therefore, on the doctrine of principal and assistant, lie is entitled to the benefit of McAfee’s work.
With respect to the origin of the invention, Gray testified that he did not conceive it before the 3d of February, 1913. On that date, according to him, Dr. McAfee was in liis office
This leaves counts 6 and 7 to be considered. They call for the treatment of oil produced by the process of the other counts, before filtration until sulphuric acid. McAfee in his report to Gray, June 13, 1913, said: “Dr. Dengler has apparently solved the difficulty completely and satisfactorily. He treats the oil containing the suspended solid with fuming sulphuric acid * ' * * and the color is further apparently improved.” This is an admission on the part of McAfee that Dengler was the inventor of the process covered by counts 6 and 7. Gray does not claim to have made the invention himself, but asserts that he put Dr. Dengler to work with instructions and, therefore, that whatever Dengler discovered in pursuance of those instructions belongs to him. There is nothing in the instructions which he gave to Dengler that would indicate the steps pursued by the latter as described in McAfee’s report. Gray’s testimony on this point is: “I had given instructions
The decision of the Assistant Commissioner is reversed and priority of invention as to all the counts is awarded to Aimer M. McAfee. Reversed.