159 F.2d 28 | D.C. Cir. | 1947
In December, 1939, one Sauer, a German national, was granted a patent on a claim relating to a polarizing film which, placed between two layers of transparent material, merged gradually into that material, with decreasing polarizing effect.
Smith, one of the appellants, filed an application on the same claim in June, 1940, and, in an interference proceeding, priority was awarded to Sauer. Smith and his as-signee, Polaroid Corporation, sued in the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia, under R.S. § 4915, 35 U.S.C.A. § 63, for a patent, and made the Alien Property Custodian, to whom by that time Sauer’s rights had passed, a party defendant.
At the hearing in the District Court, it was not disputed that Smith was the first to conceive the idea. Testimony for Smith and Polaroid, which was the only proof introduced, established priority of invention, according to their contention, because they said it showed that Smith had been the first to reduce the invention to practice, and that Sauer’s disclosure was inoperative.
When the District Court disagreed and dismissed their complaint, Smith and Polaroid appealed to this court. We set aside the judgment of the District Court and remanded the case
When the case was returned to it, the District Court considered it further, filed expanded findings of fact and conclusions of law, and dismissed the complaint. Smith and Polaroid again appeal.
In the new findings, the court pointed out wherein it considered the testimony of appellants’ witnesses had failed to establish reduction to practice by Smith in 1936 or 1937, as appellants claimed, or at any time prior to their filing date of June 26, 1940, and then found as a fact that there had been no such reduction to practice. The new findings also specified how, in the court’s opinion, the appellants’ witnesses had failed to show Sauer’s disclosure to he inoperative, and found as a fact that inoper-ativeness had not been proved.
It is our settled rule not to disturb findings of fact made by the trial court unless an examination of the evidence convinces us that the findings are clearly wrong; moreover, a decision of the Patent Office officials should be, and is, given great weight and is overcome only by clear proof of mistake.
Our review of the evidence does not lead us to conclude that the findings of the court were clearly wrong. Its judgment, therefore, must be, and is,
Affirmed.
Polaroid Corporation v. Markham, Alien Property Custodian, 80 U.S.App.D.C. 225, 151 F.2d 89.
Abbott v. Coe, 71 App.D.C. 195, 109 F.2d 449.