Gilman v. Hinson
Gilman v. Hinson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents in an interference. The subject is emergency knuckles ■for car couplers.
The issues of the interference are as follows:
“1. In automatic car couplers, an emergency coupling attachment designed to closely and interchangeably fit at one end in coupling engagement with all forms of the vertical plane type of coupler, having a rotative hook or knuckle, and provided at its other end with an opening to receive a vertical pivot pin by which it is adapted to be connected with another coupler, a ■coupling knuckle, or analogous coupling device.
“2. In automatic car couplers, an emergency coupler attachment designed to be hinged at one end to the drawhead in place •of the usual swinging knuckle, and provided at its other end with a hook and with a guard arm, the hook being adapted to nlosely and interchangeably fit, and to be automatically coupled to all forms of the vertical type of coupler having a rotative Took or knuckle.
“3. In automatic car couplers, an emergency coupler attachment designed to be hinged at one end, to the drawhead in the place of the usual knuckle, and provided at its other end with a "knuckle adapted to automatically inter-couple with the rotating knuckle of an adjacent coupler in a manner to retain the inter-coupled drawheads in substantial alinement with each other.
“4. In automatic car couplers, an emergency coupler attachment designed to be hinged at one end to the drawhead in place of the usual knuckle, and provided at its other end with a rigid knuckle, and in rear of said knuckle with a guide arm, said rigid "knuckle and guide arm being adapted to automatically inter-couple with the rotating knuckle of an adjacent coupler in a manner to retain the drawheads in substantial alinement with •each other.
“5. An emergency car-coupler knuckle comprising a lug-adapted to be pivoted between the ears of a coupler head, a guard member extending from the lug, and forming with the knuckle
All of the Patent Office tribunals decided this interference in favor of James A. Hinson, the appellee, and, from the final decision of the Commissioner of Patents, George H. Gilman and .James H. Brown have taken their appeal to this court.
The appellee filed his application on August 19th, 1903.
The appellants filed their application March 14th, 1904.
The appellee died in May of the last-mentioned year, and his -case rests upon the record date of the filing of his application, and no testimony has been taken to show the date of the ap■pellee’s conception and reduction to practice of the invention. It appears from the record that the appellee’s emergency knuckle was placed on the market about the time his application was filed.
The testimony in behalf of the appellants tends to show conception and reduction to practice in 1898, although they have neither manufactured the device, nor placed it on the market.
The subject of this interference is a knuckle for car couplers, to be used in emergencies in place of a broken knuckle of any Master Gar Builders’ type.
The act of Congress of March 2d, 1893, passed in compliance with President Harrison’s earnest urgency upon Congress, and the act of March 2d, 1903, amending the prior act, greatly stimulated the production of such devices, for the first act plainly forbade the use of cars which could not be coupled together ■automatically by impact by means of the couplers actually used •on the cars to be coupled. Johnson v. Southern P. Co. 196 U. S. 16, 49 L. ed. 369, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 158.
In accordance with this legislation, the Master Car Builders .■adopted regulations with which all car couplers must conform. More than a hundred different types of automatic car couplers, all conforming to the Master Car Builders’ requirements, having knuckles adapted to swing in a horizontal plane upon a vertical axis, each of which is capable of interlocking with the knuckles of all other Master Car Builders’ types of couplers,
A train of cars contains cars equipped with various types of Master Car Builders’ couplers. It is impossible for each train to carry a supply of knuckles of all types. Prior to 1898, when the appellants first marketed their original type of emergency knuckle, when a knuckle was broken it was usual to connect the broken coupler with the coupler on the adjoining car by means of a link and pin and this required the brakeman to go between the cars. This proved a very unsatisfactory and dangerous substitute; therefore, the purpose of the invention in issue is to provide a knuckle to co-act with any of the various forms of knuckles in use, and which can be substituted for any of those forms in case of breakage, and it is one of great importance to the railway industry.
The appellants, both practical railroad men, devised an emergency knuckle to interlock with all types of Master Car Builders’ knuckles and capable of instant use in lieu of a broken knuckle on all forms of Master Car Builders’ couplers, and obtained a patent for their invention on August 16th, 1898.
The adoption and operation of the knuckle covered by the ■patent is not material here. It suffices to notice that in using that type of emergency knuckle it becomes necessary to remove some parts of the locking mechanism in most of the different types of Master Car Builders’ couplers. This fact led the appellee to seek to devise an emergency knuckle which would replace a broken knuckle without necessitating the removal of any of the parts of locking mechanism.
The testimony in behalf of the appellants shows the conception of their device in July, 1898; the making of a sketch and the completion of a rough wooden pattern in September of that.
It appears that the appellee, as we have said, filed his application on August 19th, 1903, for an emergency knuckle of the same type as the brass and gray iron casting made by the appellants in 1898, and commenced the manufacture and sale of his device soon thereafter. Thereupon the appellants, on March 14th, 1904, filed an application covering the same invention, which was, on May llth, 1904, placed in interference with the application of appellee.
The errors assigned are that the Commissioner erred in holding that the appellants did not actually reduce the invention to practice in September, 1898, and in holding that appellants were estopped from claiming priority of invention by reason of their delay in filing their application, and in determining to grant a patent to appellee in view of the prior knowledge and use of the invention by appellants, and to award priority of invention to the appellee.
The appellants contend that section 4886 of the Revised Statutes (II. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 3382) requires that an applicant can only obtain a patent for his invention “not known or used by others in this country before his invention or discovery thereofthat of several distinct inventors of the same invention one only is entitled to receive a grant of the exclusive right, namely, the original, the first inventor. “The first inventor is that original inventor whose inventive act, in point of time, preceded the inventive acts of others.” 1 Robinson, Patents, p. 92.
The appellants object that the Commissioner of Patents,, against the plain intent of the law, decided that their right to a patent becomes ’subordinate to another inventor whose efforts have given to the public the benefit of the invention.
However, on behalf of the appellee it is important to consider whether such knowledge and use of the appellants is adequate to show any such reduction to practice as is required in this interference to entitle the appellants to a patent for this invention. It does not appear from the record that the gray iron casting was subject to an actual test. The brass casting, though claimed then to work satisfactorily, was broken in the only test made of it. The rough wooden model of it was lost or destroyed, and the broken parts of the brass casting discarded. The proof is not quite clear as to whether the brass casting was like the knuckles shown in appellants’ drawing accompanying their application. No casting has been made from the wooden pattern submitted in this case.
The Master Car Builders’ couplers are made of malleable iron and cast steel, and the Gihnan and Brown emergency knuckles, already patented, are made of steel. It is settled that, to constitute a reduction to practice, the device constructed must be fashioned out of a material capable of actual use for the intended purpose.
In Paul v. Hess, 24 App. D. C. 467, it is said: “It was therefore necessary for the inventor to show that a typewriting machine supplied with the new bars had been constructed and
The Commissioner of Patents, in his decision, said: “I agree with the Examiner-of-Interferences and the Examiners-in-Chief in their opinion that the tests given to the brass knuckle in 1898 establishes the fact that that knuckle was not adapted for practical use. Both the material of which it was made and the shape of the knuckle had to be changed. The only fact which is positively established is that the knuckle would break after a short test on an improvised train of cars hauled by a switching engine in the freight yards.”
The tribunals of the Patent Office appear justified in concluding that the brass casting was unlike the wooden pattern exhibited, and did not afford satisfactory evidence of its exact construction. If that casting had been successfully used, it would not, therefore, establish a reduction to practice of the knuckle shown in appellants’ drawings. The brass casting, made from a crude wooden pattern, was correspondingly crude, and was broken in the test, and obviously possessed such defects that it could not be considered a reduction to practice. The brass casting and the gray iron easting were made of metals not suitable for practical use; rather they were models. The gray iron casting was not actually tested, while the brass casting broke in the test. These did not prove a satisfactory reduction to practice.
The conduct of the appellants after the tests suggests that the results of the tests were unsatisfactory, and that this device was abandoned. They did not further proceed to develop their conception until they filed their application more than five years later, while at the same time their emergency knuckle, which had been patented, was manufactured and sold by the thousands. The appellant, Gilman, does not know what became of the gray iron casting, and did no further experimenting
There is much evidence besides to show that the appellants did not, in 1898, reduce their conception to a practical form. The burden of proof is upon the appellants to show, not only a complete reduction to practice, but also to account for their long period of delay and inaction.
In Fefel v. Stocker, 17 App. D. C. 321, this court said: “Moreover, its apparent abandonment by Stocker, and the long and wholly unexplained delay of more than four years in the application for a patent, are strongly indicative of the fact that the original machine of Stocker was not a successful reduction to practice, and was no more than an abandoned experiment. Long and unexplained delay in the application for a patent is always significant in such cases, especially when, as here, the parties in interest were actively engaged in the prosecution of other similar applications; and such delay raises a presumption
■ And again, in Funk v. Haines, 20 App. D. C. 288: “The onus of proof is upon any junior applicant to show, not only priority of invention, but he must also show that he has used reasonable diligence in adapting and perfecting his invention; for, in such case, the mere conception without actual reduction to practice within a reasonable time does not avail a junior party making the claims.”
We agree with the Commissioner of Patents that the facts of this case bring it within the scope of those decisions of this court in which it was held that what was done by the claimant fell short of a reduction to practice, and amounted to nothing more than an abandoned experiment.
The appellants’ device appears to have been an experimental model, abandoned or laid aside and lost by its makers, and recalled to mind afterward by the advertisement of the appellee’s similar device.
The decisions on this point are very numerous, and among them we only cite: Glidden v. Noble, 5 App. D. C. 480; Guilbert v. Killinger, 13 App. D. C. 107; Re Mower, 15 App. D. C. 144; Paul v. Hess, 24 App. D. C. 462.
■ In Paul v. Hess, 24 App. D. C. 468, this court said: “Long delay in making use of an invention claimed to have been reduced to practice, or in applying for a patent, has always been regarded as a potent circumstance tending to show that the alleged reduction to practice was nothing more than an unsatisfactory or abandoned experiment. * * * And this is specially the case where, in the meantime, the inventor has been engaged in the prosecution of similar inventions, * * * or others, without reasonable explanation, have been adopted for manufacture and commercial use.
The device of the appellants in 1898 \vas neglected while its inventors sought to. devise other devices for the same purpose, and they developed commercially their prior patented device for such purpose. They did nothing toward obtaining a patent until after Hinson had marketed his device, and the appellants then
We concur with the Examiners-in-Chief in this case. The rules of law as to what constitutes a “prior use” and what constitutes a “reduction to practice” are the same. As there is not sufficient proof of a reduction to practice, so, also, there is not sufficient proof of “prior use.”
By their laches thé appellants lost rights which for a long time they little valued, and which, therefore, they cannot now successfully assert.
The decision of the Commissioner of Patents in this case is affirmed. The clerk of this court will certify this opinion and the proceedings in this cause according to law to the Commissioner of Patents, to be entered of record in his office.
Affirmed.
A petition to the Supreme Court of the United States for the writ of certiorari to this court was denied February 23, 1906.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- GILMAN v. HINSON
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Patents; Interference; Reduction to Practice; Delay in Filin® Application; Prior Use. 1. To constitute a reduction to practice the- device constructed must be-fashioned out of a material capable of actual use for the intended purpose. (Following Paul v. Hess, 24 App. D. G. 467.) 2. Long delay in making use of an invention claimed to have been reduced to practice, or in applying for a patent, is a potent circumstance tending to show that the alleged reduction to practice was, nothing more than an unsatisfactory or abandoned experiment; and this is specially the ease where, in the meantime, the inventor has. been engaged in the prosecution of similar inventions. (Following Paul v. Hess, 24 App. D. C. 468; Fefel v. Stocker, 17 App. D. C. 321; Funk v. Haines, 20 App. D. 0. 288; Glidden v. Roble, 5 App. D. C-480; Guilbert v. Killinger, 13 App. D. 0. 107; Re Mower, 15 App.. D. G. 144.) 3. The rules of law as to what constitutes a prior use, and what constitutes a reduction to practice, are the same.