Bourn v. Hill

Mr. Justice Duell

delivered the opinion of the Court:

All three of the tribunals of the Patent Office have agreed, and without a dissenting voice, in awarding priority of inven*293tion to William Gr. Hill, Jr., and from the final decision — that of the Commissioner of Patents — this appeal is taken. There are no questions of law involved in the appeal, and the assignments of error are predicated upon the alleged failure of the Commission to rule correctly upon the sufficiency of the evidence to prove or disprove claimed and necessary facts. The errors are specifically set forth, but they are summed up in the last alleged error, — that the decision appealed from is against the weight of evidence.

Where three separate and distinct tribunals, consisting of five experienced men familiar with considering and weighing evidence in proceedings of this nature, agree in their conclusions, this court has repeatedly held that an appellant, in order to secure a seversal, must make out a very clear case of error. Hisey v. Peters, 6 App. D. C. 68; Esty v. Newton, 14 App. D. C. 50; Howard v. Hey, 18 App. D. C. 142; Ocumpaugh v. Norton, 25 App. D. C. 90.

That these tribunals have reached their conclusions by different paths does not detract from the weight to be given to their decisions. The twelve men in a jury box do not look at all of the items of proof adduced from the same view point, but their unanimous concurrence in their conclusion is ordinarily very persuasive that the result reached is a correct one.

It further appears that Hill, the appellee, is not only the senior party, but that the interference is between his patents and an application of Augustus O. Bourn, the appellant, filed after he had knowledge of the issue of the patents. This fact adds heavily to the burden under which the appellant labors. Kelly v. Fynn, 16 App. D. C. 573; Nielson v. Bradshaw, 16 App. D. C. 92.

The record is a voluminous one, consisting as it does of nearly 700 printed pages, but it is unnecessary to refer to Hill’s testimony in view of the conclusion reached by us.

Hill filed his original application January 9, 1900. On March 5th of the same year that application was divided and a second one filed. Patents based upon these applications issued November 6, 1900. It is therefore incumbent upon Bourn *294to establish his case beyond a reasonable doubt, and to prove invention prior to January 9, 1900. This he may show by a reduction of the invention in controversy to practice prior to that date or by a conception and disclosure anterior thereto, followed by due diligence in his efforts to perfect his invention prior to and at the time when his rival, Hill, entered the field, which, for the purpose of this proceeding, we take as of January 9, 1900.

Let us see whether or not he has succeeded.

The issue of the interference is in three counts, all of which are for processes which are thus stated:

“1. The process of vulcanizing rubber and allied gums, which consists in surrounding with gas the substance to be vulcanized, heating the gas to a temperature sufficient to vulcanize the substance, and subjecting the gas to pressure irrespective of that which may be due to the expansion of the gas by heat.
“2. The process of vulcanizing rubber and allied gums, which consists in surrounding with air the substance to be vulcanized, heating the air to a temperature sufficient to vulcanize the substance, and subjecting the air to pressure irrespective of that which may be due to the expansion of air by heat.
“3. The herein-described process of vulcanizing rubber and allied gums, which consists in heating the rubber compound in an atmosphere of an inert gas.”

That these counts are to be construed in the light of the specifications of the Hill patents is a proposition that has repeatedly been affirmed by this court. They are claims of Hill’s patents, and were bodily incorporated into Bourn’s application after the issue of Hill’s patents and for the purpose of provoking this interference. Cherney v. Clauss, 25 App. D. C. 15. With his application Bourn filed an affidavit claiming to have completed his invention prior to January 9, 1900, the date of Hill’s filing his original application.

The Examiners-in-Chief have, we think, correctly defined the processes of the counts. They say:

The processes of counts 1 ¿nd 2 of the issue have the relation of genus and species. In the first count a process is defined in *295which is used any gas. In the second count the same process is defined, but the gas used is a specific gas, i. e., air.

In count 3 of the issue the gas is an inert gas; that is to say, a nonoxidizing gas, or any gas which will not injuriously affect the rubber or allied gum to change its constituent character.

Whatever be the gas used, the process as defined by the language of counts 1 and 2 is:

(1) Surrounding with the gas rubber or its allied gums.

(2) Heating the gas to a heat sufficient to vulcanize rubber or its allied gums.

(3) Subjecting the gas to pressure “irrespective of that which may be due to the expansion of the gas by heat.”

These counts call for a simultaneous application to the rubber or allied gum of a gas at a vulcanizing heat and at a pressure greater than that due to the expansion of the gas while hot; and that the temperature and the pressure shall be maintained until the rubber or allied gum is vulcanized.

The manner of carrying out the process is described in the Hill patents, and such description shows clearly that the gas Í3 applied to the rubber at the vulcanizing heat and stated pressure at one and the same time, and is continued until vulcanization is complete.

An examination of the proofs adduced by Bourn to determine whether he had completed the invention in controversy prior to January 9, 1900, as set forth in his affidavit before referred to, and in his preliminary statement becomes necessary.

In his preliminary statement Bourn claims to have conceived and disclosed the invention early in 1897, and that in April, 1898, he caused to be constructed an apparatus to be used for carrying on his experiments, and that with such apparatus he practised the invention of all of the counts of the issue during the following month; and, further, that he from time to time vulcanized rubber and allied gums from that time until the filing of his application.

His proofs disclose that what he claims to have done in 1897 amounted to naught. He neither, during that year, con*296ceived nor disclosed to anyone the subject-matter of the interference. The latter part of April, 1898, he had procured a vulcanizer, and undoubtedly he used it for experimentation purposes; but neither his own testimony nor that of his witnesses is sufficiently clear and exact to convince us that at any time prior to his learning of the issue of the patents to Hill had he successfully practised the process of the issue. It is very easy when one has been in possession of an apparatus capable of carrying out a process, and has experimented with that apparatus, to convince himself, and those in his employ, or interested with him in business, that a process, afterward disclosed in a printed publication, was the one practised by him. But a careful reading of the testimony fails to convince us that Bourn had more than scratched the surface. All the circumstances surrounding the case, and his own conduct, tend to strengthen our opinion. He was a manufacturer of India rubber boots and shoes, with ample means and facilities for making improvements in the art at his command; a patentee of improvements in the rubber art, and familiar with the art of vulcanization; and he had full knowledge of the need for some process that would shorten the time of vulcanization. It seems impossible to believe that he would have waited months and years after he had solved the problem without applying for patent protection. Having learned of the issue of the patents to Hill, for what he believed was his invention, he says that very day he wrote his attorneys to investigate the matter, and prepare an application for patent. The nonproduction of that letter forces us to the conclusion that even at the time when he wrote it he was unable to, or did not, apprize his attorneys what his process was. We do not doubt that he had been floundering about for more than two years in his attempts to accomplish something, nor do we doubt that, after he had the process described to him, he really believed that he had practised the process. He may have practised at it, but it is not sufficient that he may have approximated the process. Appert v. Schmertz, 13 App. D. C. 117.

The evidence offered, however, is not sufficient to overcome *297the doubts arising from his own actions, much less to overcome an issued patent. We think no court would overthrow Hill’s patents on evidence such as is presented in this record. The same ride of law applies in both cases. All the testimony relating to the counts of the issue is oral. No written directions given to the workmen as to what they were to do are in evidence. Such exhibits as are produced relate to a machine which could be used in carrying out different processes. There is an absence of clear and convincing testimony sufficient to overcome the many presumptions bearing so heavily upon the appellant. The comments of the Supreme Court in Barbed Wire Patent (Washburn & M. Mfg. Co. v. Beat ’Em, All Barbed Wire Co.) 143 U. S. 284, 36 L. ed. 158, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 443, 450, are very pertinent to, and strongly appeal to us in, this case.

To review all the testimony would consume more time than we have at our command, and, as the facts would be of no value to any other case, a longer opinion would merely lumber the reports of the court. The three opinions of the Patent Office tribunals give in detail the facts, and no good purpose would be subserved in restating them.

Appellant has not satisfied us, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he had reduced the process of the issue to practice prior to the time when Hill’s patents were applied for, or that he had done so even at the time when he filed his application for patent. Our conclusion on this branch of the ease makes it unnecessary to refer to the laches of appellant in filing an application for patent. The general principles applicable to that question need not here be discussed.

We have failed to discover any error in the decision of the Commissioner of Patents which would warrant a reversal. Hi a decision is correct and is affirmed.

The clerk of the court will certify our opinion, and the proceedings herein, to the Commissioner of Patents as required by law. Affirmed.