LOUIS et al. V. OKADA et al. - Page 12




            Interference No. 104,311                                                                                             
            Sauer Inc. v. Kanzaki Kokyukoki Mfg. Co., Ltd.                                                                       

            practice and be regarded as diligent; and still another inventor may take two years to reduce the                    
            same invention to practice and be regarded as diligent. Diligence is directed to continuous,                         
            steady, or constant effort, and not necessarily to any quick result.                                                 
                   Sauer has not cited to any authority, and we are aware of none, that supports its position                    
            that diligence is a measure of how quickly, in absolute measure of time, one reduce an invention                     
            to practice, as compared to some "norm." In contrast, we note that quoting from a Sixth Circuit                      
            opinion from 1893, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in Mahurkar v. C.R. Bard Inc.,                      
            79 F.3d 1572, 1577, 38 USPQ2d 1288, 1290 (Fed. Cir. 1996), stated:                                                   
                   [T]he person "who first conceives, and, in a mental sense, first invents.... may                              
                   date his patentable invention back to the time of its conception, if he connects the                          
                   conception with its reduction to practice by reasonable diligence on his part, so                             
                   that they are substantially one continuous act." (Emphasis added.)                                            
                   For the foregoing reasons, continuity of steadfast effort is the linchpin for determining the                 
            presence of reasonable diligence. With the un-excused gap of more than three months from                             
            November 25, 1987 to February 28, 1988, more than three weeks of which are within the critical                       
            period commencing from February 3, 1988, Sauer has failed to show the necessary reasonable                           
            diligence. In its reply, Sauer argues that the public's interest was protected because despite the                   
            initial gap, it still completed reduction to practice in a short period of time. We disagree. Had                    
            there not been this three month gap, more than three weeks of which is in Sauer's critical period,                   
            Sauer most likely could have reduced the invention to practice earlier. In any event, as already                     



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