Ex Parte JOHNSON - Page 10




                Interference No. 104,315                                                                                                              
                Sauer Inc. v. Kanzaki Kokyukoki Mfg. Co., Ltd.                                                                                        

                their joint efforts to something outside of the scope of the count does not provide an excuse for                                     
                either party to not be diligent in reducing the invention of the count to practice. Either for                                        
                technical or business reasons or a combination of the two, and whatever is its motivation, Sauer                                      
                chose to pursue something outside of the scope of the count and has nothing to show for more                                          
                than three weeks at the very beginning of the critical period for reducing to practice the invention                                  
                of the count. Moreover, Sauer does not allege and it has not been demonstrated that the so called                                     
                "agreement" between Sauer and Kanzaki precluded either party from separately engaging in the                                          

                development of other design concepts independent of the other party. Sauer has not shown that                                         
                during the initial period encompassing the three week gap it had any intention to reduce to                                           
                practice an invention according to the count, let alone that during that time period it had                                           
                diligently engaged in specific or meaningful activities toward reducing the invention of the count                                    
                to practice.                                                                                                                          
                         At least on the record presented in this interference, if Sauer assumed that Kanzaki would                                   
                not develop other concepts on its own, or that an eventual binding joint venture between them                                         
                would necessarily occur which would incorporate any and all work Kanzaki had developed or                                             
                would develop on the subject of integrated hydrostatic transaxles, that would appear to be very                                       
                optimistic wishful thinking and Sauer would be making the assumption at its own risk. The risk                                        
                is that Kanzaki would have conceived and filed a patent application which possibly was                                                
                previously conceived by Sauer but for which Sauer had not been diligent toward reducing it to                                         
                practice. That is the circumstance we now have.                                                                                       

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