Rights of Government and Its Employees in Inventions Made by Such Employees

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U.S. Government Printing Office, 1958 - 112 lappuses
Committee Serial No. 15. Includes "Federal Employee Invention Rights -- Time to Legislate," by Marcus B. Finnegan and Richard W. Pogue, Michigan Law Review, May 1957 (p. 49-112).

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104. lappuse - The head of each department is authorized to prescribe regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the government of his department, the conduct of its officers and clerks, the distribution and performance of its business, and the custody, use, and preservation of the records, papers, and property appertaining to it.
73. lappuse - This section shall not confer a right of action on any patentee...
82. lappuse - It is * the reward stipulated for the advantages [ * 242 ] derived by the public for the exertions of the individual, and is intended as a stimulus to those exertions. The laws which are passed to give effect to this purpose ought, we think, to be construed...
45. lappuse - If any provision of this Act or the application of such provision to any person or circumstance shall be held invalid, the validity of the remainder of the Act and the applicability of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.
82. lappuse - Intention of the statute, or countenancing acts which are fraudulent or may prove mischievous. The public yields nothing which It has not agreed to yield; It receives all which It has contracted to receive. The full benefit of the discovery, after Its enjoyment by the discoverer for fourteen years. Is preserved; and for his exclusive enjoyment of It during that time the public faith Is pledged.
57. lappuse - ... was the employee at the time of the injury engaged in interstate transportation or in work so closely related to it as to be practically a part of it.
55. lappuse - But a manufacturing corporation which has employed a skilled workman, for a stated compensation, to take charge of its works, and to devote his time and services to devising and making improvements in articles there manufactured, is not entitled to a conveyance of patents obtained for inventions made by him while so employed, in the absence of express agreement to that effect.
57. lappuse - An employe, performing all the duties assigned to him in his department of service, may exercise his inventive faculties in any direction he chooses, with the assurance that whatever invention he may thus conceive and perfect is his individual property. There is no difference between the government and any other employer in this respect.
57. lappuse - The Government has no more power to appropriate a man's property invested in a patent than it has to take his property invested in real estate ; nor does the mere fact that an inventor is at the time of his invention in the employ of the Government transfer to it any title to or interest in it.
66. lappuse - NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and statutes, and as President of the United States...

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