Altvater v. Knight

82 F.2d 608, 23 C.C.P.A. 897, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1936
DocketNo. 3559
StatusPublished

This text of 82 F.2d 608 (Altvater v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altvater v. Knight, 82 F.2d 608, 23 C.C.P.A. 897, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 49 (ccpa 1936).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office in an interference proceeding which arose between patent No. 1,885,169, issued to the party Altvater November 1, 1932, on an application filed May. 22, 1931, and an application of the jjarty Knight, filed December 21, 1932, for the reissue of'patent No. 1,886,554, granted him November 8, 1932, on an application filed January 14,1924.

The subject matter is a perforating device intended particularly for use in making ornamental perforations in materials, such as leather, entering into the manufacture of shoes, especially shoe uppers.

Only one count is involved in the appeal. It reads:

A machine of the character described comprising rigid ornamenting dies, a movable support having holes therethrough for the projection of said dies when said support is moved, a gage device supported by said support for gaging and locating the work properly with respect to said dies, and means for operating said gage device to position against the upper side of the work that is mounted on said support.

It was copied by Knight from the Altvater patent for interference purposes.

The single issue presented is whether the party Knight, who is the senior party, in his application which matured into patent No. 1,886,-554, disclosed the invention of the count.

The Board of Appeals, it may be said, had the question of Knight’s disclosure before it in three separate hearings. Originally, the interference contained four counts. Altvater moved to dissolve on the ground that Knight had no right to make the counts because of lack of disclosure. The motion was sustained by the Examiner of Interferences, but upon appeal the board reversed as to the count now involved, which was count 1, and upon return of the case to the Examiner of Interferences he entered judgment on the record awarding priority to Knight upon said count. Altvater then applied to the board for a rehearing as to count 1, citing certain cases which it was argued were controlling. The board denied the petition, whereupon [899]*899appellant took formal appeal from tbe decision of the Examiner of Interferences entering judgment on the record. The board, adhering to its former views, affirmed the decision, and the instant appeal to this court followed.

In general, it may be said that each party discloses a device comprising a series of plates fastened together, one upon top of another, so that they form a rigid base which rigidly supports what are called die elements. These die elements are small pins or “pegs” whose outer ends are sharpened and given a contour which adapts them for use in punching small holes in material. Another plate, sometimes referred to as a “work support” and at other times as a “stripper plate,” is located above the base, being attached to it and held apart from it, by springs capable of being compressed when it is desired to bring the die elements in contact with the material. These stripper plates are equipped with holes which are in alinement with the rigid die elements.

As to the foregoing general features there is no issue between the parties. The- issue grows largely out of an additional plate which is located above the stripper plate.

Altvater refers to this additional plate as a “gage device,” or “gage plate.” Knight refers to his as a “gage mask,” or “hold-down plate.” For convenience, we shall use the term “gage plate” in referring to this feature of both devices.

In the Altvater device the gage plate is a strip of metal whose upper edge is comparatively straight, but whose lower edge is fashioned to conform to the arrangement of the holes in the stripper plate, said lower edge being serrated with the edges of the serrations alining with parts of the edges of “some of the holes.

The Knight device shows substantially the same arrangement of a serrated edge alined with parts of some of the hole edges.

There are structural differences in the respective gage plates, and certain differences in operation, but none in the. ultimate function performed.

Altvater’s gage plate stands above and normally out of contact with the stripper plate. Its normal position, when not in operation, leaves a sufficient space between its lower side and the upper side of the stripper plate to admit of the entrance of the material which it is desired to perforate with the die elements. The gage plate is equipped with a rivet at each end and these rivets extend through holes in the stripper plate and are rigidly riveted into the ends of arms of what Altvater designates as an “angular bail-shaped lever.” The arms of this lever extend forwardly from the points where they are riveted to the gage plate and are connected at their front ends by a metal connection which is slightly back of the front edge of the stripper plate and extends across it, the entire lever [900]*900element being underneath the stripper plate. When it is desired to operate the device the material is inserted by hand in the space between the stripper plate and gage plate. It covers the holes in the stripper plate through which the die elements are to be pressed, but by means of the serrated! edges of the gage plate, above described, the operator is enabled to place the material in proper position relative to the concealed holes. The operator then presses the arm connecting strip of the bail-shaped lever upward and this causes the gage plate to be drawn downwardly to contact the material resting upon the stripper plate. While it is so held pressure is applied by means not here involved, which causes the dies to thrust upwardly through the holes in the stripper plate and puncture the material.

Knight’s gage plate consists of a metallic plate which covers the entire surface of the stripper plate, except for al cut out section over the holes, and extends beyond both side edges and bottom edge of the latter. The projections at the lower ends of its (the gage plate’s) sides are wider than those at its upper ends-and. are bent downwardly, forming what Knight designates as “wings.” The gage plate at its upper end is hingedly attached to the stripper plate, and, in normal position, when not in operation, the under surface of the gage plate rests directly upon the upper surface of the stripper plate. In operation, the operator, using the wings as handles, lifts the gage plate by hand and places the work on the stripper plate, covering the holes, as in the Altvater device. When tire gage plate is lowered to contact with the material, the serrated edges of the upper side of the cut out section in the gage plate indicates the proper alinenrent to be made with the holes in the stripper plate through which the die elements are pressed by means not here at issue.

The count which is here involved is concededly broad in its terms, but it is insisted on behalf of the party Altvater that at least two of its features are not disclosed in the Knight patent, viz., (1) “a gage device supported by said support for gaging and locating -the work * * * ,” emphasis being placed upon “and locating,” and (2) “means for operating said gage device to position against the upper side of the work.”

The contention on behalf of appellant is, in substance, that since the count originated in the patent to Altvater it must be interpreted in the light of that patent, and if there be any ambiguity in the count the meaning given it must be that disclosed in Alt-vater’s specification.

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Bluebook (online)
82 F.2d 608, 23 C.C.P.A. 897, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altvater-v-knight-ccpa-1936.