Application of Frank M. Van Deventer (Walworth Co., Assignee)

223 F.2d 274, 42 C.C.P.A. 947
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1955
DocketPatent Appeal 6085
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 F.2d 274 (Application of Frank M. Van Deventer (Walworth Co., Assignee)) 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
Application of Frank M. Van Deventer (Walworth Co., Assignee), 223 F.2d 274, 42 C.C.P.A. 947 (ccpa 1955).

Opinions

WORLEY, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the rejection by the Primary Examiner of claims 19 to 23, inclusive, of the appellant’s application, Serial No. 25,002, for a patent on an improvement in plug valves, [275]*275on the ground of lack of invention over the prior art. Claim 19, which is illustrative of the appealed claims, reads:

“19. A plug valve assembly adapted for insertion between the ends of a pair of oppositely disposed tubular pipe sections comprising a valve casing having opposite end portions, one of said casing portions defining an inlet passage converging in one direction to a tapered valve seat from substantially the diameter of one of the pipe sections with which it is adapted to be associated, the other of said casing portions including an outlet passage extending in an opposite direction from the valve seat, a tapered plug valve member eo-operable with said seat and having a port of substantially rectangular cross-section, said passages having at least the portions thereof adjacent the valve seat formed of substantially rectangular cross-section with which said plug port is adapted to register to form a supplemental connecting conduit in the open position of said valve member, and a tapered pipe section positioned at the outlet of said outlet passage and engaging at its smaller end with said other casing portion, said smaller end being generally rectangular cross-section forming a continuation of said outlet passage and diverging into substantially circular cross-section at its larger end, said tapered pipe section having an included angle in its major dimension of approximately ten degrees and being adapted to be connected at the larger end thereof to the other of the tubular pipe sections.”

The references relied on are: de Ferranti (French), 422,829, January 30, 1911; Murray, 1,220,773, March 27, 1917; Borden, 1,522,490, January 13, 1925; Merco Nordstrom (British), 339,-889, December 18, 1930; Hamer, 2,421,-879, June 10, 1947; Hughes and Safford ■ — -“Textbook on Hydraulics,” 1926, pp. 225 and 227.

The application is directed to a valve construction which is intended to be used in relatively large pipe lines. In such lines, the cost of the valves is a material item, and it is therefore desirable to employ valves which are considerably smaller in size than the pipe line itself. When that is done, however, there is normally an appreciable loss in pressure at each valve, which results in an increased cost of operation. It is an object of the applicant’s invention to minimize the pressure drop, while at the same time employing valves of standard construction which are materially -smaller in diameter than that of the pipe line.

Specifically, the application discloses a valve of the rotary plug type having a substantially rectangular passage there-through, and mounted in a casing which has rectangular openings adjacent the valve and adapted to register with the opening in the plug when the valve is in open position. On the inlet side, the casing expands rather rapidly from the point adjacent the valve to a point at which it is joined to the inlet side of the pipe line, and the configuration of the casing also changes from rectangular to round, the diameter of the round portion being approximately equal to that of the pipe line. On the outlet side, the valve casing is generally rectangular in cross-section and expands in a lesser degree from the valve at an angle of approximately 10°. At the outlet end, the casing is joined to a tubular member which expands gradually from a generally rectangular cross-section equal to that of the casing outlet to a round cross-section equal to that of the pipe line, the angle of expansion being approximately 10°. With that arrangement, turbulence and losses due to friction are said to be very materially reduced.

The reference primarily relied on by the Patent Office tribunals in the rejection of claim 19 is the French patent to de Ferranti. That patent discloses a valve comprising a spherical plug mounted in a casing having passages which flare outwardly in each direction from a diameter equal to that of the passage [276]*276in the valve plug to the diameter of the pipe in which the valve is to be inserted. Those passages are circular in cross-section, and one is more sharply flared than the other. The specification of the patent is directed to the construction of the valve itself and no specific statement is made as to the size or shape of the passages in the casing. Although it was stated by the Patent Office that the angle at which the outlet passage is flared is approximately 10°, that conclusion must necessarily be based on the drawing alone. However, from our examination, the drawing indicates that the angle in question is in excess of 10° and more nearly approximates 15°.

The British patent to Merco Nordstrom was also relied on in the rejection of claim 19. It discloses a valve comprising a tapered plug having a substantially rectangular opening and mounted in a casing which includes rectangular openings adapted to register with the openings in the plug. From those registering portions, the casing is flared and changes its shape from rectangular to circular, so that it may be connected with the circular inlet and outlet pipes having a diameter somewhat greater than the longest dimension of the rectangular opening. .

The patents to Murray, Borden, and Hamen were also relied on by the tribunals below as disclosing certain ancillary features, but, in view of our conclusion, it is not necessary to consider those patents in detail here. ,

Claim 19 is limited to a valve assembly comprising a plug having a rectangular passage and a casing having rectangular inlet and outlet passages registering with the plug opening. It further requires that the outlet passage shall have a taper of approximately 10°, and that both the inlet and outlet passages shall vary in shape from rectangular to circular cross-section*

That claim was rejected on a combination of the British and French patents, it having been held that no invention would be involved in modifying the taper of the outlet passage of the British patent to correspond with that required by claim 19 in view of the showing of the French patent; or, conversely, that invention would not be involved, in view of the British patent, in employing a valve plug with a rectangular opening in the French patent and modifying the outlet passages of the casing so that they vary from rectangular to circular conformation.

In our opinion those rejections would be more persuasive if the French patent contained any statement as to the taper of the outlet passage, or any indication that some particular degree of taper were desired. In the absence of such statements, the patent contains no more than an incidental showing in the drawing. . It is quite true that an incidental, or even an accidental, showing may constitute an anticipation and, accordingly, if claim 19 were readable on the drawing of the French patent, it would be immaterial that the taper of the passage is not specifically described. In attempting to combine references, however, consideration must be given to what they properly teach, and we. do not think that the specific taper which happens to be illustrated in the French patent could properly be transferred to the device of the British patent.

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223 F.2d 274, 42 C.C.P.A. 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-frank-m-van-deventer-walworth-co-assignee-ccpa-1955.