Application of Frederick C. Tarbox

411 F.2d 1029, 56 C.C.P.A. 1205
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1969
DocketPatent Appeal 8092
StatusPublished

This text of 411 F.2d 1029 (Application of Frederick C. Tarbox) 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 Frederick C. Tarbox, 411 F.2d 1029, 56 C.C.P.A. 1205 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

*1030 WORLEY, Chief Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of all the claims of appellant’s patent application 1 under 35 U.S. C. § 103.

Appellant’s invention relates to a grass cutting mower of the type having a tractor and a plurality of cutters. The tractor motor and the individual cutter motors are operated by one hydraulic system best described with reference to Figure 4 of the application:

*1031 In one position of the main valve (47), fluid from the pump (17) is directed in series through the mower motors (39, 39a, 39b), a variable throttling valve (58) and the tractor motor (63), thus enabling the mower to be driven across a grassy surface to be mowed with the cutter motors operating under full pressure at optimum speed and with the tractor motor moving at a variable speed controlled by the setting of the variable throttling valve.

In another position, the main valve blocks off fluid flow to or from the cutter motors to hold the cutters stationary, with the flow from the pump being directed through the throttling valve to the tractor motor. In that condition the mower may be driven at variable speed or left stationary, depending on the setting of throttling valve, with the cutters immovable.

Independent claims 16 and 17 of appellant’s application read:

16. In the power mower combination of a plurality of cutter vehicles, each having cutting blades, and a hydraulic motor powered tractor vehicle for pulling said cutting vehicles the improvement which comprises:

(1) a hydraulic motor on each of said cutter vehicles for driving said cutting blades;

(2) means whereby said tractor motor and each of said cutter motors are actuated by the fluid pressure of a common hydraulic system; and

(3) valve means for controlling said fluid pressure and adapted to, selectively, (a) isolate all said motors from said fluid pressure, (b) isolate only said tractor motor from said fluid pressure while maintaining full fluid pressure to said cutter motors, (c) isolate only said cutter motors from said fluid pressure while providing said tractor motor with a controllable variable and directional fluid pressure, or (d) provide the cutter hydraulic motors with full fluid pressure while providing said tractor motor with a controllable variable and directional fluid pressure.

17. In the power mower combination of a plurality of cutter vehicles, each having cutting blades, and a hydraulic motor powered tractor vehicle for pulling said cutter vehicles the improvement which comprises:

(1) a hydraulic motor on each of said cutter vehicles for driving said cutting blades;

(2) means whereby said cutter motors and said tractor motor are actuated by the fluid pressure of a common hydraulic system;

(3) a valve in said common hydraulic system which provides a selective on-off fluid pressure to said cutter motors while providing a substantially constant positive pressure to said tractor motor; and

(4) a second valve in said hydraulic system which provides a controllable variable and directional fluid pressure to said tractor motor.

Claim 18 depends from claim 17 and adds the additional limitation that at least three overlapping cutter vehicles having at least three overlapping blades are provided.

The references are:

Haberland et al. 2,953,164 Sept. 20, 1960 3,135,079 June 2, 1964 Dunn

*1032 Haberland discloses a grass cutting mower driven by hydraulic motors and having a hydraulic cutter motor. Opera-

In Haberland, fluid from a pump P is directed to a cutter motor M3 to drive the cutter blades B, with the flow of fluid from the motor returning via a line (30) to a reservoir R. Fluid is also directed through a line (13) to a spool valve C which contains an inner member having an internal recess (56). In a neutral position of the spool valve C shown in Figure 1, the recess (56) directs the incoming fluid from the line (13) to two outlet ports (25, 26) which return the fluid through a line (28) to the reservoir R. To move the vehicle, the inner member of the spool valve C is rotated forwardly to the position shown tion of the Haberland device is most easily understood from Figures 1 and 7 of the patent:

in Figure 7 in which the recess (56) directs the incoming fluid to two ports (16, 17) which communicate through lines (21, 23) with the wheel motors Mi, M2 to drive them. The speed of the wheel motors Mi, M2 may be varied by selectively controlling the spool valve C. To control the cutter blade movement, the motor M3 may be selectively bypassed through a line (14) controlled by a valve V interposed in the line (14).

The Dunn patent discloses grass mowing apparatus comprising three hydraulically powered cutting units connected in series, drawn by a tractor. However, *1033 the tractor is not disclosed as being powered by a hydraulic motor.

The examiner rejected the claims under 35 U.S.C. § 103, taking the position that the only difference between the vehicle-mower combination of Haberland and appellant’s claimed device was that appellant provides a separate motor for each of the cutters which should be an obvious expedient in view of Dunn’s showing of 3 hydraulic cutting motors connected in series. Appellant argued that the valves Y and C of Haberland would not conform in their operation to the requirements of the claims on appeal and, in particular, that valve V failed to “isolate” the cutter motor. The board affirmed the examiner, stating:

It appears to us that the patent to Haberland et al. does show a construction wherein the operation of the valve means V and C thereof conforms to the requirements of the claims.
Appellant takes issue with the Examiner’s interpretation of Haberland et al., arguing that the Examiner is in error in stating that the valve V of the system of the patent is merely a by-pass valve and will not isolate the cutter mowers at any time. As we see it, the specification of Haberland et al. at column 3, lines 19-37 inclusive clearly discloses that the motor M-3 will not actuate the cutter blades when the valve V is open. This condition, therefore, is one wherein the motor M-3 is isolated from the rest of the system insofar as concerns the operation thereof. The motor M-3 will, at that time, be isolated from the fluid pressure.

Appellant here draws attention to what he considers a region of uncertainty in the disclosure of the Haberland patent and hypothesizes various arrangements of the Haberland components within that uncertain region, each of which arrangements appellant asserts would fail to provide the operation required by the claims.

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Bluebook (online)
411 F.2d 1029, 56 C.C.P.A. 1205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-frederick-c-tarbox-ccpa-1969.