Application of Lovel R. Simmons and James T. Monk, Jr

314 F.2d 555, 50 C.C.P.A. 1071
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6949
StatusPublished

This text of 314 F.2d 555 (Application of Lovel R. Simmons and James T. Monk, Jr) 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.

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Application of Lovel R. Simmons and James T. Monk, Jr, 314 F.2d 555, 50 C.C.P.A. 1071 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 1-9 in application Ser. No. 673,835, filed July 24, 1957, for “Tractor With Selectively Appliable Weight Transfer For Traction Wheels Thereof And A Traction-Wheel-Driving Differential With Lock-Up Selectively Applicable Concurrently With Application of Weight Transfer.”

The sole issue is obviousness in view of prior art under 35 U.S.C. § 103.

Appellants’ invention is the combination of a tractor, an earth-hauling vehicle towed thereby, and cooperative mechanisms for limiting the tendency of one or the other of the tractor’s rear driving wheels to spin due to insufficient traction. One such mechanism is an hydraulically-operated, inclined, extensible hydraulic strut, attached at its lower end to the rear of the tractor frame, the upper end being attached to the front of the earth-hauling vehicle’?* frame at a point considerably higher than the point of attachment of the strut to the tractor. The introduction of pressurized fluid into the cylinder of the strut drives a piston-like plunger rearward and upward, thereby tending to release some of the weight from the front wheels of the earth-hauling vehicle. The weight released from the front wheels of the towed vehicle is transferred in part to its rear wheels and in part to the rear wheels of the tractor, thereby increasing the traction of the latter wheels. This mechanism and associated structures, which we need not further describe, are designated as “weight transferring hitch means” in claim 1, infra. An hydraulic hose line connects the cylinder of the strut to a tractor-engine-activated pump and hydraulic fluid source. Fluid flow to the cylinder is controlled by a valve operated through mechanical linkages by the operator of the tractor.

Appellant’s second tractor-wheel-spin-limiting mechanism amounts to a known differential lock-up, 1 two forms of which are disclosed, one manually operable and the other hydraulically operable by means of a hydraulic ram. The latter form of differential lock-up is shown as connected, through a secondary hydraulic hose line and a manually operable differential lock-up control valve, to the first mentioned hydraulic hose line. The position of the control valve (i. e., whether open or closed) determines whether or not the differential lock-up will be activated simultaneously with the “weight transferring hitch means.” 2

*557 Claim 1, which, for the purposes of this appeal, is admitted to be indistinguishable from claim 9, reads as follows:

“1. In a tractor vehicle adapted for propelling a second vehicle articulately coupled thereto and adapted to receive traction-improving weight from the second vehicle, tractor-supporting traction type propelling elements engaged with the ground at spaced-apart positions thereon, weight transferring hitch means connectable with the second vehicle to establish the articulate coupling of the tractor vehicle thereto and energizable to transfer weight from the second vehicle onto the propelling elements in different relative amounts depending upon the attitude of the tractor vehicle such as relative to the verticle [sic], or to the hitch means, a selective lock-up type differential through which propelling force is differentially transmittable to the propelling elements during non-lock-up and independently transmittable to such elements during lock-up, control means for selectively energizing or deenergizing the weight transferring means, and means for selectively effecting lockup or non-lock-up of the differential concurrently with energization of the weight-transferring means.”

Claims 2-8 are more specific than claims 1 and 9 in that they are directed to a device wherein differential lock-up occurs under the control of the means for controlling the activation of the weight transfer mechanism. The patentability of claim 5 and dependent claims 6 and 7 is urged on the basis of the recitations therein that the “differential control means” is “settable for operation under control of the weight transferring control means” (our emphasis) thereby more explicitly including the differential lock-up control valve in the claims. Inasmuch as claim 4 includes a similar recitation, we have grouped this claim with claims 5-7.

The references relied on are:

Simmons 2,459,098 Jan. 11, 1949

Mayer et al. 1,212,795 Jan. 16, 1917

Miller 1,142,831 June 15, 1915

A discussion of the content of these references is unnecessary in view of the following statements in appellants’ brief:

“The Simmons patent No. 2,459,-098, discloses a weight-transferring hitch structure 12 identical with that of the present application, and the hydraulic circuit and controls for the hitch structure of the patent and of this application are identical excepting for the tap into the hose line 75 shown in Fig. 3 of this application to enable the differential lock-up mechanism of such Fig. 3 to operate in response to and under control of the operation of the weight-transferring hitch.
“The Mayer patent No. 1,212,795 and the Miller patent No. 1,142,831 disclose differentials capable of being locked up, and it can be assumed for the purpose of the ensuing argument that these two lock-up differentials are identical with the present applicants’ lock-up differential.”

The Patent Office position is that all of the claims are unpatentable because it would be obvious to substitute a lockup differential of the type shown by either Miller of Mayer et al. for the differential disclosed by Simmons and to actuate both the lock-up and hydraulic strut together by a common hydraulic control.

With respect to broad claims 1 and 9, all that appellants have recited in these claims is the mere addition of a differential lock-up to the weight shifting device disclosed in the Simmons patent. In view of the well known nature and attributes of a differential lock-up, such an addition to the Simmons structure would be obvious if wheel-spinning were encountered therein or if, for any other reason, use of a differential lock-up appeared to be desirable.

*558 Claims 2-8, as previously noted, recite a specific cooperative relationship between the differential lock-up and the weight transferring mechanism, wherein the latter is controlled by the former so that both mechanisms may be operated together through actuation, by the operator, of a single manual control.

The board stated on request for reconsideration :

“The idea of using a single control to actuate two branches or two stages of an apparatus is quite common in various arts. We found no patentability in the substitution of a lock-up type of differential for the differential disclosed by Simmons. In such a substitution, we find no further patentability in the concept of actuating the differential lock-up and the weight transfer mechanism through a common control.”

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314 F.2d 555, 50 C.C.P.A. 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-lovel-r-simmons-and-james-t-monk-jr-ccpa-1963.