Application of Oliver Kenneth Kelley

305 F.2d 909, 49 C.C.P.A. 1359
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedAugust 2, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6755
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 305 F.2d 909 (Application of Oliver Kenneth Kelley) 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 Oliver Kenneth Kelley, 305 F.2d 909, 49 C.C.P.A. 1359 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Applicant has appealed from a decision of the Board of Appeals, adhered to on reconsideration, which affirmed the examiner’s final rejection of claims 110 through 113, inclusive, of appellant’s application for patent Serial No. 431,868, filed May 24, 1954, for a “Multiple Stage Torque Converter Drive”.

The examiner rejected the appealed claims solely on the ground that they are not supported by the disclosure. The sole issue to be decided in this appeal is whether the board was correct in affirming this rejection. Appellant, at oral argument, withdrew claim 112 from this appeal. Claim 110 was treated by the board as representative of the remaining claims 111 and 113 on appeal. Therefore, our decision as to whether claim 110 is supported by the disclosure is dispositive of that question for all claims on appeal.

Appellant’s application discloses a complex hydraulic transmission for motor vehicles. A complete description of appellant’s invention is unnecessary since the issue on appeal directly concerns only a part of appellant’s invention. The particular part involved is a power-operated clutch or an equivalent friction device which is engaged by hydraulic pressure and has a timing device which controls the rate of flow of the hydraulic fluid to cause the force engaging the clutch to rapidly move the clutch to the position *911 of initial engagement, and then solely increase the engagement force until the clutch is completely engaged. Such a rapid initial movement is desirable in order to reduce the time necessary for initial clutch engagement, and thereafter to build up a gradual increase in pressure to gently and smoothly complete engagement. A portion of figure 12 from the specification is reproduced below and shows the only portions of the mechanism with which we are here concerned.

Claim 110, which as previously stated, is representative of all appealed claims, is as follows:

“110. A device for the automatic control of friction means, comprising in combination [1] a power driven actuator operative to produce an actuating force for the engagement of said friction means, an adjustable power control member for controlling said actuator, a source of power providing an actuating force, connecting means connecting said power driven actuator with said source through said power control member including [2] means for reducing said actuating force supplied by said source, a time-controlled element movable under the influence of a force and adapted during movement thereof to control the rate of engagement of said friction means by said power-driven actuator, [3] means for reducing the strength of said last-mentioned force during the largest part of movement of said time controlled element, and means operatively connecting said time controlled element with said power control member and said first-mentioned reducing means, to provide timed adjustment of said actuator to first move said friction means into slight engagement, to thereupon build up friction at a slow rate to a value at which said friction means ceases slipping, and to subsequently increase said friction well beyond said value.” [Emphasis added.]

It is the position of the board and solicitor that the first two emphasized portions of the claims cannot be supported by appellant’s specification because the only structure in appellant’s invention which can be a “reducing means” is the valve comprised of port 206, the upper land of piston 200 and member 203, shown above. Since this valve must be the element defined in the third emphasized portion of the claim, and since the first emphasized element, the power-driven actuator, is piston 44 and cavity 49, the second emphasized element finds no support in the specification.

Appellant’s interpretation of the claim, presented before the board and before this court, is as follows: Element [3] of the claim is the valve 200, 203, 206 as interpreted by the board above. Element [1], the “power-driven actuator”, is *912 piston 44 alone, and element [2], the “means for reducing said actuating force”, is “expanding cavity 49”. 1

The board’s objection to appellant’s interpretation was stated in its initial opinion as follows:

“* * * we (j0 not agree with the appellant that the piston 44 by itself constitutes the power-driven actuator recited in the claim. Necessarily the actuator includes the piston and the cylinder in which it is located. We do not agree with the appellant that the means for reducing the actuating force supplied by the source, which is recited in the claims, is the expanding cavity 49 in the present case because this cavity is an inseparable part of the cylinder and piston constituting the power-driven actuator and may not, therefore, be properly included as a separate and independent element from the power-driven actuator. To do so would be misleading and indefinite. * * *”

The solicitor argues that the “actuator” cannot be the piston 44 alone, but must include both the piston 44 and its cylinder 2 (or expanding cavity 49), since a piston alone cannot produce an actuating and that the “means for reducing said actuating force” (element [2] of claim 110), must include the piston 44 and its cylinder 49 since the means to reduce the force must include both the cylinder and the piston 44 which define the limits of the expansion area. Therefore, the solicitor argues, there is no support in the specification for elements [1] and [2] of the claims since it requires the double inclusion of both piston 44 and cylinder 49 in order to read the claims on the disclosure. As authority for the position that the clams are not supported because of the double inclusion of elements 44 and 49, the solicitor cites Holdsworth v. Goldsmith, 129 F.2d 571, 29 C.C.P.A. 1047; Kreidel v. Parker, 97 F.2d 171, 25 C.C.P.A. 1242 and Frank v. Hollerith, 159 F.2d 774, 34 C.C.P.A. 863.

Before deciding the question of whether the claims are in fact supported by the specification or whether a supporting disclosure is barred because of double inclusion, it is noted that the claims on appeal were copied by appellant from a patent to Forster, 3 presumably for purposes of interference. The solicitor, throughout his brief, in urging acceptance of the board’s interpretation of the claims, has referred to the disclosure of Forster to show that Forster’s invention shows distinctly separate structures for each of the emphasized elements of the copied claims. However, at oral argument, the solicitor stated that the claims are not ambiguous. Therefore, the fact that the appealed claims originated in the Forster patent is immaterial. If an ambiguity exists in the language of a claim (or a count in an interference proceeding), it should be interpreted in the light of the specification from which *913 it originated.

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Bluebook (online)
305 F.2d 909, 49 C.C.P.A. 1359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-oliver-kenneth-kelley-ccpa-1962.