Application of Ray

198 F.2d 831, 40 C.C.P.A. 701
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1952
DocketPatent Appeal 5897
StatusPublished

This text of 198 F.2d 831 (Application of Ray) 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 Ray, 198 F.2d 831, 40 C.C.P.A. 701 (ccpa 1952).

Opinion

GARRETT, 'Chief 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, hereinafter referred to as the examiner, of claims 1, 4, 5, and 9 of appellant’s application for a patent for “Electromagnetically Controlled Operator.”

Two claims numbered respectively 7 and 10 were allowed by the examiner.

Appealed claim 1 is typical of all the appealed claims. It -reads :

“1. In an electromagnetically controlled device: an electromagnet -comprising a core member and a coil in flux-inducing relation to the core member for energizing the same; an armature member cooperable with said core member; said electromagnet when energized being incapable of attracting said armature member through ■space, but adapted while, and only while, energized to retain the armature member in engagement with said core member after the members are first mechanically brought together; and mechanical means for moving the members into send engagement and for then sliding their cooperating surfaces relative to each other to ensure intimacy of the engagement.”

We have italicized the last clause of the claim because it is typical of the only material limitation in the appealed claims which differs from a patent, No. 2,245,834, issued to Hubert T. Sparrow June 17, 1941.

In appealed claim 9 it is stated that the purpose of the sliding action defined in the claim is “to ensure intimacy of engagement of the surfaces.” In appealed claims 1 and 4 the purpose of the sliding action is stated to be “to ensure intimacy of the engagement.”

In appealed claim 5 the limitation reads:

“* * * mechanical means for moving one of said members arcuately into engagement with the other, said mechanical means including means yieldable in a manner to permit sliding of said surfaces relative to each other after initial interengagement of the surfaces.”

The Sparrow patent was the basic reference relied upon by the tribunals of the Patent Office, although a number of other patents were cited in their decisions.

In view of the conclusion which we have reached upon -the narrow issues presented to us by the reasons of -appeal, we find it unnecessary to discuss the other references.

We quote here the description given by the board of the device defined by the appealed claims:

“The appealed claims relate to an electromagnetically controlled operating device of the manual reset type in which an electromagnet is provided to retain an armature in attracted position after it is first brought to that position by manually operated means. The electromagnet is defined in the claims as being so designed that it is incapable of attracting the armature through space. In the event of subsequent de- *833 energizing of the electromagnet, as in response to a change in the controlling condition, the armature is released and thereafter it must be manually reset An important feature of the appealed claims is the provision of means for causing relative sliding movement between the pole faces of the electromagnet and the contacting surface of the armature after these parts have been brought into engagement. Appellant states that by such relative sliding of the surfaces the intimacy of the contact therebetween is improved.” (Italics supplied by us.)

The Sparrow patent “relates to a safety control device and more particularly to a gas valve for shutting off the flow of gas in the event of the pilot burner becoming extinguished.” The patent, illustrated with drawings, discloses a device consisting of many physical elements arranged in a general combination, which includes some sub-combinations.

The rejection of the appealed claims was based upon two grounds.

The first ground, if we understand the decisions aright, is that, by reason of certain structural features defined in the Sparrow patent, the sliding of cooperating surfaces relative to each other is inherent in that patent.

The board, in its decision affirming the decision of the examiner, quoted from the specification of the patent a sentence stating, in substance, that by reason of a loose pivotal connection afforded by certain elements designated as “tongues” and an element designated as a “pin” it is possible to move the armature, disclosed in the patent, into very close engagement with the core, and stated:

“In view of this statement by Sparrow, and in view of the frictional forces applied during the actuation of his manual reset means, we believe that his structure inherently provides means for sliding the contacting surfaces relative to each other to insure intimacy of the engagement, as recited broadly in the rejected claims.”

The second ground of rejection is stated in the decision of the board as follows:

“* * * As indicated by the Examiner in his rejection, the [appealed] claims depend for novelty on a means type functional statement relating to a desired mode of operation and he cites as precedent the case of In re Lawson, 1936 C.D. 585; 30 USPQ 13. Appellant contends that his claims are not directed to a new element, but to a new combination of elements each of which is known in itself. However, the rejected claims contain functional language at the exact point of alleged novelty. Suich claims were held to be defectively functional in General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance Corp., 1938 C.D. 813; 37 USPQ 466.” (Italics supplied by us.)

It should be noted that the decision in the Lawson case, supra, was a decision of this court, see 83 F.2d 1001, 23 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1235, and the decision in the case of General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance Corp., supra, was by the Supreme Court of the United States, 304 U.S. 364, 58 S.Ct. 899, 82 L.Ed. 1402.

It is thought that the precise point involved in the second ground of rejection may be more easily understood from a comparison of the limitations involved in the appealed claims with the limitations involved in the allowed claims. So, we here quote in parallel columns appealed claim 5 and allowed claim 7 with the respective limitations italicized.

Appealed claim 5.

“5. In an electromagnetically controlled device: an electromagnet comprising a core member having a plane polar surface, and a coil in flux-inducing relation to the core member for energizing the same; an armature member having a plane surface co-operable with said polar surface of the core member; said electromagnet when energized being incapable of attracting said armature member through space, but adapted while, and only while, energized to retain the armature member in engagement with said core member after said surfaces are first mechanically brought together; and mechanical means for moving one of said *834

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198 F.2d 831, 40 C.C.P.A. 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-ray-ccpa-1952.