Application of Wesley Nathaniel Karlson

311 F.2d 581, 50 C.C.P.A. 908
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 311 F.2d 581 (Application of Wesley Nathaniel Karlson) 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 Wesley Nathaniel Karlson, 311 F.2d 581, 50 C.C.P.A. 908 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

Appellant appeals from an adverse decision of the Board of Appeals which affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 8 and 9 of his application 1 for a patent on a chemical feeder. No claims were allowed.

The board in affirming the examiner's final rejection relied on the following references :

Stewart 1,362,153 December 14,1920.

Shuldener 2,703,176 March 1, 1955.

Claim 8 is illustrative and reads as follows:

“8. In a chemical feeder, a chemical tank having a bottom wall with upwardly extended sides defining a clear and unobstructed interior space within which a supply of soluble chemical may be contained and means including a horizontal top wall closing the top of said space in a water-tight relation, means on one of said walls for supporting said tank on a horizontal portion of a water line, and means providing valved passages for connection of one end of each such passage to such a line and the other ends of the passages opening through said horizontal top wall to terminate at the inside surface of said top wall so that water may pass from one to the other of said passages along the inside surface of said top wall."

The issues to be resolved appear to be adequately stated by the appellant. They relate to whether or not the board committed error in holding “that the unobstructed interior space defined by the side and end wall,” set out in appellant’s claim, “is obviously disclosed in the Shuldener device; in holding that it would not be unobvious to eliminate the screen and filler tube of Shuldener if it was desired to introduce the solution into his tank in some other manner; in holding the location of the tank as being of no patentable significance; in holding it would be obvious to merely arrange the pipe inlet and outlet on the top of the Stewart tank to obtain a flow path as taught by Shuldener and in holding the Shuldener tank does not have segregated bodies of liquid.”

The claims relate to a by-pass type of feeder designed to add small amounts of chemical to a water system, the object being to improve the propei-ties of the water by feeding into the system a water solution of the chemical in quantity proportioned to the flow of water there-through.

The feeder is a closed cylindrical tank mounted on a horizontal pipe of the water system. The tank, in a vertical position, is disclosed as having an inlet line and an outlet line connecting its top to the water pipe on its opposite sides to carry a by-pass flow of water from the pipe through the tank. The by-pass flow is produced by a pressure differential es *583 tablished in the pipe by a valve, or by other means, such as an orifice plate. Jét fittings connect the inlet and outlet lines to the water pipe. The inlet line has a shut-off valve and the outlet line a needle valve. Lumps of a slowly soluble treating chemical, filling a major portion of the tank, provide a supply of undissolved chemical for maintaining a saturated solution of the chemical in the upper portion of the tank. A flow of water by-passed through the tank engages the solution and feeds it into the water system in proportion to the velocity of the water flow.

The application states that the water by-passed through the tank passes through only the upper portion of the tank and the saturated solution therein.

The Shuldener patent discloses a chemical feeding tank with by-pass feed lines. The inlet and outlet lines enter and exit through the top of the tank from a main water supply pipe. The supply line contains a restricting element which provides for a pressure differential at the points of connection of the by-pass lines to the main supply line. The chemical may be introduced into the tank through a perforated tube at the top to permit water access to the chemical. The chemical begins to dissolve as it passes through the tube. A screen is horizontally placed near the mid-section of the tank, to suspend the undissolved chemical. Any chemical not dissolved before it reaches the screen is suspended by the screen and dissolves within a few minutes. The heavier, more concentrated solution is said to be in the lower half of the tank, while the solution in the upper half is less concentrated. The tank is supported on a cradle, spaced from the water supply line.

The Stewart patent discloses a feeder for adding boiler compounds to feed water in quantities proportioned to the velocity of water in the feed pipe. The feeder comprises a closed cylindrical tank mounted on an enlarged casing interposed in the feed pipe. An inlet pipe leads from the enlarged easing to the upper portion of the tank diverting thereto a portion of the feed water. An outlet pipe leads from the upper portion of the opposite side of the tank to the enlarged casing. This pipe has an extension within the tank leading from the upper portion of the tank to a point near the bottom of the tank. The chemical to be dissolved is introduced by means of a funnel through the top of the tank. The inlet pipe is provided with a regulating valve and the outlet pipe is provided with a cut-off valve.

The board, in finding the claimed structure unpatentable over Shuldener, said:

“ * * * The claims attempt to distinguish over Shuldener by stating that the sides and end walls of the tank provide an unobstructed interior space. This construction is obviously disclosed in the Shuldener device. The fact that Shuldener provides the tank interior with a basket and filler pipe for the purpose of introducing chemicals into solution in a certain desired manner does not result in a modification of the area encompassed by the wall structure. However, we agree with the position taken by the Examiner that it would not be unobvious to eliminate the screen and filler tube of Shuldener if it was desired to introduce the solution into his tank in some other manner. The water circulation and entrainment of chemical solution in the Shuldener device would still function in the same manner if the screen and filler tube were removed.”

We do not agree that the presence of a basket and filler tube does not result in a “modification” of the tank interior in Shuldener. The claims specifically require that the interior space be “clear and unobstructed.” While a wire mesh basket may not be much of an obstruction to the flow of water, this is in part the kind of obstruction appellant seeks to obviate. It is noted that one of the drawbacks of the prior art, according to the instant specification, was the presence of “strainers” at either end. For this reason, we cannot say that the perforated screen disclosed and claimed in *584 Shuldener is not an obstruction in any sense of the word.

On the other hand, we agree with the finding below that it would be obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art to remove the screen and tube in the Shuldener tank to provide “a clear and unobstructed interior space” as in the claims here presented.

Appellant contends that the board’s holding that it would not be unobvious to eliminate the screen and filler tube of Shuldener ignores the inventive concept of Shuldener.

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Related

Application of Alexander M. Wright
343 F.2d 761 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
311 F.2d 581, 50 C.C.P.A. 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-wesley-nathaniel-karlson-ccpa-1963.