Durdin v. Nordell

190 F.2d 211, 38 C.C.P.A. 1187, 90 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 228, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 355
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1951
Docket5809
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 190 F.2d 211 (Durdin v. Nordell) 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
Durdin v. Nordell, 190 F.2d 211, 38 C.C.P.A. 1187, 90 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 228, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 355 (ccpa 1951).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This case is before us on an appeal from a decision of the Board of Interference Examiners holding that the counts in issue are readable on the original disclosure of the appellee and awarding priority of invention to him.

On November 28, 1947, appellee Nordell filed an application for reissue of Patent No. 2,418,189,. “Traction Drive for Liquid Treating Apparatus,” issued April 1, 1947, and applied for August 23, 1941. The disclosure of the Nordell reissue application is identical with that of the original patent and the claims differ only in that two have been added which were copied from the Durdin patent. The Primary Examiner rejected those two claims on the ground that they were not supported by the disclosure, Nordell appealed, and the Board of Appeals in a decision of December 31, 1948, reversed the examiner. On March 22, 1949, an interference was declared between the Nordell reissue application and the Durdin patent.

The party Durdin filed his application, serial No. 507,631, on “Liquid Treatment with Solids Impeller Means Having a Normally Submerged Drive Wheel,” on October 25, 1943, and prosecuted it through a final rejection, appeal, and allowance by the Board of Appeals in a decision of July 9, 1947.' The application issued as Patent No. 2,427,091 on September 9, 1947, and some ten or twelve weeks later the party Nor-dell filed his reissue application requesting an interference therewith.

Preliminary statements were filed and when the party Durdin failed to allege a date prior to the filing date of the original Nordell application he was placed under an order to show cause why judgment should not be entered against him. The party Durdin responded by filing a motion to vacate the order and to dissolve the interference on the ground that the party Nordell’s original application did not disclose the .invention of the counts, and that Nordell was consequently not entitled to the benefit of the filing date of that application and was in fact the junior party.

The decision by the Board of Interference Examiners on final hearing, awarding priority to the party Nordell, is the decision on review.

There is no question as to dates. Nor-dell is the earlier. The determinative issue is whether the two counts read on Nordell’s original disclosure.

The invention of both parties has to do with liquid clarifiers, such as those employed by municipalities and process industries to remove suspended solids from a flow-through of raw water, and particularly to the means for driving scrapers which .remove the precipitated solids from the clarifier tank. These scrapers are referred to in the counts as “solids impeller means.”

Both apparatuses comprise a large circular tank, to which the raw water is continuously admitted while being kept as quiescent as possible in order that the suspended solids will subside. The clarified liquid overflows a weir into a launder, and thence to an outlet. The settled solids are scraped from the bottom of the tank towards a sludge outlet in the middle of the circular bottom, the latter being coned downwardly from its periphery to such outlet. ’ The scrapers are carried by a radial bridge structure which rotates on a fixed pivot in the center of the tank and extends to the rim of the tank. This bridge structure comprises a bridge over the liquid level and scraper carrying truss, arms below the liquid level extending radially in the lower portion of the tank. A power driven unit connected to the end of the bridge rotates the bridge by means of a traction wheel which engages a circular track.

It was old in the art to have the track on the top wall of the tank, although this construction was beset with the various *213 difficulties caused by accumulations of ice and snow on the traction surface usually resulting in loss of traction. Both parties solved this difficulty by using a circular track under the liquid surface.

The party Durdin supports the outer or rim end of the bridge on wheels carried by the bridge and riding over the top surface of the vertical tank wall. Attached to the rim end of the bridge is a swingable frame pivoted on a horizontal axis which lies above and substantially tangent to the tank wall. This frame, the normal position of which is horizontal, carries a vertically positioned drive motor, a reduction gear, and a drive wheel mounted on a downwardly extending vertical shaft, which is driven by the motor through the reduction gear. The drive wheel is disclosed as being supplied with a resilient tire which tire makes contact with the vertical inner surface of the tank wall. That surface comprises the track or driveway. Since the entire power unit is mounted on the swing-able frame, the drive wheel is urged against the tank wall with a constant force and is free to follow the contour' of the wall, thus eliminating the necessity for an accurately circular driveway or track. As the tank is always kept full of liquid the driveway and drive wheel are always submerged.

The party Nordell shows several species of his invention, only one of which need be' explained in detail. In his first embodiment Nordell provides an annular track or rail mounted on the inner side of the tank wall and disposed a sufficient distance below the surface of the liquid to prevent its being covered by ice. The outer end of the bridge is supported by a carriage whereon is mounted a wheel which rides over the submerged annular track. Also mounted on the carriage are a motor, a reduction gear, and a drive chain, all of which cooperate to rotate the wheel and thereby move the bridge and connected scrapers. If the foregoing arrangement does not provide sufficient tractive force, Nordell provides a second wheel which contacts the under surface of the annular rail and is driven by the motor. The two wheels are mounted in spaced horizontal relationship. Connected to the wheels and carriage is a linkage, not of importance here, which urges the wheels against the track with a force proportionate to the amount of sludge the scrapers are then encountering.

A second embodiment of Nordell’s invention utilizes the same submerged annular track but derives its traction from a rack and pinion arrangement, the under side of the track being provided with rack teeth for this purpose.

Still a third embodiment eliminates the annular track mounted on the tank wall and utilizes a drive wheel which rolls along the tank bottom.

The counts of the interference read as follows:

“1. In apparatus for the treatment of liquid with precipitation of solids, a tank having a wall associated therewith, which wall presents a submergible and normally submerged driveway in the tank; liquid inlet and outlet means associated with the tank, whereby a liquid level can be substantially maintained in the tank, above said driveway; a frame structure adapted to be moved along said driveway; means to support said frame structure while allowing it to be moved; solids impeller means in the tank, mounted on said frame structure; a drivewheel mounted on the frame structure and adapted to contact said driveway in a direction normal to said driveway and to the periphery of said drivewheel, with sufficient pressure to provide traction; and motor means mounted on said frame structure to drive said drivewheel and thereby to drive said frame structure and solids impeller means.
“2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fontijn v. Okamoto
518 F.2d 610 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1975)
Stansbury v. Bond
482 F.2d 968 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 F.2d 211, 38 C.C.P.A. 1187, 90 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 228, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durdin-v-nordell-ccpa-1951.