Harrison v. Cadwell

39 F.2d 704, 17 C.C.P.A. 1024, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 2270
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 39 F.2d 704 (Harrison v. Cadwell) 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
Harrison v. Cadwell, 39 F.2d 704, 17 C.C.P.A. 1024, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 255 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of tire court:

This interference proceeding, which is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, involves the question of priority of an invention of a process for vulcanizing rubber.

The value of the invention is emphasized by the size of the record (more than .2,500 pages) and the briefs (more than 300 pages). There are more than 100 exhibits in the case, and a great number of legal questions are raised and argued at length, most of which questions require no consideration by us.

The interference is between two patents numbered 1,434,892 and 1,434,908, of Harrison and Morton, appellants, granted November 7,1922, and a single application by Cadwell, appellee, filed February 1, 1921. Harrison’s and Morton’s applications were filed March 5, 1921. Appellants’ assignee is the Miller Rubber Co. Cadwell was a chemist in the employ of the United Rubber Co. or its subsidiary, the Naugatuck Chemical Co. For the purpose of interference, 11 counts were taken from the patents of Harrison and Morton, No. 1 and No. 7 of which were regarded by the Board of Appeals as illustrative and will be so considered by us, and are as follows:

1. The herein described method of forming a sheet or slab of rubber which consists in superposing one upon the other a plurality of plies of rubber compound, one ply containing sulphur and an adjoining ply an accelerator.
7. The hereinbefore described method of effecting the vulcanization of rubber compounds which consists in incorporating with the rubber compound one [1026]*1026of two ingredients which. will coact to effect vulcanization, applying the other ingredient to the surface of the rubber compound, and thereafter causing the surface ingredient to penetrate the rubber and coact with the first named ingredient to effect vulcanization.

It was at first contended by Harrison and Morton that Cadwell could not make the counts. The law examiner, the examiner of interferences, and the Board of Appeals found to the contrary and the correctness of their conclusions in this regard is not seriously disputed here.

Harrison and Morton, being the junior parties, in order to show priority were required to produce and did produce evidence. Later appellee introduced rebuttal evidence. Upon the record, the examiner of interferences found that Cadwell was prior in conception and disclosure, but gave priority of reduction to practice to Harrison and Morton and, therefore, awarded priority of invention to appellants. The Board of Appeals reversed the examiner of interferences, found that Cadwell was first to reduce to practice and awarded priority of invention to him.

The sole question presented here, therefore, is: Upon the record was the Board of Appeals justified in awarding priority of reduction to practice to appellee, Cadwell. In order to understand the contentions of the parties as respects this issue, it will be helpful to consider for a moment the art of vulcanizing rubber at the time the two opposing parties herein undertook the solution of the problem which resulted in the invention in dispute.

Crude rubber possesses some elasticity and tensile strength. It is lacking in many qualities desirable for commercial articles, particularly in that it is affected by temperature variations, when cooled becoming more brittle and harder, and when heated becoming soft and plastic. It was early discovered that by incorporating sulphur with rubber and by heating the mixture at a relatively high temperature (286° F. or higher) and for a relatively long time, its properties were favorably changed,, in so far as its elasticity, tensile strength, and other desirable properties were greatly increased. It was then not affected, as above indicated, by temperature changes and was not soluble in organic solvents. This was early styled “ vulcanization ” or “ curing.” The amount of sulphur in a rubber compound is comparatively small: From 2 to 10 parts of sulphur to 100 parts of rubber. It was later discovered that by the addition of certain inorganic substances to the rubber and sulphur, the time and temperature required' to produce vulcanization were considerably decreased, and in more recent years it was also discovered that certain organic substances known as high power or low temper atare curing accelerators, when mixed with the compound, further reduced the' [1027]*1027time and temperature required for vulcanization. The use.of these accelerators, however, was fraught with danger and inconvenience since the low temperature at which and the quickness with which the vulcanization or curing was brought about by the accelerator caused frequent burning in the mill.

The milling consisted of taking the crude rubber which was tough and almost inelastic though somewhat flexible and incorporating with it the other compounding ingredients and “ breaking it down ” or working it into a plastic condition by running it through a mill consisting of rolls. During the milling operation it was squeezed, mixed, kneaded, pulled apart and stretched until the mass became plastic and its original nature almost completely changed. The rolls of a standard mixing mill are about 5 feet long and 2 feet in diameter and handle in one operation a batch of rubber weighing about 150 pounds. The operation requires approximately 40 to 50 minutes. The friction generated in the mill raises the temperature of the compound to approximately 200° F. After this compound has been mixed, it is usually placed in the stock room of the factory.

■ When it is needed for manufacturing purposes a sufficient amount is taken from the stock room and warmed up in the mill substantially in the manner in which it was mixed. It is then taken to a calendering machine and run between two heated rolls accurately spaced apart to produce a sheet of the thickness desired. Rubber blanks are then cut from the sheet. The scrap from this operation is put back with the original batch. Up to this point it will be seen that it is very important that the material will not “ set up ” or that incipient vulcanization should not have occurred. To vulcanize such a stock requires a period of three or four hours and a temperature of approximately 270° to 300° F.

. The high power accelerators were well known in the art when the parties hereto made their respective inventions. Both recognized that there was a great advantage in the use of high-power accelerators in so far as very rapid vulcanization would result from the use thereof and thereby yield a vulcanized product having an exceedingly high tensile strength and other very valuable physical characteristics. These powerful accelerators, it is admitted, will coact with sulphur at a temperature materially below the melting point and even below the temperature commonly obtained by the compound in the mixing mills and calenders. Because the powerful accelerators would effect vulcanization in the presence of sulphur below the temperature which the compound reached in the milling, warming up and calendering operations, no great field of usefulness appeared for' them. How to use them to advantage in vulcanization was the problem of the inventors herein. The problem was solved by both parties in [1028]*1028an exceedingly simple way and solved so completely as to obviate all difficulty in the use of the high-power accelerators.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.2d 704, 17 C.C.P.A. 1024, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-cadwell-ccpa-1930.