Hill v. Hill

54 F.2d 950, 19 C.C.P.A. 918, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
DocketNo. 2840
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 F.2d 950 (Hill v. Hill) 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
Hill v. Hill, 54 F.2d 950, 19 C.C.P.A. 918, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 55 (ccpa 1932).

Opinion

Leneoot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in an interference proceeding, Ho. 50523, declared by the United States Patent Office. There were originally seven counts in the issue, counts 1 to 6, inclusive, being awarded by both tribunals of the Patent Office to Ebenezer Hill, and the seventh being awarded to Myron F. Hill. This appeal is taken by Ebenezer Hill from that part of the decision of the Board of Appeals, affirming the decision of the examiner of interferences, which awarded count 7 to appellee.

Count 7 reads as follows:

7. In a rotary mechanical movement for fluids, in combination, two rotor members one within and eccentric to the other, both having tooth divisions forming rotor chambers which expand and contract during rotation, said tooth divisions having contours which have continuous fluid-tight engagements between them during performance of pressure functions, said rotor members [919]*919capable of relative rotary motion to cause said members to receive and discharge fluid, the teeth of one rotor having epicycloidal contours, and those of the other hypocycloidal contours, a casing including high and low pressure conduits leading to said chambers, the tooth spaces of the pinion rotor having hypocycloidal contours to roll upon the teeth of the annular rotor at the center line at full mesh.

Appellant’s application, No. 607947, was filed on December 20, 1922. The application of appellee here involved, No. 616,778, was filed on February 3, 1923. The primary examiner held that said application of appellee was a division of his application, No. 551079, filed, on April 10, 1922, and appellee accordingly was held to be the senior party by both tribunals of the Patent Office.

The examiner of interferences held that the evidence was insufficient to establish conception by appellant, prior to April, 1922, of the subject matter of count 7, but, assuming that it did, appellant had failed to show diligence from just prior to April 10, 1922, appellee’s filing date, and his own filing date, December 20,1922. The examiner accordingly awarded priority of invention as to this count to appellee.

The Board of Appeals held that the evidence was sufficient to establish conception of the subject matter of count 7 by appellant prior to April 10, 1922, appellee’s filing date, but concurred in the decision of the examiner that appellant had failed to show diligence during the period within which it was necessary, and concurred in the award of priority to appellee.

The subject matter of the count in issue, as may be gathered from the language of the count, is a rotary pressure pump for gases. It consists of an outside casing within which are two rotary gears, one within the other, both referred to as rotors. The outside rotor is fitted with teeth which project inward, said teeth meshing with cooperating teeth cut on the periphery of the inner rotor. For purposes of distinguishing between the two rotors, the outside one is commonly referred to as the annular rotor, the inner one being called the pinion, or pinion rotor.

These terms will be employed in referring to the respective rotors hereinafter. The pinion has one tooth less than has the annular rotor; the diameter of the pitch circle of the pinion rotor is smaller than that of the annular rotor, said diameters bearing the same ratio to each other as the respective number of teeth on the two rotors, and the rotors are mounted eccentrically with respect to each other, the amount of eccentricity being the mean between the diameters of the respective pitch circles. Power is applied to a shaft upon which the pinion is mounted, causing said pinion to rotate; the pinion being meshed with the annular rotor, the latter also is caused to move, provision being made for its rotation within the casing of the pump. [920]*920The eccentric position of the two rotors is such that' relative motion between them is permitted, said relative motion being essential, of course, since the pinion has one tooth less than has the annular gear. The result of the eccentric mounting of the two rotors is that they are at full mesh at only one point for any given position of the rotors, and are farthest from full mesh at a point diametrically opposite. As the rotors are turned, those teeth moving away from the position of full mesh begin to separate, forming an enclosed space referred to as a chamber; said chamber changes in form and increases in volume as the said teeth approach the point opposite the position of full mesh, at which opposite point the volume of said chamber is a maximum; as the rotors continue to revolve beyond this point,, a reverse operation results, the chamber again varying in shape and progressively decreasing in volume as it approaches the position of full mesh of the teeth. It will be understood that at all times there is a succession of such chambers about the periphery of the pinion, being of various shapes, said shapes depending upon the position of the chambers with respect to the point of full mesh, and of which some are necessarily in the process of expansion while the others are contracting. The construction is such that at all times each tooth of the pinion rotor is in engagement with one part or another of the contact surface of the annular rotor. There is a close, rolling contact between the teeth of the rotors at all times throughout the cycle of rotation; thus there is maintained a fluid-tight contact which prevents leakage of gas from the chambers hereinbefore mentioned while the same are contracting, and wear is minimized by the elimination of frictional sliding contact. The gas is introduced into the chambers while they are moving away from the position of full mesh, or, stated in another way, during that portion of the cycle when they are expanding, as hereofore detailed. When the chamber passes the point opposite the position of full mesh it begins to contract, thus subjecting the within gas to pressure. Said pressure increases as the contraction of the chamber progresses j when said gas pressure reaches a predetermined point, the gas is discharged through the outlet passage by means which it is not necessary here to discuss.

We agree with the Board of Appeals that appellant conceived and disclosed the invention in issue prior to the filing date of appellee’s parent application, April 10, 1922. The board found that appellee was entitled to said date for conception and reduction to practice,, holding that appellee’s application, filed on said date, disclosed the invention involved in count 7. ^

There are two principal issues before us: (1) Does appellee’s application filed on April 10, 1922, disclose the said invention? [921]*921(2) If it does, appellant being the prior conceiver, was he (appellant) diligent in reducing the invention to practice?

We will first consider the question of whether appellee’s parent application does, in fact, disclose the invention embodied in count 7. If it does not, it will be unnecessary to consider the question of appellant’s diligence because, in such case, upon the record before us, appellant was not only the first to conceive, but also the first to reduce to practice.

It will be observed that count 7 calls for two rotor members, one within and eccentric to the other, both having tooth divisions forming rotor chambers which expand and contract during rotation.The contours of the tooth divisions are such as to.

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Bluebook (online)
54 F.2d 950, 19 C.C.P.A. 918, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-hill-ccpa-1932.