Howard C. Ludwig v. Jesse S. Sohn and Harold Robinson

324 F.2d 1004, 51 C.C.P.A. 796
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 7025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 324 F.2d 1004 (Howard C. Ludwig v. Jesse S. Sohn and Harold Robinson) 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
Howard C. Ludwig v. Jesse S. Sohn and Harold Robinson, 324 F.2d 1004, 51 C.C.P.A. 796 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority of invention to the senior party, Sohn et al., in Interference No. 88,770. The interference involves application serial No. 204,722, filed January 6, 1951, by Sohn et al., and an application, serial No. 286,348, filed May 6, 1952, by the junior party, Ludwig. 1

The interference has a single count which reads :

“1. The method of joining material by arc welding said material with a consumable electrode, which comprises the steps of impressing a potential to produce and maintain an arc sufficient to melt said electrode between said electrode and said material, striking an are between said electrode and said material while said potential is impressed therebetween, maintaining.said arc sheathed in an atmosphere of commercially pure inert gas, and adding sufficient oxygen to the atmosphere to stabilize the arc, the said method being characterized by the fact that the spacing between said electrode and said material and the magnitude of the arc current are maintained such that the arc burns in a nonturbulent atmosphere so that substantially the only gas in addition to the inert gas present in said shield is said oxygen and by the further fact that the quantity of said oxygen is maintained just sufficient to stabilize the arc without oxidizing the weld.”

The invention at issue is directed to a method of joining material by arc welding with a consumable electrode. The method involves (1) maintaining the magnitude of the arc current as well as the spacing between the consumable electrode and the material to be joined such that the arc bums in a non-turbulent atmosphere, and (2) maintaining the arc sheathed in an atmosphere of oxygen and *1005 a commercially pure inert gas, e. g. argon, such that the oxygen is substantially the only gas present in addition to the inert gas and the quantity of oxygen is maintained in an amount just sufficient to stabilize the arc without oxidizing the weld.

Pursuant to a stipulation by the parties, evidence on their behalf was submitted in the form of affidavits supported by documentary and physical exhibits. Ludwig, the junior party, submitted evidence allegedly showing actual reduction to practice of the invention of the count in December 1947 and in August 1949, both of which dates are prior to the filing date of the application of Sohn et al., the senior party. Sohn et al. regard their evidence as showing actual reduction to practice of the invention in November 1948. Neither party argues that he should prevail on the basis of an earlier conception followed by diligence extending to a later reduction to practice.

Ludwig thus will prevail irrespective of the proofs of Sohn et al. if he is found to have proved an actual reduction to practice of the invention in December 1947. He also can prevail on the basis of proof of an actual reduction to practice in August 1949, if Sohn et al. have not proved actual reduction to practice as contended in November 1948.

The Board of Patent Interferences held that Ludwig’s evidence failed to prove actual reduction to practice prior to the filing date of the application of Sohn et .al. The board further stated that if it “be regarded” that Ludwig proved an .actual reduction to practice in August 1949, then the proof submitted by Sohn •et al. as to the work done in November 1948 “should also be regarded as a reduction to practice.” Thus it concluded that Sohn et al. are entitled to prevail on the basis of their earlier filing date on the one hand, or, on the other hand, on the basis of an earlier actual reduction to practice.

The activities Ludwig relies on for reduction to practice involve a first series of welds designated 1AO through 9AO made no later than December 8, 1947 and a second series designated 65AO through 67AO made in August 1949.

Ludwig urges that one of the welds of the first series, weld 6AO, was a sound weld and was recognized as a sound weld by him when made. He contends that he and his supervisor knew from the comparison of weld 6AO with the others in that series that when less oxygen than employed with weld 6AO was used, as in welds 1AO, 4AO and 9AO, the arc was unstable as shown by Esterline-Angus 2 meter traces, and that when more oxygen was used, as in welds 2AO, 5AO, 7AO, and 8AO, the weld was porous as shown by lower density measurements.

With reference to the second series of welds, Ludwig contends that his Exhibit J, a physical cut of weld 65AO, shows a sound weld produced by maintaining the oxygen just sufficient to stabilize the arc without oxidizing the weld, while his Exhibits K and L, physical cuts of welds 66AO and 67AO, respectively, show that with “higher percentages of oxygen” unsound welds resulted “by reason of oxidation.”

Ludwig states that welds 65AO, 66AO and 67AO were made in protective atmospheres of argon with different quantities of oxygen and that he “elaborately studied” the effect of the oxygen on the welds with respect to stabilization of the arc and oxidation.

Sohn et al., on the other hand, contend that Ludwig’s welds 6AO and 65AO did not involve an actual reduction to practice of the invention defined by the count. It is argued that welds 6AO and 65AO were but isolated single experiments which did not represent a completion of *1006 the invention. Sohn et al. contend that both welds 6AO and 6 5AO were followed by long periods of further experimentation “before anything that could be called a useful or practical welding process was developed by Ludwig.”

Our consideration of whether the board erred in finding that Ludwig failed to show by a preponderance of evidence an actual reduction to practice prior to the filing date of the Sohn et al. application requires careful analysis of Ludwig’s alleged reductions to practice in December 1947 and in August 1949.

In this connection the count itself should be considered. The count relates to the use of an inert gas as a shield surrounding an electric welding arc and more specifically involves the addition of small amounts of oxygen to such inert gas, the quantity of said oxygen in the shield being maintained “just sufficient to stabilize the arc without oxidizing the weld.” We regard that limitation to the quantity of oxygen as a critical element of the invention at issue. It is firmly established that express limitations in an interference count are deemed material and cannot be ignored. Liebscher v. Boothroyd, 258 F.2d 948, 46 CCPA. 701. Moreover, the record shows that the Board of Appeals, in allowing the claim corresponding to the count in Ludwig’s application, held that patent-ability could not be predicated merely on the use of oxygen in an amount which would stabilize the are. Rather the board based its finding of patentability on the ground that the prior art on which the claim was rejected did not teach a correlation between the proportion of oxygen to be added and the factors of arc stabilization and weld oxidation 3 as expressed in the following language of the count:

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Bluebook (online)
324 F.2d 1004, 51 C.C.P.A. 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-c-ludwig-v-jesse-s-sohn-and-harold-robinson-ccpa-1963.