In re Banner

39 F.2d 690, 17 C.C.P.A. 1086, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 266
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 2289
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 F.2d 690 (In re Banner) 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
In re Banner, 39 F.2d 690, 17 C.C.P.A. 1086, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 266 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the decision of the examiner denying claims 1 to 9, inclusive, 11, 14, 15, 17, 18, 20, 21, 23, 24, and 25, in appellant’s application, [1087]*1087for an invention relating to power plants, primarily for marine use, but also adapted for other uses requiring great power.

Appellant’s application discloses a power plant of four operating units arranged in pairs on opposite sides of a main driven shaft. The crank shafts of one pair of engines are coupled with a pinion, requiring the two crank shafts to rotate in unison. The crank shafts of the other pair of engines are coupled with another pinion with like results. The two pinions mesh with a gear fixed on the main driven shaft, and thus power from each of the operating units is transmitted to this shaft. All engines can be simultaneously started, stopped, and reversed. The invention is described more fully in the opinion of the Board of Appeals, to which we will hereinafter direct our attention.

The claims have been divided into five groups and so considered by the Patent Office tribunals and by counsel.

Claims 1,7,11,14, and 17 are illustrative of each of the five groups. They read:

I. In a power plant the combination with a driven shaft of a plurality of internal combustion engines, each having a crank shaft, a single gear set for transmitting power delivered by said engines to said driven shaft and for maintaining said engines in a definite phase relation, and a flexible coupling forming a direct connection between the crank shaft of each engine and said gear set.
7. In a heavy duty po'wer plant for marine or stationary installation, the combination of a driven shaft, a plurality of oil engines having individual crank shafts geared thereto for operation in a definite predetermined phase relation, and a unitary control means connected with said engines for effecting the simultaneous reversal thereof.
II. In a power plant, the combination of a driven shaft, a plurality o'f internal combustion engines comprising separate complete units connected in driving relation therewith, separate means for controlling the supply of fuel to each unit, and means connected with all of said units for effecting a simultaneous control of the supply of fuel thereto.
14. In a power plant the combination of a driven shaft, a plurality of internal combustion engines comprising separate complete units connected in driving relation therewith, means connected with said several units for controlling the speed thereof, and means connected with said several units for effecting the simultaneous reversal thereof.
17. In a power plant, the combination with a gear set including a pair of intermeshing herringbone gears, so mounted as to permit one gear to adjust itself to the other gear, of an internal combustion engine unit, and a flexible coupling between said unit and one of said gears permitting relative axial adjustment between said gears.

The references are:

Riottee et al„ 722629, March 10, 1903.
Munden, 894682, July 28, 1908.
Dalton, 1078774, November 18, 1913.
Surcouf, 1019283, March 5, 1912.
Schoonmaker, 1108249, August 25, 1914.
[1088]*1088Kuentzel, 1316903, September 23, 1919.
Dodge et al., 1341709, June 1, 1920.
Despins, Brit., 19976, of 1907.
Parsons, Brit., 24398, of 1912.
Boothroyd, Brit., 103444, of 1917.
Balanced-Engine, Brit., 120227, of 1918.
Mackenzie-Kennedy, Brit., 137078, of 1920.
Canadian patent to Curtiss, 173948, of 1916 (same as U. S. No. 1223316, April 17, 1917).

Claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 24, and 25 were rejected on the patents to Mackenzie-Kennedy, No. 137078 and Boothroyd, et al No. 103444. With reference to these claims and the references the Board of Appeals, in part, said:

* * ■ * Most of the claims are met literally unless special weight be attached to the expression “ definite phase relation ” and the element included in some of the claims as “ a flexible coupling.” As previously pointed out the expression “ definite phase relation ” is not employed in the specification and its significance is not clear. It apparently is intended to describe a desirable characteristic of operation of a power plant made up of a plurality of internal combustion engines but the expression itself does not import any structure into the claims. Touching the other limitation mentioned, that of “ a flexible coupling,” we would say that a spring-pressed clutch such as disclosed by the reference would ordinarily be described as “a flexible coupling.” There is no structural limitation in the claims of the group under consideration defining the flexible coupling and distinguishing from the reference construction. There is some criticism of the reference because the power plant is light being primarily intended to drive aircraft. , We do not think this criticism is entitled to much weight but in any event it can not be urged against another reference relied on against other claims. We refer to the British patent to Boothroyd et al No. 163444. It is stated in the specification of this patent that the power plant disclosed may be used for marine work. The arrangement of driven shaft, gearing, internal-combustion engine units and location of flexible connections between engine crank shafts and the short shafts carrying the driving gears is the same in this last noted British patent as it is in appellant’s case. Even the type of gears employed is the same, i. e., double-helical type. The British patent No. 103444 discloses clutches between the crank shafts of the various internal-combustion engines and the short shafts carrying the driving gears which are said to be of the combined friction and positive-engagement type. Broadly, we think these clutches constitute flexible couplings. Some of the claims of the group under consideration refer to axial adjustment or movement of one of the gears. Claims 24 and 25 include means for preventing longitudinal movement of the crank shafts. This last noted limitation seems to define an ordinary construction. With respect to the limitation as to axial adjustment this is -not a structural limitation and is not sufficiently definite to justif yan allowance of the claims. Claim 2 is not met by the British patent No. 137078. Referring to figure 5 there is no disclosure of crank shafts in alignment, with a gear thereon meshing with a gear on the driven shaft. This feature, however, is shown in British patent No. 103444.

It is contended by counsel for appellant that the structures shown in the references do not maintain a “ definite phase relation ”; that appellant’s powe/r' plant has permanent connections between the [1089]

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.2d 690, 17 C.C.P.A. 1086, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-banner-ccpa-1930.