In re Batcher

59 F.2d 461, 19 C.C.P.A. 1275, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 164
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1932
DocketNo. 2969
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 461 (In re Batcher) 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 Batcher, 59 F.2d 461, 19 C.C.P.A. 1275, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 164 (ccpa 1932).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The claimed invention involved in this appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming a decision of the examiner rejecting all the claims relates to variable condensers designed particularly for use in radio-receiving sets.

In a structural sense the novelty is alleged to lie in the shape given the condenser plates. Two sets of plates are employed, one of which is fixed and the other of which is movable in and out of' interleaved relation with the fixed set, so as to change the capacity of the condenser as required.

It is claimed, and conceded by the tribunals of the Patent Office, that the plates are so dimensioned that a change in capacity is produced by a movement of the plates, which capacity is expressed by a differential law set forth in the claims in a certain mathematical equation.

The said equation is set forth in each of the claims, but its repetition here is not essential to an understanding of the legal principles upon which the case is decided and same is, therefore, omitted.

There is no serious dispute about the facts.

In the title of the application appellant designates the invention as “ new and useful improvements in straight-line frequency condensers.” It appears that, as a result of the particular shaping of appellant’s plates, whenever the condenser is used to tune an electrical circuit including inductance, if angular rotation of condenser be plotted against resulting frequency of the tuned circuit, as shown in a figure of the drawings, the curve plots as a straight line. Hence the “ straight-line frequency condenser ” name.

The references cited are:

Wireless World, April, 1914, pages 20-23.
The Electrician, February 6, 1914, pages 740 and 741.
Principles of Radio Communication (Morecroft), pages 793 and 794.

[1277]*1277We reproduce from the brief of the solicitor for the Patent Office (omitting the citations to record pages) the statement of the pertinent disclosures of the aforesaid references:

The Wireless World publication discloses several variable condensers with “ a square law.” In fig. 3a a set of rotor plates of semicircular outline is arranged to interleave with a set of stator plates of peculiar shape as shown so as to obtain capacity variation in accordance with the desired “ square law.” Knowing the desired law of variation of capacity, the mathematical expressions are deduced from which the necessary shape of plates is determined.
The Electrician publication shows in fig. 3 the form of condenser also shown in fig. 3a discussed in the preceding paragraph, and gives the mathematical expressions for plate shapes to make the capacity variation conform to the desired law.
The Morecroft publication shows in fig. 12 a variable condenser having semicircular stator plates and interleaved rotor plates, with the rotor plates shaped, in accordance with mathematical expressions therein deduced so that the condenser capacity varies, with angular movement, according to a desired law. With a condenser as shown used for tuning a circuit, if angular rotation of the condenser be plotted against resulting wave length, in meters, of the tuned circuit the curve plots as a straight line, as shown by the full line in fig. 13. Because of this such a condenser has come to be called a “ straight-line wave-length condenser.”

It was the opinion of the tribunals of the Patent Office that appellant’s results were obtained simply by making a mathematical computation and shaping the plates in accordance therewith, and that under the doctrine announced by the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia in In re Nyman, 58 App. D. C. 186, 26 F. (2d) 558, this did not involve invention, in view of the teachings of the prior art.

Appellant argues that—

* * * patentable invention is commonly recognized where the only structural difference over the art consists in reshaping, as, for example, a bullet or projectile, by which it is given increased flight and penetrating power; the hull of a vessel, by which its speed is greatly increased; the wings of an airplane, by which lifting power, speed, and stabilization of the plane are increased ; a drill, auger or other boring tool, by which its rate of cutting is greatly increased, and so on acl infinitum,.

Hirschy Co. v. Wisconsin-Minnesota Gas Co., etc., 18 F. (2d) 347, wherein a slight change in a clothes wringer was held by the fourth division of the United States District Court of Minnesota to involve patentable invention, is cited, and also the Barbed Wire Patent case, 143 U. S. 275. The Hirschy Co. case itself made different citations, one of them being Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consolidated Rubber Tire Co., 220 U. S. 428, wherein a slight change in the metal rim used on automobile wheels ivas held patentable.

Appellant also presents as a part of his argument an elaborate opinion by Dr. John H. Morecroft, professor of electrical engineer - [1278]*1278ing of Columbia University, in which the latter sets forth his reasons for believing that the examiner’s conclusion that appellant’s straight line frequency condenser was an obvious development is erroneous.

Three errors are alleged and argued by appellant, viz, that the Board of Appeals—

First. * * * assumed tlie condenser of appellant, Batcher, to be Duddell’s condenser of the prior art.
Second. * * * in assuming Batcher’s invention to consist in converting Duddeli’s wave length condenser scale, by mathematical calculation, into a frequency scale.
Third. * * * the board evidently and erroneously assumed that changing the scale from wave length to frequency converted Duddell’s condenser into Batcher’s.

Upon these allegations of error there are elaborate arguments as to the “ variable radio condenser,” the law of capacity variation,” “ why variable condensers are used in the radio art,” etc., the arguments being illustrated and elucidated at many points by mathematical computations unnecessary to be here repeated.

Appellant’s own argument and the opinion of Doctor Morecroft, adopted as a part of the former’s brief, challenges with some vigor, not to say asperity, the assertion or presumption as to the expertness in this art of the tribunals of the Patent Office who passed upon the issues there.

We shall only say as to this that the presumption applies, and that when an appeal is taken to this court, the judges of which are not supposed to be, and do not profess to be, experts in the realm of mechanics, the burden rests upon the party appealing to make it clear that the findings of fact by such tribunals are manifestly wrong. Appellant does not convince us that such is the case, nor are we convinced that the doctrine announced in In re Nyman, supra, is either erroneous or inapplicable to the instant case.

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59 F.2d 461, 19 C.C.P.A. 1275, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-batcher-ccpa-1932.