In Re Ellis

47 F.2d 963, 18 C.C.P.A. 1060
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1931
DocketPatent Appeal 2639
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 963 (In Re Ellis) 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 Ellis, 47 F.2d 963, 18 C.C.P.A. 1060 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.

This is an áppeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals'affirming that of the examiner refusing to allow elaims .17 to 21, inclusive (claims 7, 8, 9, 10 being allowed), relating to the distillation and purifying of oil in an internal combustion engine. Claims 17 and 18 are illustrative and follow:

“17. In combination with an internal-combustion engine having a crankcase, and an exhaust conduit; a distilling vessel associated with said exhaust conduit so as to be heated thereby; means for supplying lubricating oil from the crankcase of said engine to said distilling vessel; and a thermostat separate from and located within and attached to a wall of said distilling vessel, and adapted to control the flow of oil thereinto through said supply means.

“18. In a device of the class described, a distilling vessel; a pump; means for conveying oil from said pump to said distilling vessel; a valve for controlling the flow of oil through said conveying means; and a thermostat located within said distilling vessel and which thermostat is complete in itself and independent as a structure from said distilling vessel, said thermostat being opera-tively connected with said valve to thereby control the flow of oil through said conveying means.”

The grounds of rejection of said elaims by the Board of Appeals, as we understand its decision, is in substance to the effect that the appealed claims are not considered patentably different from claims 8 and 13 allowed to Hans in the reference Hans, 1,420,837, June 27, 1922, concerning which the appellants herein had been a party in an interference proceeding in, the Patent Office and in which interference priority was definitely awarded to Hans. Priority having been awarded to Hans in the only patentable subject-matter involved in the claims herein appealed and in the counts of the interference, the board found that the appellants could not after-wards successfully contend for the allowance of broad elaims covering the same patentable subject matter. The counts'in the interference between appellant and Hans, as above stated, were claims 8 and 13 of the Hans patent, and follow:

“Count 1. A purifier for the lubricating oil of an internal combustion engine consisting of a heating chamber having a volatile *964 gas outlet, means for heating said chamber, means to cause lubricant to flow from said engine to said heating chamber, means to regulate the flow of the lubricant into said heating chamber, and means actuated by the temperature of the lubricant for controlling the means regulating the flow of the lubricant into said heating chamber.
“Count 2. In a purifier for the lubricating oil of an internal combustion engine, the combination of a chamber to receiye the oil, means for heating the oil in the chamber, means for causing the oil to flow from the engine to the heating chamber, and a thermostat controlled by the heated oil to regulate the flow of the oil.”

It will be noted that in the claims of the Hans patent the matter involved in dispute was in claim 8 (count 1) in a thermostat “actuated by the temperature of the lubricant,” and in claim 13 (count 2) it was in a thermostat that was “controlled by the heated oil.” The rejected claims in this appeal are directed to the same subject-matter as that involved in the interference, and expressed in the following language in claim 17 of the application at bar: “And a thermostat separate from and located within and attached to a wall of said distilling vessel, and adapted to control the flow of oil.” While in claim 18 the following language is used: “And a thermostat located within said distilling vessel and which thermostat is complete in itself and independent as a structure from said distilling vessel, said thermostat being opera-tively connected with said valve to thereby control the flow of oil.”

As the ease is presented here by the appellants, they take the position that in the interference with Hans, the board held that they could not make the counts of the interference since their claims and disclosure did not respond to the terms in the counts of the interference “actuated by .the temperature of the lubricant” and “controlled by the heated oil.” Appellants insist that since the board has held that their disclosure does not read upon the counts of the interference, which they contend is equivalent to holding that their invention is different from that of Hans, they are now entitled to a patent upon their means of thermostatically controlling the flow of oil.' They complain of the fact that now, after having in effect been denied their rights in the interference proceeding (if the inventions were the same), their claims are improperly rejected on Hans either as prior art or on account of the judgment against them in the interference case.

This anomalous situation, arising from the foregoing facts, presents a problem which at first blush would seem difficult of solution, but when, upon closer consideration, the facts are carefully analyzed and" the law is applied, it is found to be much less formidable.

The first question that arises is: Does the disclosure of appellants show, and do their claims in issue call for, anything patentable over and above the counts of the Hans patent involved in the interference. ■ The structures of appellants and Hans are alike in principle. The thermostat in Hans’ structure is in the oil in the distilling vessel, while in appellants’ structure, as affects the issue here, the claims require only that it be on the inside of the distilling vessel. The heat comes from the same source, the exhaust pipe, in both devices. We do not see any patentable distinction between the two devices. The claims of the application and the counts of the interference all call for the same invention.

It is true that appellants’ structure does not literally read upon the exact words of the counts of the interference, since their thermostat is not in the oil, but since we conclude that both are claiming the same invention, priority in fact should have been determined before the examiner of interferences, whereas it seems to appear from the record that priority was awarded Hans because he was the first inventor of the particular thing Hans claimed (when limited by the exact terms used) and which appellants claimed in words which did not read upon the exact language used by Hans, that is to say, appellants did not show in the interference proceeding that they were entitled to priority of the particular structure which the counts called for, regardless of whether the inventions of both parties were the same.

Under the circumstances of this ease, the fact that there was a mistake or inadvertence in the interference proceedings which brought about a failure to adjudicate the real issue between the parties is no justification' now for the allowance of applicant’s claims which would clearly cover the patented subject-matter in Hans.

It is well settled that the primary examiner could have, and we think should have, suggested a claim broad enough to cover the invention claimed by both, if he believed that the application and the patent were both calling for the same invention. That the examiner did believe they called for the same invention is evidenced by the fact that he *965 brought about the interference.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 963, 18 C.C.P.A. 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ellis-ccpa-1931.