In re Green

97 F.2d 130, 25 C.C.P.A. 1143, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 1938
DocketNo. 3906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 97 F.2d 130 (In re Green) 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 Green, 97 F.2d 130, 25 C.C.P.A. 1143, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 104 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of tbe court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the Primary Examiner rejecting all of the claims — 3 to 8, inclusive — in appellant’s application for a patent for an alleged invention in improvements in a “Magnetic Impulse Contactor.”

Claims 3 and 5 are illustrative of the appealed claims. They read:

3. A magnetic impulse registering device adapted for registering electric impulses caused by certain passing objects and operative therewith, comprising a magnet of the permanent type surrounded by continuous coil winding of fine insulated wire, a sensitive relay instrument having its energising coil electrically connected by intervening electric circuit wires with the magnet coil winding, said relay being provided with closable electric contact terminal members connected by electric circuit wires in a separated electric circuit having an auxiliary relay instrument connected therein, said auxiliary relay having switch means mounted thereon also connected by electric circuit wires in another separated electric circuit, and an electric impulse registering unit electrically connected within the said auxiliary relay circuit.
6. A magnetic impulse contactor device adapted for registering electric impulses caused by the passing of certain objects and actuated thereby, comprising a permanent magnet core section surrounded by continuous core indue tion winding of numerous turns of fine insulated wire, a non-magnetic casing mounted over said magnet and coil winding, a sensitive relay instrument connected electrically by intervening electric circuit wires with the magnet coil winding, said relay being provided with closable electric contact terminal members mounted thereon and connected by electric circuit wires in a separated electric circuit having an electric impulse registering unit connected therein, and a relay circuit holding contactor also connected within the same separated electric circuit.

The references are:

Edison, 470,923, Mar. 15, 1892.
Dixon, 570,700, Nov. 3, 1896.
Kleinschmidt, 881,005, Mar. 3, 1908.
Bryant, 1,296,360, Mar. 4, 1919.
Einnigan, 1,302,345, Apr. 29, 1919.
Wells, 1,332,451, Mar. 2, 1920.
Harvey, 1,495,790, May 27, 1924.
Nelson, Re., 17,602, Eeb. 18, 1930.
Cleaver, 1,768,524, June 24, 1930.
Grondahl et al., 1,798,256, Mar. 31, 1931.

Each of the elements in appellant’s device is old. The issue in the case, therefore, is whether appellant’s arrangement of old elements in what must be conceded to be a new combination is new and useful and involves invention.

[1145]*1145The following excerpt is taken from appellant’s application:

My device is herein illustrated in the drawings as applied to a simple electric light signal as may be adapted to a street crossing signal unit, although it is 1o be understood that any other type oí impulse signal unit or device may be used in its place if desired. The drawings illustrate the magnet impulse unit ■as installed across a highway for signaling the approach, or counting passing automobiles, although it may be as readily adapted for recording, by electric impulses, the passing of any other metalie magnetic unit such as metal parts dispensed from a manufacturing machine, the magnetic impulse bar being designed and positioned so the metal x>arts will pass through the magnetic field.

Appellant’s device consists of a permanent magnet bar around which is found a coil of fine insulated wire. The ends of the wire coil are extended as leads and connected to a sensitive relay instrument. The permanent magnet bar is enclosed in a casing to protect the bar when it is embedded in the ground under a road or street. When the magnetic field surrounding the permanent bar is disturbed by passing magnetic material, an electric impulse is induced in the coil. To make use of such electric impulse, as stated by the Primary Examiner—

* * * the coil leads are conuected to a relay of the rotor type. The leads are connected to the coil of the wound rotor situated in the magnetic field of the relay magnet. To this rotor is attached a contact arm which is normally maintained in a position intermediate contacts presumably by proper adjustment of a spiral spring element. (The spring is shown but not specifically referred to by the applicant in his description but relays of this type are well known.)
An electrical impulse in the coil of [the] rotor, such as might be caused by an induced E. M. F. as described, will cause a slight rotation of the rotor and consequently of the [contact] arm, causing the latter to contact [one of the terminal contact points] depending on the direction of the electric impulse wave and for a time depending on the length of the impulse. The contact arms and the [terminal contact points] * * * are connected so that when engaged they will close some type of electric circuit. * * *
The specific circuit herein shown is another relay circuit.

Appellant’s device also includes a bolding relay, referred to in the application as relay “K,” which, as stated by the Primary Examiner, when energized “closes a branch circuit around the contact arm of the relay F so that relays F and K mutually lock each other. Applicant shows batteries E and H for the relay F circuit and the signal circuit respectively but in dashed lines shows a common source for both.” When the holding relay “K” is in operation, the signal is continuous.

With reference to the holding relay, specified in claims 5 and 6, the board stated:

* * * as claimed, no definite function is developed for the circuit-holding contactor. As we understand its operation, it serves to control a shunt circuit which maintains the relay F energized after the passage of the metallic object and the consequent oxjening of the circuit of relay F by the relay O.
[1146]*1146While no reference cited by the examiner shows the use of a relay corresponding to appellant’s relay K in an organization such as disclosed, the claims on appeal fail to bring out any such structure and relationship as to develop any useful function for his contactor.

With reference to the quoted excerpt from the board’s decision, counsel for appellant stated in his brief that, although a thermostatic switch unit was hot set forth in the appealed claims as being a part of appellant’s combination, such a unit is a common expedient for controlling the duration of an electric impulse, and would be used by any electrician in connection with appellant’s combination when needed, and that, therefore, it was not believed necessary to include it in the claims. Counsel further stated that if the court was of opinion that that element should be specified in the claims as a part of appellant’s combination, it should permit an amendment of the claims to that extent and for that purpose.

It is well settled that claims can not be amended in this court. In re Riebel, Jr., 21 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 972, 69 F. (2d) 563.

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Bluebook (online)
97 F.2d 130, 25 C.C.P.A. 1143, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-green-ccpa-1938.