In re Guthans

125 F.2d 722, 29 C.C.P.A. 843, 52 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 477, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1942
DocketNo. 4558
StatusPublished

This text of 125 F.2d 722 (In re Guthans) 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 Guthans, 125 F.2d 722, 29 C.C.P.A. 843, 52 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 477, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 23 (ccpa 1942).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the examiner disallowing certain claims embraced in appellant’s application for patent relating, according to the statement in the specification, “to-improvements in lubricating apparatus for the propeller shaft of watercraft and stern bearings thereof.”

Five claims, numbered 1 to 5, inclusive, were involved in the appeal to the board and in the appeal to us but at the oral hearing before us. counsel for appellant moved to dismiss the appeal as to claim No. 5, which motion will be allowed. Of the remaining claims, numbered, respectively, 1 to 4, inclusive, claim No. 1 reads:

1. A lubricating apparatus for a shaft and its bearing comprising a yieldingly-positioned bland engaging 'a packing carried in a recess in the bearing, lubricant extruding means connected by a duct with, the bearing and driving means for said extruding means driven by the shaft so as to constantly force the lubricant at a substantially constant pressure to the interior of the bearing 'along said shaft against the action of the yieldingly pressed gland.

In the brief for appellant it is said:

Claim 2 is of similar scope to claim 1, but specifically mentions a spring-pressed gland and the piston and cylinder for forcing the lubricant through the duct leading to the bearing.
Claims 3 and 4 define the combination in more specific terms, bringing in the fluid supply tank and the relief valve and the connection from the supply-tank to th'e intake side of the pump. These detailed features are apparent from consideration of the specification and drawings, and are intended to set forth, with that degree of particularity required by the statutes, the exact elements, which in practice have been found to produce excellent results.

The examiner describes the invention in the following manner:

/This device covers a means for lubricating and sealing a bearing for propeller shafts of watercraft and stern bearings and contemplates means for forcing lubricant to the outboard bearing under pressure along the propeller shaft and against a force exerted on a packing by a spring-pressed gland. The arrangement is such that sand, grit, and water are kept out of the bearing and wear on the packing is automatically compensated for.
Tli'e pressure on the lubricant to force same to the bearing is brought about through a pump operated from the propeller shaft. This forces a liquid into a cylinder thereby driving a piston against a quantity of lubricant in said cylinder, which escapes through a conduit to the bearing and packing.

We quote from the brief filed before us by the Solicitor for the Patent Office (omitting the numerals which identify the parts shown in the drawings) the following:

[845]*845Tlie main features of this device, as they appear in the claims here involved, may be summarized as follows: a gland engages a packing, carried in a recess of the bearing of the shaft, th’e gland being pressed by a spring. There is a lubricant cylinder, within which is a piston which extrudes lubricant through, the duct to lubricate the bearing. The shaft drives a pump.

The examiner rejected the claims now before us, first, up'on the-ground of old and exhausted combination -and, second, as not being-patentable over prior art. The first ground was overruled by the-board, but the second ground was approved. The references cited by the examiner and in the decision of the board are:

Scott, 53,190, March 13, 1866,
Davis, 724,086, March 31, 1903.
Bennett, 1,097,074, May 19, 1914.
Hodgkinson, 1,323,474, December 2, 1919.
Scoville, 1,696,737, December 25, 1928.
More et al., 1,997,069, April 9, 1935.

The examiner’s analysis of the references was made in connection with his rejection upon the ground of old combination, which ground the board overruled but without questioning the correctness of the examiner’s analysis. The board’s statement concerning the prior art is as follows:

The prior art discussed by tlie examiner discloses a lubricant pump operated from a shaft which discharges a lubricant against a packing member surrounding the shaft (see Hodgkinson). It also shows a gland in a packing member which is spring pressed into position. We fail to find patentability in arranging such gland structure so that the pressure of the lubricant from the pump is exerted against the action of the spring acting upon the gland. Bennett describes a submerged shaft having a packing gland held tight against a ring by combined spring and lubricant pressure and to use the lubricant pressure to-oppose the spring does not appeal to us as patentable. The patentee describes, using light lubricant pressure‘under normal conditions. . .

Appellant’s brief contains an analysis of tlie references, as does the brief filed by the Solicitor for the Patent Office. These need not be-repeated in detail, but such parts of them as are pertinent will be alluded to hereinafter.

It is contended by appellant that there is no reference which discloses the combination that he has perfected and that “without invention one cannot piece together the isolated portions of the teachings taken from six prior patents and arrive at a device capable of producing the result which practice has demonstrated the device of appellant’s invention in reality produces.”

The brief for appellant also states:

Appellant contends that the decision of the Board of Appeals is inconsistent in holding that although the Examiner was unjustified in rejecting the claims on the basis of exhausted combination, no invention was involved particularly in the absence of any patent fairly disclosing the claimed combination.

[846]*846It appears that the instant application is a division of another application which matured into a patent. Neither the original application nor the patent appears in the record, but it is stated in appellant’s brief that the gland f&r se, mentioned in all the claims before us, and its mounting and related structure, is covered by the patent. Appellant’s claims here, of course, are for the combination of which the gland is an element.

It is not contended that any one of the references anticipates the appealed claims, the ground of rejection being, as expressed in the brief filed by the Solicitor for the Patent Office, “not anticipation but lack of patentable invention over what is shown by the references.”

In both the brief and oral argument before us appellant has greatly stressed the presence in his combination of the spring-pressed gland in an arrangement which extrudes lubricant against the action of such gland, it being said:

No reference of record shows a spring pressed gland in combination with means actuated by the lubricated shaft for extruding lubricant against the spring action of such gland. In the absence of such reference, it is submitted that the rejection must fall.

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125 F.2d 722, 29 C.C.P.A. 843, 52 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 477, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guthans-ccpa-1942.