In re Moss

101 F.2d 536, 26 C.C.P.A. 861, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 479, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 4076
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 101 F.2d 536 (In re Moss) 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 Moss, 101 F.2d 536, 26 C.C.P.A. 861, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 479, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 93 (ccpa 1939).

Opinion

BlaND, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, on November 29, 1933, filed their application with the United States Patent Office for a patent relating to a method and an apparatus for an annealing treatment of steel for the elimination of certain objectionable metallurgical changes brought about by the high temperatures employed by oxy-acetylene cutting flames.

The application contained both apparatus and method claims. The Primary Examiner required division between the apparatus and the method claims. The method claims only were considered by the examiner and of them claims numbered 4, 5 and 11 were allowed, while claims 1 and 30 to 36, inclusive, were rejected.

Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals, the decision of the examiner rejecting the said method claims and his decision requiring division were affirmed. From the decision of the board, appellants have appealed here and by appropriate reasons of appeal raise two principal questions, the first relating to the correctness of the decision of the board in affirming the rejection of said method claims, upon the prior art cited, and the second to the correctness of the said decision affirming the examiner’s requirement for division.

Appellants’ invention is aptly described by the Board of Appeals in the following language:

Tlie subject matter of the appealed claims is a process of annealing the edges of material cut by an oxy-acetylene flame. It has long been recognized that when the oxy-acetylene flame is used for either welding or cutting the parts of the metal immediately 'adjacent the weld or cut are necessarily hardened if the steel contains over .3 carbon. It is alleged that in attempting to bend steel cut in this manner without re-annealing, hair cracks will form in the hardened surface of the material. It is recognized that the steel cut in this m'anuer can be annealed by placing the material in an annealing furnace and heating it up above the critical temperature, but in structural steel of large dimensions, this type of annealing is not feasible and appellant proposes to anneal the cut edges by local application of 'an oxy-acetylene flame. This is done by directing the flame directly against the cut surface so as to heat up the metal affected to the critical temperature followed by gradual cooling. Appellants 'also provide another series of flames of less intensity so as to delay the cooling of the metal after it has once been heated to the high temperature. After the metal has cooled down below the critical point it may be quenched in any suitable manner.

It is thought that claims 1 and 36 of the appealed claims are illustrative of the subject matter on appeal, and they read as follows:

1. In a method of substantially eliminating objectionable change produced in the metallurgical structure of metal cut by oxidizing and high-temperature heating agents, the step which comprises locally reheating successive portions of the exposed and thermally affected surface formed by the cutting operation.
[863]*86336. The method of reconditioning the metallurgical structure of metal cut by me'ans of oxidizing and high-temperature heating agents, which comprises first progressively reheating the exposed and thermally-affected surfaces to above the critical temperature, and subsequently progressively applying to said surfaces local high-temperature heat of less intensity than the first reheat.

The references listed in the decision of the examiner are:

Roller: High Temperature Control: Photo-electric-tube Pyrometry. Industrial 'and Eng. Chemistry, 1931. Yol. 23, pages 1379-1381.
Moss: Machining with Oxyacetylene I — American Machinist, 1932. Yol. 7G, pages 1217-1219. (See especially page 1219.)
P. L. R.: The Local Annealing of Metallic Arc Welds. The Welding Journal. Aug. 1925. pages 234r-235.
Anonymous: Heat Treatment with the Oxy-Acetylene Flame. Oxy-Acety-lene Tips. Feb. 1926. pages 128-132.
Miller, 1,828,977, Oct. 27, 1931.

Claims 1 and 30 to 36, inclnsiye, were rejected by the examiner on the patent to Miller and the article by Moss as supplemented by the reference articles listed under the letters “P. L. R.” and the term “Anonymous.” Claims 30, 31 and 32 were rejected substantially upon the same ground as was claim 1, although in somewhat different language. Claim 36 was rejected on the same ground as, claim 1, but since that claim (36) called for “subsequently progressively applying to said surfaces local high-temperature heat of less intensity than the first reheat,” the examiner pointed out that the said P. L. R. and Anonymous references teach the idea of Avithdraw-ing the flame gradually to control the rate of cooling and “the last part of this claim merely requires that the torch be held farther away from the work which produces less heating.”

The patent to Miller is the principal reference applied by the examiner and it is the only reference specifically relied upon by the Board of Appeals.

The board noted that the article by Moss (one of the appellants) on “Machining with Oxyacetylene,” which stressed the need for annealing flame-cut edges of steel castings, ivas published in 1932, not more than two years prior to the filing of appellants’ patent application, and in view of this fact stated: “For these reasons the ‘Moss’ article must be abandoned as a reference against the appealed claims.”

The patent to Miller relates to a method of annealing fusion welds at the time the welds are made. Miller points out that the intense heat engendered in the welding material (if any is used) and the edges of the portions which are welded together by the use of an oxy-acetylene blowpipe or an electric arc, leaves the structure of the metal at the point of welding in a coarsened condition so that its ductility is somewhat lowered. He points out that the method of cui’ing this difficulty, prior to his invention, .consisted of permit[864]*864ting the welded article to become cool or nearly so and to then reheat it in its entirety or at least the entire weld and the metal in the vicinity of the weld and that this process was wasteful of both heat and time. In his patent he teaches that an oxy-acetylene blowpipe may be applied directly to the weld and the adjacent portions so as to intensely heat this particular portion of the article. His annealing means is moved along the weld a certain distance behind the welding means. The annealing takes place before the welded portion of the article loses the heat which was applied in the welding operation. In this manner he saves heat and time. He points out that while the welding means and annealing means may be used simultaneously, they are separate operations and that one must not interfere with the other.

The board, in affirming the' decision of the examiner, said:

It must be admitted that no one of the references cited shows the use of 'an oxy-acetylene flame for the purpose of annealing a flame cut edge, but the patent to Miller shows that it is old to anneal a weld by means of such a flame. In view of the fact that it is quite old to anneal steel which is too hard by heating it up above the critical temperature and then permitting it to cool slowly, we can see no invention in the board [broad] proposition of annealing a cut edge by directing the flame perpendicular to said edge.

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Bluebook (online)
101 F.2d 536, 26 C.C.P.A. 861, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 479, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moss-ccpa-1939.