In re Murray

77 F.2d 648, 22 C.C.P.A. 1241, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 177
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1935
DocketNo. 3474
StatusPublished

This text of 77 F.2d 648 (In re Murray) 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 Murray, 77 F.2d 648, 22 C.C.P.A. 1241, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 177 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

LeNroot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, affirming the decision of the examiner, rejecting, for want of patentability in view of the prior art, claims 20, 21, 25, 26, 27, and 29 of appellant’s application. Claims 1 to 19, inclusive, 22, 23, 24, and 28 of appellant’s said application were allowed.

Appellant’s instant application is for a reissue of Patent No. 1,744,078, issued to appellant January 21, 1930.

Of the claims on appeal claim 20 is illustrative and reads as follows :

20. A radiator for heating and circulating tbe air of a room comprising a single horizontally extending beating element and a radiating structure com[1242]*1242prising two plates constituting tire external walls of the radiator and applied respectively to the opposite sides of the heating element and corrugated to form relatively high vertical flues closed at the sides and open at the ends and extending beyond the heating element so as to provide an extended heating surface for the air and to induce a substantial draft of such heated air through the flues.

The references relied upon by the board are:

Baker, 105,886, August 2, 1870.
Hamilton (British), 18,044, August 19, 1904.

The patent to Snter, 1,514,877, also relied upon by the examiner, was referred to in the decision of the board, as hereinafter set out.

The examiner rejected the claims here on appeal on the ground of unpatentability in view of the prior art, as hereinbefore stated. He further rejected claims 20 and 21 upon another ground, but his rejection upon this ground was expressly reversed by the Board o.f Appeals; therefore such ground of'rejection of claims 20 and 21 is not before us. In re Wagenhorst, 20 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 991, 64 F. (2d) 78.

The nature o.f appellant’s claimed invention is briefly stated by the examiner as follows:

The invention here in issue is a radiator comprising a tubular heating fluid conducting element, which may lie constructed in a variety of different forms as is illustrated -in the drawings. The heating element is inclosed in a corrugated sheet metal casing or flue, the inner portions of the corrugations being arranged to contact with the heating element, thus forming vertical air passages for the circulation of the air in intimate contact with the walls of the heating element, such circulation being accomplished by means of the well known principle of convection currents.

In one of the simplest forms of the device shown in appellant’s drawings, two horizontal tubular heating elements are shown, one positioned above the other, the two being joined at their centers by a vertical connecting element. About these heating elements is positioned a box-like structure made of sheet metal, the sides of which are corrugated, the corrugations of the two sides cooperating to-form a series of V-shaped vertical flues through which air majr ascend and pass about the heating elements. This box-like structure-is .suitably fastened to the heating elements to establish thermal contact between said structure and- the heating elements. The announced purpose of the appellant is the conduction of heat from the-heating elements to the walls of this boxlike structure and thence to the atmosphere of the room to be heated, thus providing a large radiating surface, and utilizing the automatic draft created by convection.

• The patent to Plamilton relates to the construction of a radiator for cooling internal combustion engines, or for condensing the exhaust steam from steam engines. It shows a tube through which [1243]*1243is passed a lieated fluid, and mounted upon-said tube, on opposite side of the same, are two metal strips, corrugated in form. The pat-entee states the object of the invention to be to provide such strips in corrugated form to obtain a comparatively large radiating surface, and to have said strips so mounted on the tube that a good thermal contact will be attained for the conduction of heat from the tube to the corrugated strips. The drawings of the Hamilton reference show only one unit, rather than a complete radiator or condenser, and it is obvious that a number of such units are intended to be used in order to make such radiator or condenser. The examiner regarded the disclosure of this reference as showing that the pat-entee intended that, when used in a radiator or condenser, such units would be so disposed that the air channels, or flues, between adjacent corrugated metal strips, would be in a horizontal position, and not vertical as in appellant’s application. This view of the Hamilton structure was concurred in by the Board of Appeals, is accepted by appellant’s counsel and the Solicitor for the Patent Office, and is, we think, warranted by an examination of said reference.

The patent to Baker relates to steam radiators and the pertinent feature of his disclosure is that he shows, interposed between a series of steam conducting tubes, a series of corrugated metal strips. He states as one object of his invention the provision of an increased radiating surface without increasing the outside dimensions of the radiator. The important feature of the Baker disclosure, so far as the present case is concerned, is that it is clear that the patentee intended to use his structure in such a way that the channels or flues between adjacent corrugated strips would be disposed in a vertical direction, in much the same manner as is shown in appellant’s application.

The patent to Suter relates to what he terms a “ heat exchanger,” and consists primarily in a radiator arrangement disposed about the ordinary heating stove. The board intimated that, in its opinion, Suter was not as satisfactory a reference as Baker, and limited its affirmance of the examiner’s rejection upon prior art to the ground that the claims are not patentable over Hamilton in view of Baker. In view of our conclusion with reference to the applicability of the reference Plamilton in view of Baker, it is not necessary for us further to consider the patent to Suter.

The question for determination is whether appellant’s claimed structure involved invention over the disclosure of the Hamilton patent, in view of the disclosure of the patent to Baker.

It is conceded that the flues shown by Hamilton lie horizontally and that therefore the principle of convection is not involved in said patent. However, this principle is clearly involved in the patent [1244]*1244to Baker, and it was the view of both the examiner and the Board of Appeals that, in view of the patent to Baker, it would not involve invention so to change the position of Hamilton’s radiator that the flues would occupy a vertical position, and that, as thus modified, the Hamilton patent would read upon the claims here involved so far as patentability is concerned. We are in agreement with this view of the Patent Office tribunals.

It is true that Hamilton did not contemplate the radiation of heat for the purpose of heating rooms, but he did contemplate the radiation of heat from the heating element for the purpose of cooling the water utilized with an internal combustion engine. The general purposes of appellant and Hamilton are the same, viz., to radiate heat from the heating element in the radiator.

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77 F.2d 648, 22 C.C.P.A. 1241, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-murray-ccpa-1935.