In re Neuberth

82 F.2d 718, 23 C.C.P.A. 1070, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1936
DocketNo. 3618
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 F.2d 718 (In re Neuberth) 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 Neuberth, 82 F.2d 718, 23 C.C.P.A. 1070, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 83 (ccpa 1936).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant has here appealed from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, which affirmed the [1071]*1071action of the Primary Examiner in rejecting all of appellant’s claims in his application for an alleged improvement in metal stock. The ground of rejection by the Patent Office tribunals is hereinafter quoted. The conclusion by the tribunals that the allowance of the appealed claims would amount to a patent for the same invention as is covered by appellant’s article patent No. 1,842,280, arises from the history of the alleged invention which appellant, in his brief, recites as follows:

In April, 1929, applicant filed an application for letters patent to cover a method and apparatus for working metal in the cold state, which application was based on certain experimental work which had been carried out in connection with the manufacture of metal tubes. The said application was prosecuted to allowance and was issued on June 16, 1931, No. 1,810,886. During the course of this experimental work with tubes, it was soon discovered that the tubes produced possessed remarkable properties which had hitherto been unknown in cold worked tubes. Investigation of the crystalline structure of said tubes demonstrated that these properties resulted from a novel crystalline structure produced by the said method and apparatus. Accordingly, an application was filed on April 11, 1931, Serial No. 5291,534, for a patent to cover said tubes having the said novel crystalline structure which had been found to be useful and valuable. The said application was also prosecuted to allowance and the patent issued on January 19, 1932, No. 1,842,280.
Subsequently, however, it was discovered that solid stock did, in fact, possess the same crystalline structure as the tubes, and it was also discovered that the said crystalline structure produced physical properties in solid stock which were of even greater importance in solid stock than in tubes. It was decided, therefore, to file an application to cover solid stock having this novel crystalline structure inasmuch as no claim had been made in this field in the tube application. * * * The present application was filed on December 5, 1931, Serial No. 579,13S, more than a month before the tube patent issued, so that this .application and the tube application were co-pending.

It will be observed that appellant first filed an application for a method and apparatus for producing metal tubes by the cold rolling process and that during the pendency of this application, which ripened into patent No. 1,810,886, appellant filed an application, and a patent, No. 1,842,280, was granted thereon, for the article produced by his method and apparatus, to wit, a metal tube. The application relating to the tube contained fourteen article claims and no method claims. During the prosecution of the said last-referred-to application, appellant filed the instant application which also contains fourteen claims, all of which are drawn to cover either “solid metal stock” or “a round metal rod”.

The metal stock and rods involved in the claims at bar are made by the same process as that called for in appellant’s said method and apparatus patent, except that in the making of the tubes it is necessary to have a mandrel inside the tube. Appellant in his specification [1072]*1072in the instant case, after calling attention to the method of his said patent No. 1,810,866, states:

It is obvious that by removing the mandrel from such machines and by feeding solid stock for reduction by the rockers in accordance with the method therein described, it is also possible to reduce solid stock such as rods, bars, strips and the like. It is found that such solid stock may also be worked to' an almost unlimited extent, also without annealing and without destroying the characteristics of the metal. * * *

'Hie claims in the application at bar and the claims in the patent for the metal tube, No. 1,842,280, are distinguishable only in that the application at bar covers the intracrystalline structure in solid metal stock or a round metal rod, while the patent relates only to the intracrystalline structure of tubes. Some of the claims in the present application refer to a majority of the crystals which characterize the structure, while other claims refer to- different percentages of the crystals which possess the characteristics referred to in all the claims.

Claims 2 and 12 are illustrative of all the appealed claims and read:

2. As an article of manufacture a round metal rod characterized by this: that in 'a longitudinal section taken through the longitudinal axis thereof a majority of the crystals appear elongated with surface made up for the most part of elongated longitudinal fibers. [Italics ours.]
12. As an article of manufacture solid metal stools in which the intracrys-talline structure is characterized by the presence, in a majority of the crystals, of fold lines extending substantially parallel to the axis of elongation of the stock and by the substantial absence of slip-lines. [Italics oursl]

Claim 12 of appellant’s patent No. 1,842,280, is illustrative of all the claims therein contained, and recites the subject matter which the tribunals of the Patent Office regarded as the same as that claimed in the instant application, and reads as follows:

12. As an article of manufacture, a metal tube in which the intracrystalline structure is characterized by the presence, in a majority of the crystals, of fold lines extending Substantially parallel to the axis of elongation of the tube, and by the substantial absence of slip-lines. [Italics ours.]

The examiner did not cite appellant’s patent No. 1,842,280 as a prior art reference, since the application for it was copending with the instant application, but stated:

The reference discloses and claims a tube having the same crystalline structure as that of the solid metal stock here claimed, the tube having been made by advancing it on a mandrel between the rockers of said device. The claims of the reference are the same as those in the application with the exception that they recite either “solid metal stock” or “a round metal rod” instead of “a metal tube.”
Applicant contends that because the reference was copending with the present application it is not a valid reference against the claims. The rejection is not on the disclosure of the reference, however, but is on the claims of the [1073]*1073reference. The case of Ex parte Chapman, 1924 C. D.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Allen
88 F.2d 705 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 F.2d 718, 23 C.C.P.A. 1070, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-neuberth-ccpa-1936.