In re Pierce

65 F.2d 271, 20 C.C.P.A. 1170, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1933
DocketNo. 3144
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 271 (In re Pierce) 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 Pierce, 65 F.2d 271, 20 C.C.P.A. 1170, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 99 (ccpa 1933).

Opinion

Bland, 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 that of the examiner, denying all of appellant’s claims, 10 in number, of which claims 30, 36, 44, and 46 are regarded as illustrative by the appellant, and will be so regarded by us. They follow:

30. An electric system having, in combination, a coil adapted to be traversed by alternating currents, a magnetostrictive body in magnetizable relation to said coil, said magneto'strictive body having a natural frequency of vibration synchronous with a frequency of said alternating current, a resistance-changing element positioned to be mechanically operated by vibrations of said body, and an electric circuit through said resistance-changing element.
36. An electric system having, in combination, a source of electromotive force, an electric circuit for the flow of alternating current connected with the source and having a winding, a magnetostrictive vibrator disposed in the winding and attuned to the frequency of the said electromotive force, whereby the vibrator freely vibrates mechanically by magnetostriction when stimulated by the electromagnetic field of the winding, and a microphone the electrical conduction o'f which is varied in accordance with the magnetostrictive deformations of the vibrator.
44. A telephone system having, in combination, an electric circuit, means for supplying speech-controlled current to the circuit, a vibrator connected with the circuit and attuned to the frequency of the speech-controlled current so as to' [1171]*1171be excited by reversible internal stresses set tip in tbe body by tlie speecli-controlled current, a microphone, an electric circuit in which the microphone is connected, and a telephone responsive to the variations in the electrical conditions o'f the circuit.
46. A receiving system having, in combination, a circuit, a coil traversed by currents flowing in the circuit, a magnetostrictive core in the coil and tuned to the frequency of said currents, a resistance-changing- element positioned to be mechanically operated by vibrations of the core, an electric circuit through the said resistance-changing element, whereby the electrical conduction of the circuit is varied in accordance with the magnetostrictive deformations of the core, and a telephone responsive to the variations in the electrical conditions of the second-named circuit.

The references used by the examiner were:

Wiegand, 436514, Sept. 16, 1890.
Warth, 1022519, April 9, 1912.
Kinsley, 1488789, April 1; 1924.

The board used the same references but also referred to a patent to Hall, 1378345, dated May 17, 1921, which was referred to in the reference Kinsley, and to which further reference will be made hereinafter.

Concerning the nature of the invention, the board said:

The claims are directed to a magnetostrictive device or vibrator for transmitting and receiving purposes in telephony and telegraphy. The device comprises a magnetostrictive core or small rod surrounded by a coil adapted to be traversed by alternating currents which will produce slight extensions and contractions of the core. These changes in the length of the magnetostrictive rod are utilized to actuate a microphone shown in most of the views at the end or ends of the rod. * * *

The board held that it was not new to attach a microphone to a magnetostrictive rod, and that the particular departure from the prior art in the instant application resides in making the natural frequency of the core substantially the same as or resonant to the frequencies set up in the surrounding coil. The board pointed out that in the patents to Wiegand and Warth it was an old expedient to employ a magnetostrictive rod in a coil subjected to alternating current and utilize the consequent extensions and contractions of the rod to actuate a microphone. The board pointed out that these two patentees did not state that they availed themselves of the advantages resulting from the adoption of magnetostrictive rods whose natural frequency was resonant to the frequencies of the alternating currents. The board said:

* * * The patent to Kinsley discloses, however, that it was not new when the applicant filed his application to obtain the advantages resulting from using a magnetostrictive rod whose natural period corresponded with or was resonant to either the frequency or an overtone of the alternating current frequency. Kinsley employed a different resistance varying device from that adopted by the applicant. The patentee used the hot-wire resistance varying coil indicated at 10 and by the lengthening and shortening of the magnetostrictive rod con[1172]*1172trolled the play of a cooling jet of air upon the heated coil to vary its resistance. The examiner has held this resistance varying arrangement of Kinsley was but the equivalent of the microphone disclosed by Warth or Wiegand and that to substitute in Kinsley the microphone or to substitute in Wiegand or Warth the resonant magnetostrictive rod would result in producing the device applicant claims and that this was an obvious and noninventive change to make.

The applicant presented his own and other affidavits in an effort to show that the change resulting from the combination was not obvious and to show that an unexpected and highly useful result was obtained. It is not denied by either the examiner or the board that better results can be obtained from the use of appellant’s device than could be obtained by the use of any of the patents of reference. Both tribunals of the Patent Office concurred, however, in holding that the production of appellant’s device called for nothing more than the exercise of mechanical skill in view of what was shown in the three references.

In discussing the effect of the affidavits filed and the view expressed therein that the microphone is very much more sensitive than the arrangement disclosed by Kinsley, the board said:

* * * It should be noted in this connection that the resistance-varying device disclosed by Kinsley is that shown in the patent to Hall, 1378345, referred to by Kinsley in his specification, and that in connection with it Hall states on page 2, lines 5 to 9, of his patent, that “ radiation losses being constant, enormous variations in temperature are attainable by the alternate application and withdrawal of the cooling blast from the jet.” It is evident therefore that with the resistance-varying device disclosed by Kinsley very large current variations would obtain.

After the board had decided the case, the appellant moved for a rehearing and submitted several affidavits by experts as to the operation of the devices in the references, as well as to the device in the Hall patent referred to in the decision of the board. In the motion he contended that the board misunderstood the Hall patent. The board, in ruling on and denying the motion for reconsideration, said:

The patent to Hall is regarded by us as of record in the application, since it is referred to in the specification of the Kinsley patent. We do not regard our decision as having set forth any new references or any' new reasons over those relied upon by the examiner in his decision.

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

Related

Dickinson v. Zurko
527 U.S. 150 (Supreme Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 271, 20 C.C.P.A. 1170, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pierce-ccpa-1933.