In re Roe

102 F.2d 200, 26 C.C.P.A. 869, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 4091
StatusPublished

This text of 102 F.2d 200 (In re Roe) 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 Roe, 102 F.2d 200, 26 C.C.P.A. 869, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 94 (ccpa 1939).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Having allowed claims 13, 19, and. 22 in appellant’s application, in which were both method and apparatus claims, for a patent relating •to air conditioning, the Primary Examiner of the United States Patent Office refused to allow claims 11, 17, 20, 21, 23, and 25 to 28, inclusive, for reasons which will be referred to hereinafter. Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals, the decision of the examiner rejecting said claims was affirmed. Appellant has appealed here from the decision of the Board of Appeals.

Claims 11, 20, 26, and 27 are regarded as illustrative and follow:

11. A refrigeration system including: an evaporator and condenser having connections with one another, the whole arranged to constitute a cyclic passage [870]*870and maintained under relatively high vacuum; and a reaction-type power-drivable axial-blade-screw compressor in said cyclic passage and in compressive relation from said evaporator to said condenser.
20. A refrigeration system including: an evaporator and condenser having connections with one another, the whole arranged to constitute a cyclic passage and maintained under relatively high vacuum; a reaction-type multi-stage power-drivable axial-blade-screw. compressor in said cyclic passage and in compressive relation from said evaporator to said condenser; and a fluid refrigerant in said cyclic i>assage and the boiling point of which at atmospheric pressure is above 70° F.
26. In a refrigeration system utilizing water as a refrigerant, a compressor, a condenser and an evaporator all connected in the order named in a closed circuit, said compressor being of the multi-stage reaction turbo-type, whereby the relatively large volume of gaseous refrigerant leaving the evaporator of thei system) is compressed to the proper condensing pressure in a relatively small practical and efficient machine.
27. The process of refrigeration comprising the evaporation of a refrigerant of such characteristics that its volume is relatively large when in a gaseous state, sucking in one direction the vapor from the surface of liquid refrigerant, increasing the pressure of said vapor, again sucking said vapor in the same direction at a higher pressure and again increasing the pressure of said vapor.

The references relied upon by the Patent Office tribunals are as follows:

Worthen, 1,463,110, July 24, 1923.
Leblanc-Vickers (Ger.), 489,194, Feb. 3, 1926.
Carrier, 1,576,818, March 9, 1926.
Weaver, 1,761,551, June 3, 1930.

Applicant’s invention, as defined by some of the rejected claims, relates to a refrigerating system of the compressor-condenser-evaporator type utilizing a refrigerant having a relatively large volume when in the gaseous state and a compressor of the multi-stage reaction turbo-type. The refrigerant, which applicant states he uses, is water.

The examiner in rejecting the claims, used the following language:

The appealed, claims are each rejected as drawn to an old combination shown in the Carrier patent. The substitution of applicant’s compressor for Carrier’s in Carrier’s combination is not believed to make a new combination (See In re McNeil, 1902 C. D. 563; 100 O. G. 2178; 20 App. D. C. 294). Nor is the substitution of water for Carrier’s CCL4 believed to effect such a combination. Carrier clearly discloses the general combination of a compressor, condenser and evaporator in which the refrigerant circulated (CCL) is of such a nature that it occupies a relatively large volume when in a gaseous state. Furthermore, Carrier’s multi-stage rotary compressor is designed to take care of large volumes of evaporated refrigerant. * * *
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The appealed claims are each rejected as presenting no invention over Carrier in view of Leblanc-Vickers taken with Worthen. These claims differ from Carrier, who clearly discloses the general combination to be old, in that they recite the utilization of a somewhat different form of compressor and [871]*871refrigerant from that specified by the patentee. Applicant’s compressor, however, is nicely depicted and described in the drawings and specification, respectively, of the Worthen patent. Applicant, furthermore, is not first in making use of water as a refrigerant which fact is apparent from the disclosure in the Leblanc-Viekers patent (or the Weaver patent). Carrier, by his adoption of CCh, as his refrigerant, had before him the problem of removing from his evaporator and compressing large volumes of refrigerant vapor. To this end he selected a multiple stage rotary compressor for utilization in his system. The substitution for COB of an old refrigerant (water), the vapor of which has even a larger “cubic feet per pound” ratio than COB and the utilization of a multi-stage reaction turbo-type compressor in place of Carrier’s multi-stage rotary compressor, in order that the correspondingly larger volume of water-vapor might be handled, in Carrier’s combination, in view of the Leblane-Vickers patent taken with the Worthen patent, is not deemed to involve invention.
Conclusion.
I. The appealed claims are each finally rejected as drawn to an old combination shown in Carrier’s patent.
II. The appealed claims are each finally rejected as presenting no invention over Carrier’s teachings in view of the Eeblanc-Vickers and the Worthen disclosures.

The board recited the grounds of rejection of the examiner without disapproving of his reasoning- or conclusion. We find the following in the decision of the board:

* * * With regard to the refrigerant, the patentee [Carrier] states that the refrigerant should have relatively large vapor volumes, that the carbon tetrachloride refrigerant is non-explosive, non-inflammable and is safe to be used in a refrigerating system because all of the parts, including the evaporator, exhauster and condenser, are under a vacuum and that the liquid itself can be handled almost like water under atmospheric pressures and is entirely harmless.
In view of these suggestions as to the capacity and analogy of the refrigerant used in the Carrier patent to water, and to the conditions in the compressor being similar to the conditions in a steam turbine, it is believed that the rejections of the examiner are proper.

More definitely stated, it seems to be the view of the examiner and the board that it did not require invention on the part of applicant to use water as a refrigerant in Carrier’s multi-stage rotary compressor in view of the fact that it was old in the art to use multi-stage reaction turbo-type compressors in the art and in further view of the fact that Carrier taught the use, under vacuum, of a refrigerant, carbon tetrachloride, which was non-explosive, non-inflammable and had a relatively large vapor volume. As a matter of good measure, the examiner cited the patents to Leblanc-Vickers: and to Weaver ■which show the use of water as a refrigerant. The board, however, did not specifically apply the two last-referred-to references but stated: “the conditions in the compressor being similar to the conditions in a steam turbine.”

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Bluebook (online)
102 F.2d 200, 26 C.C.P.A. 869, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-roe-ccpa-1939.