In Re Smith

183 F.2d 84, 37 C.C.P.A. 1142, 86 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 394, 1950 CCPA LEXIS 272
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1950
DocketPatent Appeals 5699
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 183 F.2d 84 (In Re Smith) 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 Smith, 183 F.2d 84, 37 C.C.P.A. 1142, 86 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 394, 1950 CCPA LEXIS 272 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming rejections by Primary Examiners of two claims numbered 24 and 25 reading:

“24. The method of working beta brass which comprises plastically deforming the alloy at a temperature in the range from 100° to 350° C. sufficiently to elongate the grains of the worked alloy in the manner characteristic of metals that have been subjected to more than 25% plastic deformation at temperatures below the recrystallization temperature and without injuring the thus-worked alloy, the extent of said plastic deformation without injury to the worked alloy being substantially greater than the extent to which the same alloy can be plastically deformed without injury at room temperature.
“25. Beta brass which has been extensively plastically worked at a temperature in the range from 100° to 350° C. as evidenced by plastic deformation of the alloy grains (without injury to the worked alloy) to an extent greater than 25% reduction in cross-sectional area at a temperature below the recrystallization temperature, said grains consequently having a long diameter in the direction of working at least twice as great as the short diameter substantially perpendicular to the direction of working, said plastic deformation of the alloy grains without injury to the worked alloy being on the average substantially greater than exists in a specimen of the same alloy composition plastically deformed at room temperature to the maximum extent possible without injury to said specimen.”

The appealed claims were rejected, along with others not appealed, because the respective tribunals of the Patent Office deemed them uninventive over disclosures of prior art, the single reference cited being, as- stated in the decision of the board:

“ ‘Metals’ by Carpenter and Robertson, Vol. II, 1939, Oxford University Press N.Y., Page 1302.”

It will be observed that claim 24 is a method claim and claim 25 is for the product resulting from practice of the method.

It may be said that in the Patent Office several other method claims and one other product claim (numbered 23) were involved, and that a practice which the Patent Office began some years ago, usually referred to as “duel prosecution,” was followed. Under that practice the method claims of appellant’s application were passed upon and rejected by an examiner in Patent Office Division 13 to which division was committed general jurisdiction of the application. The two product claims were passed upon and rejected by an examiner in Division 3.

When the appeals to the board were taken the decisions of the respective examiners were consolidated.

The appeal to us relates only to the rejection of method claim 24, supra, and product claim 25, supra. It is obvious that those claims are not patentably distinguishable— that is, the two stand or fall together.

It will be noted that the claims relate only to alloys which, when combined, constitute what is known to those skilled in the brass making art as beta brass.

In the specification it is recited that there are three important alloys of copper and zinc which can be classified as alpha brass, alpha plus beta brass, and beta brass; that alpha brass contains up to about 35% zinc, the balance being copper; that such alloys are workable both hot and cold and have reasonable strength and excellent ductibility at room temperature.

A footnote of appellant’s brief, referring to the record, explains:

K1 The term ‘workable’ refers to the ability of an alloy to undergo mechanical working such as rolling, drawing, swaging, heading, cupping, coining, stamping, forging, etc. * * * into desired commercial shapes without cracking or failure of any *86 kind. Equivalent term." frequently used are ‘plastically workable’, ‘plastically deformable’, etc.”

The following is quoted from the specification of appellant’s application:

“The present invention provides a new and novel method of working alloys of beta brass structure, for I have found that they are unexpectedly plastic at temperatures in the range 100° C. to 350° C. Temperatures in this range are low enough to permit the utilization of ordinary metal-working equipment intended for use at room temperatures, and which give to the final product an accuracy of dimension and fineness of finish that cannot be achieved by hot working methods.
“Stated concisely, the invention contemplates the method of working an alloy predominantly comprising copper and zinc (such, for example, as an alloy of copper with 42 to 51 per cent zinc), having a body-centered-cubic crystal structure (the crystal structure of the beta brasses), which comprises plastically deforming said alloy at a temperature in the range 100° C. to 350° C. Often it is advantageous to subject the alloy to plastic deformation in the narrower range of 150°C. to 300°C. in order to insure against development of any defect in the metal during working. A working temperature of about 200° C. is optimum for many beta brass alloys. Frequently it is most convenient to hot work the alloy (in the hot working range of 500°C. to 850°C.) approximately to finished size, and then to work the alloy substantially to its finished size and shape by plastic deformation at a temperature in the range of the invention. If desired the alloy may be cold-worked substantially at room temperatures after working in the temperature range of the invention in order to develop a degree of work-hardening, but such cold-working cannot in general exceed 25 per cent reduction in cross-sectional area without developing cracks or other defects.”

The foregoing, of course, relates to the method embodied in claim 24, supra. Immediately after it is the following, which relates to the composition defined in claim 25, supra:

“The invention further embraces the plastically worked alloy produced by the method of the invention.”

In the decisions of the respective Primary Examiners the claims here before us were very fully discussed and reasons were given for applying the reference.

The Board of Appeals in its decision epitomized the statements and holdings of the respective Primary Examiners and we quote the following pertinent excerpts from the board’s decision:

“ * * * jn * * * the specification * * * appellant states: ‘So far as alloys composed substantially entirely of copper and zinc are concerned, the process of working in accordance with my invention can be applied most usefully in the range from 42 to 51 per cent zinc because below 42 per cent zinc enough of the alpha phase is present to permit working by ordinary cold rolling methods and much above 51 per cent the gamma phase will be precipitated at 200° C. and the alloy will become brittle.’ The Examiner has adopted this quoted part of the disclosure as showing the scope of the range of alloys contemplated by appellant in the claims. “The reference relied on by the Examiner is page 1302 of Metals by Carpenter and Robertson, Vol. II, 1939. This page is concerned only with alloys of copper and zinc. It shows a graph made by Bunting based on impact tests of various alloys at various temperatures. In-Fig.

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Bluebook (online)
183 F.2d 84, 37 C.C.P.A. 1142, 86 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 394, 1950 CCPA LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-smith-ccpa-1950.