In re Spinasse

69 F.2d 109, 21 C.C.P.A. 883, 1934 CCPA LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1934
DocketNo. 3227
StatusPublished

This text of 69 F.2d 109 (In re Spinasse) 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 Spinasse, 69 F.2d 109, 21 C.C.P.A. 883, 1934 CCPA LEXIS 21 (ccpa 1934).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant has filed his application in the United States Patent Office for a patent upon certain claimed improvements in means and method for treating glass, especially glass sheets or plates. Certain claims were allowed to the appellant, applicant, but claims 50, 51, 54, 55, 5G, 58, 59, 62, 68, and 64 were disallowed by both tribunals in the Patent Office, and the decision as to these was appealed to this court. On the hearing here, the appeal was dismissed as to said claim 64, on the motion of counsel for appellant. Claims 50 and 56 are device claims, while the remaining claims are for a method.

Appellant’s device and method concern the treatment of plates or sheets of glass as they are drawn from the molten glass in a glass bath, and are intended to obviate the formation of longitudinal cracks in the plate of glass as it is drawn. It is admittedly known to the art that as plates or sheets of glass are drawn from the furnace, cracks are aj)t to appear as the result of the cutting of the sheet, and these may extend longitudinally of the plate of glass behind the point of cutting to the limit of the annealed portion of the glass. To overcome this difficulty, the appellant has devised the apparatus and method disclosed in his drawings, namely, that when the glass is drawn from the bath it is conducted through rolls between a pair of fireproof belts, preferably made of asbestos fabric, and which said belts move around oppositely disposed rolls. Placed within these asbestos belts, at desired places, are transverse flat strips of high electrical resistance, such as nichrome. As the asbestos belts move forward with the sheet of glass, these fiat nichrome strips, which are continuously heated by electricity, come in contact with the surface of the plate of glass and move forward with the glass until disengaged therefrom at the point where the belts turn outward and away from the glass. This, however, is a matter which will be hereinafter ■discussed with reference to claim 50.

[885]*885These heated nichrome strips, it is said, form heated strips in the glass sheet prior to, and at the time of, the cutting of the sheet of glass above the belts, so that cracks, if generated by the cutting operation, will not travel backward in the sheet farther than this heated area. It is stated in appellant’s specification: “ The strips may be arranged at regular interval — so that at least one of them will come in engagement with the face of the sheet as or before the one in advance moves out of contact.” The object of this, it is said, is to-insure that there will be always a heated area in the glass, back of the point of cutting.

Claims 50, 51, 56, and 62 are thought to be sufficiently typical of all the rejected claims, and are as follows:

BO. A device for arresting cracks in sheet glass during drawing comprising a pair of endless carriers, and a plurality of heated strips mounted in spaced relation on tile carriers and adapted to register on opposite sides of the glass sheet during the movement of the carriers, the pairs of registering strips being so positioned relatively to one another on the carriers with at least one pair of the strips while in the heated condition is always maintained by the carriers in heating relation to a transversely extending zone of the sheet between the cutting station and the source from which the sheet is drawn.
51. The method of arresting cracks in sheet glass during drawing which consists in heating the glass sheet during the cutting operation along a transverse line between the cutting station and the point where the glass becomes set in the sheet.
56. In apparatus for drawing sheet glass, a nonnicking flat strip, means for passing an electric current through said strip for heating the strip, and a mechanically operated carrier means for maintaining said electrically heated strip with the flat side thereof in contact with the surface of the drawn sheet while the sheet is being cut to intercept a longitudinally extending crack in the sheet.
92. The method of annealing glass, which consists in drawing the glass, allowing the glass to cool to an initial annealing temperature, then raising the temperature of the glass rapidly and for a short period of time, subsequently allowing the glass to cool to a lower temperature than the initial annealing temperature, then again raising the temperature of the glass though not to such a high a degree as previously, and allowing the glass to cool.

The Board, of Appeals rejected these claims upon the following, references:

George et al., 891024, June 30, 1008,
Campbell, 1367858, Feb. 8, 1921,
Slingluff, 1373533, April 5, 1921,
Slingluff, 1544947, July 7, 1925.

In discussing these references, claim 50 was rejected as involving new matter beyond that originally disclosed in the application. Claims 51 and 55 were rejected on the Campbell reference, while claims 54 and 56 were rejected on the reference Campbell, in view of Slingluff, no. 1373533. Claims 58, 59, 62, and 63 were rejected [886]*886•on. the Sling-luff patent, No. 1544947. These various grounds of rejection will be briefly discussed.

Claim 50, as it reads, includes the element of “ heated strips mounted in spaced relation on the carriers and adapted to register on opposite sides of the glass sheet during the movement of the carriers.” Both tribunals in the Patent Office were of opinion that this was new matter. The examiner states that, while portions of the original application mentioned the use of the strips on both sides of the sheet, it at no place disclosed the idea of having them register with each other. The examiner also calls attention to the fact that Figure 6, which seems to show such a registration, was not a part of the original drawings with the application, and that it was required to be cancelled. The examiner also calls attention to the fact that Figure 1 of the application, as originally presented, showed strips upon one belt only. This is apparent otherwise from the proceedings in the Patent Office. For instance, in an amendment of March 2, 1929, the appellant alludes to the fact that in Figures 4 and 5 he has shown the heating strips to be applied to one belt only.

Inasmuch as the statement certified by the Patent Office to us must be assumed to be correct, and, in view of the fact that the appellant does not claim to the contrary, we must conclude that this feature of the registration of the heated strips was not originally included in the application. Therefore it seems that the tribunals of the Patent Office were entirely right in concluding that it was, and is, new matter.

It is argued by the appellant that he did disclose heated strips on ■opposite sides of the glass sheet. Assuming that this is correct, .such a disclosure would not justify the language of claim 50 heretofore quoted.

The Oxford Dictionary thus defines the verb “ register ”:

4. To coincide or correspond exactly. * * * To. adjust witli precision, so as to secure the exact correspondence of parts.

Heated strips might be opposite to each other, but it does not follow that they would be in register with each other.

The reference Campbell shows a machine for making and cutting-glass sheets or plates.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 109, 21 C.C.P.A. 883, 1934 CCPA LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-spinasse-ccpa-1934.