In re Stresau

110 F.2d 106, 27 C.C.P.A. 942, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 450, 1940 CCPA LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1940
DocketNo. 4233
StatusPublished

This text of 110 F.2d 106 (In re Stresau) 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 Stresau, 110 F.2d 106, 27 C.C.P.A. 942, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 450, 1940 CCPA LEXIS 53 (ccpa 1940).

Opinion

Hatfield, 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 the decision of the Primary Examiner rejecting claims 19 to 31, inclusive, in appellant’s application for a reissue of patent No. 1,925.118, issued September 5, 1933, on an application filed May 5, 1931. The reissue application, serial No. 165,230, was filed September 22, 1937, more than four years subsequent to the issuance of appellant’s patent. It contains the claims of appellant’s [latent, Nos. 1 to 18, inclusive, which were allowed by the Primary Examiner, and the appealed claims, Nos. 19 to 31, inclusive, which were copied from patent No. 2,072,273, issued to C. W. Obert, March 2,1937, on an application filed April 26,1933.

The invention defined by the appealed claims relates to oil stills and pressure vessels and to a method of making the same.

Claims 19 to 25, inclusive, are method claims, and 26 to 31, inclusive, are article claims. Claims 19 and 24 are illustrative of the appealed method claims, and 26 and 27 are illustrative of the article claims. They read:

19. The method of making a pressure vessel shell which comprises forming a plurality of metal sheets; superimposing and tightly clamping one sheet upon the other; and joining the sheets together along their respective seams while each sheet is tightly clamped.
[943]*9432-4. Tlie method of making a cylindrical vessel shell which comprises forming a plurality of substantially cylindrical metal sheets; successively superimposing one sheet upon the other; clamping said sheets in their superimposed condition; and joining the sheets together along a single longitudinal seam.
26. A shell for high pressure vessels comprising a plurality of superimposed metal plates in uniformly close contact throughout their juxtaposed surfaces and uniformly shaped together, and joined along the longitudinal seams thereof.
27. A pressure vessel shell comprising a plurality of superimposed and conforming sheets of metal in a uniformly close surface contacting juxtaposition, each sheet being separately welded along a single longitudinal seam.

The object of the reissue application is stated, in the brief of counsel for appellant to be “to correct a defect in the specification, and in the present instance it also serves as a means of correcting a cloud which has been erroneously cast upon applicant’s patent by the issuance of a later patent to Obert containing claims to the same invention,” and not “to extend the scope of the Stresau patent, but merely to include claims phrased in the same language used in the Obert patent in order to lay a foundation for a suit to cancel the later issued and interfering Obert patent.”

In the oath supporting appellant’s application for a reissue, it is stated that the patent issued to appellant is inoperative

to the extent and for the reason that the specification is insufficient, ‘and that such insufficiency consists particularly in failing to include claims directed to certain features of the invention * * * :
That ¡the specification failed to describe the invention in a manner as full as the description contained in the original applications [meaning application, serial No. 183,175, filed April 12, 1927, which was a “continuation of application Serial No. 8070, filed February 9, 1925”], of which the application issued into said Letters Patent was a substitute, that the claims failed to specify the feature of the invention employing a single longitudinal seam in a 'Cylindrical tody portion of the vessel, that the claims failed to specify the feature of the invention m which the laminations of the vessel are m uniform close surface contact 'with each other, and that the specification failed to contain claims of the scopd of claims 19 to SI submitted herewith.
That such errors so particularly specified arose as follows:
That the inventor was an engineer and unfamiliar with details of patent matters and that in the preparing of the final application, a substitute case for two previous applications [hereinbefore referred to], the matter above set forth was inadvertently left out and claims directed to the features above set forth were not included * * *. [Italics ours.]

The Primary Examiner rejected the appealed claims on three grounds: First, that they were broader in scope than the claims in appellant’s patent, and that appellant had failed to establish special circumstances to excuse the delay of more than two years in filing his reissue application; second, that appellant’s application which matured into patent No. 1,925,118 does not disclose the invention defined by the appealed claims; and, third, that appellant’s failure to claim [944]*944in bis patent the invention defined by the appealed claims was not due to inadvertence or mistake within the meaning of the reissue statute— section 4916 E. S. (85 U. S. C., title 35, sec. 64) — which reads:

Whenever any patent is wholly or partly inoperative or invalid, by reason of a defective or insufficient specification, or by reason of the patentee claiming as his own invention or discovery more than he had a right to claim as new,, if the error has arisen by inadvertence, accident, or mistake, and without any fraudulent or deceptive intention, the commissioner shall, on the surrender of such patent and the payment of the duty required by law, cause a patent for the same invention, and in accordance with the corrected specification, to be reissued to the patentee or to his assigns or legal representatives, for the unexifired part of the term of the original patent. * * *

The Board of Appeals concurred in the views expressed by the Primary Examiner as to the appealed method claims, Nos. 19 to 25, inclusive, and, although it affirmed the examiner’s holding that appellant’s patent did not disclose the invention defined by the appealed article claims, it expressed the view that those claims were not broader than the article claims in appellant’s patent.

The method claims, Nos. 7 and 8, in appellant’s patent which have been allowed in the involved application, read:

7. A method of making laminated pressure vessels which comprises forming a ifiurality of tubular members of different diameters from flat sheet metal blanks, fusing the longitudinal meeting lines of the tubular member having the smallest diameter, placing the tubular member having the next smallest diameter <eoncentric with said smallest tubular member with the longitudinal meeting lines thereof in staggered relationship with the meeting lines- of said first named tubular member, fusing the longltundinal meeting edges of said second named tubular member together and with said first named member, and continuing such operations until a wall of desired thickness has been built up, and fusing end portions on to the tubular members to form a unitary closed structure.
8.

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Bluebook (online)
110 F.2d 106, 27 C.C.P.A. 942, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 450, 1940 CCPA LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stresau-ccpa-1940.