In re Trier

163 F.2d 575, 35 C.C.P.A. 701
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1947
DocketNo. 5322
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 F.2d 575 (In re Trier) 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 Trier, 163 F.2d 575, 35 C.C.P.A. 701 (ccpa 1947).

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 1 to 13, inclusive, 15 and 17 to 21, inclusive* in appellants’ application for a patent for an invention relating to a bottle washing apparatus.

[702]*702Claims 1, 5,12, and 17 are sufficiently representative of the appealed claims. They read :

1. A machine for washing bottles or similar containers including intermittently movable bottle or container conveying means, bottle or container support means carried by said conveying means and adapted to maintain a bottle in securely fixed position relative to said support- means with substantially all of said bottle exposed for spraying or washing while being conveyed through said washing machine, and a spraying device intermittently operable in timed relation with a period of dwell of said intermittently movable conveying means, said spraying device being movable during a period of dwell of the machine over the exterior of the bottle to wash or spray the exterior of the bottle, said bottle being maintained in operative position solely by said bottle support means.
5. A machine for washing bottles including bottle conveying means for the step-by-step advance of a bottle carried in a bottle support on said conveying means with a period of dwell between each successive step, a spray ring provided with centrally directed jet orifices reciprocably movable axially of a bottle in said support, said spray ring being of sufficient diameter to receive a bottle carried by said support, means at a predetermined station in advance of said bottle support for mounting said ring for movement axially of a bottle in said support, means for the axial actuation of said ring in timed synchronism with a period of dwell of the support at said station, and means for supplying said spray ring with liquid under the pressure during its axial movement, said ring being adapted to discharge said liquid through said centrally directed jet orifices .during the axial movement of said ring and during the dwell of said support.
12. In a device of the character described, the combination with a bottle propelling conveyor having a bottle support adapted to grip a bottle and maintain it in securely fixed position relative to said support and a spray discharge means provided with a valve, of means in the path of a bottle propelled by said conveyor and connected with said valve and adapted to be actuated by the bottle in a valve opening direction.
17. A bottle washing machine comprising, in combination, intermittently movable bottle conveying means with periods of dwell between the consecutive movements thereof, bottle support means carried by said conveying means and adapted to maintain a bottle in securely fixed position relative to said support means, and a plurality of spraying devices intermittently operable in timed relation with a period of dwell of said intermittently movable conveying means, one of said spraying devices being operable by a bottle carried in said support means, said support means being so constructed and arranged as to securely maintain a grip on said bottle while said bottle is being moved through said washing machine by said conveying means and while said bottle is subjected to a spraying discharge from said spraying devices.

Claims 14 and 16 in appellants’ application were allowed by the Primary Examiner.

Appel]ants’.application discloses a device comprising an endless chain conveyor which is intermittently driven. Mounted on the conveyor, and extending across it, are spaced carrier frames, each adapted to receive several soiled bottles. The bottles are received in pockets on the carrier frames and are held in place by resilient gripping members. After being placed on the conveyor, the bottles are carried to [703]*703a pre-rinsing station where nozzles are arranged to direct jets of water against them. The flow of water to each of the nozzles is controlled by a valve and each valve is actuated by a lever extending into the path of movement of the bottles, the arrangement being such that each bottle, as it arrives at the pre-rinsing station, actuates the valve which supplies water to the nozzle which is arranged to .direct a jet against the bottle, so that rinsing water will be supplied only when there is a bottle in position to be rinsed. After leaving the pre-rinsing station the bottles are carried through a soaking bath to a washing station where they make three successive stops in registration with nozzles which deliver jets of water against them at various angles,, both internally and externally. Thereafter, the bottles pass to rinsing and sterilizing stations and thence to a discharge station where they are removed from the conveyor.

The references relied on are:

Rubin, 784,504, March 7, 1905.
Pilley, 1,299,507, April 8, 1919.
Wolf, 1,59S,634, September 7, 1926.
Price 1,687,791, October 16, 1928.
Carvalho, 1,714,075, May 21, 1929.
Ladewig et al., 1,734,585, November 5, 1929.
Enz, 1,740,233, December 17, 1929.
Herold et al. 1,824,993, September 29, 1931.
Dufford, 1,825,718, October 6, 1931.
Hippenmeyer, 1,831,351, November 10, 1931.
Gruetter 1,904,685, April 18, 1933.
Perkins, 1,978,721, October 30, 1934.
Braun, 2,017,941, October 22, 1935.
Dostal, 2,094,398-, September 28, 1937.
Wolcott et al. 2,197,602, April 16, 1940.
Ohrne et al., 2,217,324, October 8, 1940.

The patent to Ladewig et al. discloses a bottle washing machine in which the soiled bottles are placed in transverse rows on carriers which are mounted on an endless conveyor. The conveyor is moved intermittently and transports the bottles through soaking baths to stations where they are rinsed internally and externally by jets of water and are subjected to a sterilizing spray. The bottles are then sprayed by cooling spray nozzles and are discharged from the conveyor.

The patent to Price relates to a can washing machine and, so far as the issues here are concerned, is similar to the bottle washer disclosed in the Ladewig et al. patent.

The patents to Enz and Dostal disclose bottle holding devices which are mounted on carriers and which hold the bottles during the washing thereof by engaging the beads adjacent the mouths of the bottles.

The patents to Braun, Pilley, Rubin, and Wolcott et al. disclose receptacle washing machines in which the receptacle, such as a milk can, [704]*704•on arx-iving at a washing station, engages a member which canses a waive to open so that cleaning liquid is delivered against the receptacle.

The remainder of the patents cited are cumulative and do not require detailed consideration.

Claims 1 and 5 to 11, inclusive, were rejected on the ground of mis-joinder of invention.

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Related

Application of Feight
181 F.2d 206 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
163 F.2d 575, 35 C.C.P.A. 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trier-ccpa-1947.