In re Wagner

149 F.2d 939, 32 C.C.P.A. 1088, 66 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 48, 1945 CCPA LEXIS 444
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1945
DocketNo. 5020
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 F.2d 939 (In re Wagner) 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 Wagner, 149 F.2d 939, 32 C.C.P.A. 1088, 66 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 48, 1945 CCPA LEXIS 444 (ccpa 1945).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Claims 20 to 25, inclusive, of appellants’ aplication for a patent relating to a recording maximum demand meter were rejected by the Primary Examiner of the United States Patent Office upon the prior art cited, and some of the claims for other reasons which, in view of our conclusion, we need not state or discuss. Upon appeal, the decision of the examiner was affirmed by the Board of Appeals. From the decision of the latter, appellants have here appealed.

A recording maximum demand meter does not total the electrical current in the manner that the conventional household watt-hour meters do but merely records the existing demand at periodical intervals, such as every quarter hour. The necessity for the installation of a recording meter so as to determine the existing demand periodically is brought about by the fact that the supplier of the electricity must be in a position at all times to take care of a great many customers if they were continuously consuming current. Some customers might not use more than a small amount of electricity, although their capacity for using it would, at certain times, be much greater. The recording meter involved here is for the purpose of determining a charge to each consumer over and above the electricity consumed, based upon the demand which might be made upon the supplier of electricity, by réason of the fact that he must always be able to take care of each consumer’s highest demand. With the aid of such devices the supplier is better enabled to detremine' the maximum demand which might be made.

The claims involved where rejected upon the following prior art references:

Meloney et al., 1.006,968, October 24, 1911.
Kinney, 1,060,984, May 6, 1913.
Wilson, 1,133,597, March 30, 1915.
Heitman, 1,256,130, February 12, 1918.
Pogue, 1,279,378,' September 17, 1918.
Hall, 1,742,072, December 31, 1929.
Timson, 1,800,850, April 14, 1931.
Warner, 1,9,33,356, October 31, 1933.
General Electric Catalog GEA — 612C. (1936).

Claim 25 is thought to be sufficiently illustrative of the appealed claims, and since it is the claim upon which appellants particularly rely, it is here set out:

25. In a device of the character described, the combination with a driven metering mechanism, of a printing element comprising a shaft driven from the metering mechanism and a printing disk carried by said shaft and having raised printing [1090]*1090characters formed upon its outer face and disposed around said disk adjacent its edge, a clock mechanism, means for feeding a narrow, elongated, transparent chart strip across the center of the printing disk and in substantial parallelism therewith and under the influence of the clock mechanism, said chart strip having pre-printed time designations along its length, means for maintaining a carbon strip in place between the chart strip and the printing characters, a striking platen disposed outwardly of the plane of the chart strip, means controlled by the clock mechanism and acting to move the platen with striking force toward the printing characters and at time intervals corresponding with those preprinted on the chart, a fixed index printing surface, separate from but disposed adjacent to the edge óf the printing disk- and in substantial alignment with the center line of the feed of the chart strip, the outer face of said fixed index lying substantially at the level of the outer faces of the characters upon the printing disk to act simultaneously with said characters as a printing element when the chart and carbon paper are forced toward said characters and index by said platen, and means for retracting said platen to a position to leave visible through the transparent chart the marks made by the carbon strip upon the underside of the transparent chart as a result of said chart and carbon strip having been forced against the printing characters and index point.

The examiner in a very detailed way, in his rejection upon the prior art, had the following to say (omitting material relating to other grounds of rejection, etc.) :

As has been pointed out, claim 26 is directly readable on Meloney et al, this patent showing the rotative disc c2, the fixed index e2 and platen f as recited.
Claim 27 adds feed means for the record receiving strip shown at x in Meloney et al and for a carbon strip having its general equivalent in the ink strip y. Whatever advantage applicants’ structure may have over that of this patent, it is certainly not defined by substitution, of a carbon sheet such as shown old in Heitman or a carbon strip as in Fig. 30 of the G. E. Catalog (page 53) for an ink ribbon. [While claims 26 and 27 are not on appeal in this court, the above is quoted as explanatory of that which follows.]
Claim 25 adds a clock drive for the chart, old in a majority of the references and shown particularly in Wilson and G. E. Fig. 30, and feeds the chart across the center of the printing disc whereby arcuate printing with respect to the index is effected crosswise of the strip as in Fig. 9 of Kinney instead of lengthwise as in Meloney et al, Fig. 7 and G. E. Fig. 30. In addition to other features above recited, claim 25 also includes preprinted time designations along one edge of the chart as disclosed in the G. E. reference, lines 8-10 of column 2, page 53, and also in Warner and Eogue, and provides a chart with printing on the under side permitting entire visibility of the latest recording, as shown old in Wilson.
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Claim 23 is similar to claim 25 in its association of independent old features, omitting only the index, which is added by supplemental claim 24, and shown old in Meloney et al, G. E. Fig. 30, Kinney and Timson.
No response has been vouchsafed to the rejection of the foregoing claims.
Earlier claim 20 is similar to claim 23 except for the addition of the independent zero resetting feature for the printing mechanism, specifically old in Hall-if not in all the other references, and in emphasis of the complete visibility of the chart down to the last impression. This latter feature is old, e. g. and stressed in the G. E. reference, page 53, column 1, lines 5-7 from bottom. Regarding zero resetting it is obvious that the particular use determines whether or not resetting occurs after each printing stroke. Obviously if each impression is to represent [1091]*1091the demand since the last impression, zero resetting is necessary. Provision of such common and well known necessary means is neither novel nor inventive regardless of its association with other desired but absolutely independent features above recited.
Claim 21 supplements claim 20 by the addition of the index feature old in G-. E. Pig. 30, Meloney et al, Kinney and Timson; and supplemental claim 22 stresses the lengthwise direction of the index on the chart, a feature old in Kinney. Obviously the index e2 of Meloney et al (Pig. 5) could be located where index a5 is, if across-center instead of across-edge printing were desired.

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149 F.2d 939, 32 C.C.P.A. 1088, 66 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 48, 1945 CCPA LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wagner-ccpa-1945.