In Re Webersinn

191 F.2d 403, 39 C.C.P.A. 1
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 1951
DocketPatent Appeals 5775
StatusPublished

This text of 191 F.2d 403 (In Re Webersinn) 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 Webersinn, 191 F.2d 403, 39 C.C.P.A. 1 (ccpa 1951).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal wherein United Chromium, Inc., as the assignee of the application of Theordore H. Webersinn, deceased, for a patent for certain alleged “new and useful improvements in Methods of Producing Fissured Net-Works in Chromium Electrodeposits,” seeks review and reversal of the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the denial by the Primary Examiner, hereinafter referred to as the examiner, of all the claims, 11 to 14, inclusive, embraced in the application, serial No. 510,210, filed November 13, 1943. No claims were allowed. All the appealed claims are method claims.

The board expressly disapproved certain of the references applied by the examiner and also disapproved the latter’s rejection of the claims for indefiniteness and “as containing an improper step,” but approved their rejection as being unpatentable over the method claims 2 and 3 embraced in a patent, No. 2,430,750 issued November 11, 1947, to Theodore H. Webersinn and Jacob Hyner, as joint inventors, upon an application, serial No. 545,506, filed July 18, 1944, which patent also is shown to be assigned to United Chromium, Inc., the assignee of the instant application. The co-inventor, Webersinn, was the same person as the deceased applicant in the instant case.

In view of what seems to us to be the highly technical character of the claimed inventiofi, we here reproduce all the appealed claims, although it does not seem to be suggested by appellant that there is any patentable distinction between them.

The technicality of the subject matter also leads us to quote extensively and verbatim from the findings and arguments instead of attempting to paraphrase them.

The claims read:

“11. In the post-treatment of electrodeposits of chromium of a nature, acquired from the conditions under which they are electrodeposited, that preferential dissolving thereof occurs at lines in the form of a mesh, the chromium electrodeposits of said nature being designated herein as ‘predisposed’ chromium and being of approximately one-thousandth of an inch minimum thickness, immersing the ‘predisposed’ chromium electro-deposit in an electrolytic etching solution which chemically attacks active chromium, passing electric current of the order of approximately one quarter to three amperes per square inch to the *404 ‘predisposed’ chromium electrodeposit connected in the electric circuit as a cathode, maintaining the ‘predisposed’ chromium immersed in said electrolytic etching solution to dissolve the said ‘predisposed’ chromium preferentially at lines, according to its nature, thereby forming a net-work of fissures in said predisposed chromium 'electrodeposit, as distinguished from- the microscopic cracks commonly found in chromium electrodeposits, and removing the ‘predisposed’ chromium electrodeposit from the action of the current and. the solution before the chromium in the areas-between the fissures is stripped to the basis metal.
“12. In the post-treatment of electrodeposits of chromium, according to claim 11, discontinuing the passage of current in the, course of the development of the fissure net-work, the dissolving action being continued by the solution while the ‘predisposed’ chromium remains immersed therein.-
“13.’ In the post-treatment of electrodeposits of chromium, according to claim 11; further comprising passing current anodically to the ‘predisposed’ chromium electrodeposit in the same solution in which it is immersed, after the fissure net-work has been developed, to stop further development of the fissure net-work and action on the chromium.
. “14. In the post-treatment of electrodeposits of chromium of a nature, acquired from the conditions under which they are electrodeposited, that preferential dissolving thereof occurs at lines in the- form of a mesh, the chromium electrodeposits of said nature being designated herein as ‘predisposed’ chromium and being of approximately one-thousandth of an inch minimum thickness, immersing the ‘predisposed’ chromium electrodeposit in a solution which chemically attacks active chromium maintaining the ‘predisposed’ chromium immersed in said solution to dissolve the said ‘predisposed’ chromium preferentially at lines, according to its nature, thereby-forming a net-work of fissures in- said predisposed chromium electrodeposit, as- distinguished from the microscopic cracks1 commonly found in chromium electrodeposits, and removing the ‘predisposed’ chromium electrodeposit from the action of the solution before the chromium in the areas between the fissures is stripped to the basis metal.”

There are four claims in the reference patent, all being method claims. Claim No. 2 is dependent on claim No. 1, which is technical and long. Claim No. 3, the second'of the two-upon which the appealed claims were rejected, also is technical, and long. The tribunals of the Patent Office held that the appealed claims are not patentably distinguishable from the indicated patent claims, and appellant, in order to prevail, has the burden of making it clear to us that there was error in the decision of the board affirming that of the examiner.

As to certain of the examiner’s holdings, the Board of Appeals, in effect, reversed, and we have no concern with those holdings, but, as has been stated, the board definitely approved the rejection on the patent to Webersinn et al., and with that we are concerned.

The contention on behalf of appellant appears to be that the appealed claims are limited to an etching step of finishing the chromium plating, while the claims of the reference patent are limited to fitting the chromium. The following is taken from appellant’s brief:

“In 1942 [the year preceding the filing of appellant’s application] porous chromium plating was being used by both the U. S. Navy and the Army Air Force. The Navy was using chromium plate on diesel engine cylinder liners, which were subject to long, continuous use. The Air Force was testing chromium plate on aircraft cylinder barrels subjected to extreme rates of wear in dust ladened atmosphere.
“For the long continuous use in diesel engines it was desirable to obtain a porous chromium surface with deep porosity so that as the cylinders wore the porosity would still remain. On the other hand, to utilize the porous chromium plate in the aircraft, cylinders under the extreme speeds, temperatures and bearing pressures of high output aircraft engines, the special need was a chromium bearing surface that *405 would be free from ‘seizing’ and ‘galling1 faults, and excessive wear on the piston rings; the Air Force found that channel-type porosity with plateau areas of a certain size met this requirement.
“Here, then, were two different problems, •one of which was worked on by Webersinn and the other by Webersinn and Hyner.
“To obtain deeper fissures and less loss of surface chromium than was being obtained by prior methods, Webersinn (sole) invented the method of attacking the chromium claimed in his application on appeal. The advantages of the Webersinn cathodic post-treatment of the predisposed chromium over previous methods is described in his specification (Transcript, p. 6, 1. 14 to 1. 9, p.

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Bluebook (online)
191 F.2d 403, 39 C.C.P.A. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-webersinn-ccpa-1951.