Ivar Jepson v. William D. Egly and Columbus W. Harris, (Two Cases)

231 F.2d 947, 43 C.C.P.A. 853
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1956
DocketPatent Appeals 6158, 6159
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 231 F.2d 947 (Ivar Jepson v. William D. Egly and Columbus W. Harris, (Two Cases)) 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
Ivar Jepson v. William D. Egly and Columbus W. Harris, (Two Cases), 231 F.2d 947, 43 C.C.P.A. 853 (ccpa 1956).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

These are appeals by Ivar Jepson from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences of the United States Patent Office awarding priority of invention to the joint parties William D. Egly and Columbus W. Harris in Interference Nos. 85,640 and 86,202.

Interference No. 85,640 (Appeal No. 6158) involves the Jepson application, Serial No. 107,653, filed July 30, 1949, and the Egly and Harris joint application, Serial No. 53,492, filed October 8, 1948. Interference No. 86,202 (Appeal No. 6159) involves the Jepson application, Serial' No. 126,857, filed November 12, 1949, and the above-mentioned Egly and Harris joint application.

The proceedings below in both interferences have been consolidated into a single record because of the related nature of the subject matter. We will therefore treat both appeals in one opinion. However, for the sake of clarity, this opinion will treat each appeal under a separate heading.

Interference No. 85,640 (Appeal No. 6158).

The inventions in issue relate to travelling lawn sprinklers. Both parties to the interference broadly disclose a lawn sprinkler having a rotatable sprinkling head mounting a plurality of nozzles each of which sprays a stream of water. The lawn sprinkler is adapted to be attached to a flexible hose which supplies water thereto. The travelling sprinklers have structure thereon which is placed in contact with the flexible hose so that as the rotatable sprinkling head rotates because of water pressure, the travelling sprinkler is caused to pull itself along the hose and thus traverse the path defined by the hose.

One of the issues before us is whether the two counts involved in the interference read on one modification of the invention set forth in the Jepson application. In order to answer this question, we deem it expedient to briefly describe the pertinent structure disclosed in each of the applications, namely, the structure which causes the sprinkler to travel.

In the Egly-Harris disclosure, the rotatable sprinkling head is caused to rotate by the water under pressure which is supplied thereto. Two vertical shafts are journalled in the sprinkler housing. Gears transmit motion from the rotating head to each of these shafts. The shafts have rollers fixedly mounted on them. The rollers are adapted to clamp the hose between them, and as the shafts and the rollers rotate the sprinkler is pulled along the hose and thus is caused to travel.

*949 Jepson discloses an embodiment of his invention which is similar to the EglyHarris structure. However, it is different in the sense that only one shaft which mounts a hose gripping roller is positively driven through gearing connecting it to the rotatable sprinkling head. A second roller which is not positively driven co-acts with the positively driven roller to grip the hose therebetween. The second roller merely rotates idly as the sprinkler is pulled along the hose by traction between the positively driven roller and the hose.

The following two counts are in issue in this case:

“1. A traveling lawn sprinkler comprising a housing adapted to be connected to a flexible water conduit, a water reactance sprinkler unit rotatably mounted by said housing, and rotatable drive members actuated by said unit and including a pair of rotatable members gripping said conduit therebetween to propel said housing.
“2. A sprinkler of the rotary reaction type having nozzles revolving about a vertical axis comprising a support for rotatably supporting said nozzles, a pair of rotatable members associated with said support adapted to receive a water supply conduit therebetween, means for biasing said rotatable members to grip said conduit, and means responsive to rotation of said nozzles for rotating said members to cause said sprinkler to propel itself along said conduit by traction with said conduit.”

The Board of Patent Interferences was of the opinion that the above-described Jepson structure did not read on the above eounts. The reasons for the board’s opinion can best be stated by directly quoting the following portion of the board’s opinion:

“In the modification shown in Figures 13 an [sic] 14, the ‘pair of rotatable members’ recited near the end of Count 1 can only be the ■ pair of rollers 212 and 213. According to the count they must form a part of the ‘drive members actuated by said unit’ (the ‘water reactance sprinkler unit’) since the count refers to the ‘drive members’ as ‘including’ the ‘pair of rotatable members’. In order for roller 213 to be connected to the other parts of the ‘drive members’ so that it will, with them, be ‘actuated by said unit’ it is necessary to include the hose 21 or the ground as part of the ‘drive members’. However, the ‘drive members’ must be part of ‘a travelling lawn sprinkler’ since the count is drawn to such a sprinkler ‘comprising-drive members’. Obviously the hose or the ground are not part of such a sprinkler, particularly since neither the ground nor the portion of hose between the rollers travels with the other parts of the sprinkler. Thus in attempting to apply count 1 to the sprinkler shown in Figures 13 and 14 one must use something external to the sprinkler itself. This is not necessary with respect to the devices shown in the other figures of Jepson’s application or in his opponent’s application.
* * In addition, Count 1 describes the ‘drive members’ as ‘rotatable’, which is not true in any pertinent sense of the hose or the ground.
“Similar considerations apply as to Count 2 relative to the type of device shown in Jepson’s Figures 13 and 14 wherein the ‘pair of rotatable members-adapted to receive a water supply conduit therebetween’ are rollers 212 and 213. ‘Means-for rotating said members’ must include the hose (conduit) or ground for in their absence roller 213 will not be rotated; but neither the hose or ground is a part of the sprinkler, nor is either ‘responsive to rotation of said nozzles’. Moreover, it seems inapt to say that roller 213 is rotated ‘to cause said sprinkler to propel itself along said conduit’ when it is *950 such relative movement of the sprinkler and hose that causes the freely rotatable roller 213 to rotate. We accordingly hold that the type of sprinkler shown in Figures 13 and 14 of Jepson and in his Exhibits 9 and 10 does not support either count.”

The first question we must answer is whether the board was correct in its above holding. It is well settled that counts of an interference should be given the broadest interpretation which they will reasonably support, Tansel v. Higonnet, 215 F.2d 457, 42 C.C.P.A., Patents, 732, and the word reasonably should not be deleted, De Benneville v. Anderson, 212 F.2d 612, 41 C.C.P.A., Patents, 891. Furthermore, while, on one hand, limitations not included in the counts cannot be subsequently read into them, Tansel v. Higonnet, supra, on the other hand, limitations expressed in the counts may not be disregarded, Kropa v. Robie, 187 F.2d 150, 38 C.C.P.A., Patents, 858.

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Bluebook (online)
231 F.2d 947, 43 C.C.P.A. 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ivar-jepson-v-william-d-egly-and-columbus-w-harris-two-cases-ccpa-1956.