Kauffman v. Etten

97 F.2d 134, 25 C.C.P.A. 1127, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 1938
DocketNo. 3923; No. 3924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 F.2d 134 (Kauffman v. Etten) 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
Kauffman v. Etten, 97 F.2d 134, 25 C.C.P.A. 1127, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 102 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered tlie opinion of the court:

These are appeals from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the Examiner of Interferences, in a three-party interference proceeding, awarding priority to the senior party Hoke.

The subject matter relates to improvements in clothes • wringers. The function of such subject matter is described broadly in the brief on behalf of the party Kauffman, as follows:

Clothes wringers are now commonly used In connection with power washing machines and the wringers are also power driven. With the introduction of the power wringers the danger from injury to the operator by the indrawing of a hand, hair or clothes of the operator between the rolls became a matter of immediate concern and very many devices have been invented to avoid such injury or to minimize injury by providing safety releases through which the pressure on the rolls may be instantly relieved. The problem involved is not merely one of providing a mechanical device that will accomplish the release of pressure but involves also a means of effecting such release that is practically instantaneous in its action, that is sensitive to the touch of the operator, and one that may be actuated with certainty by the operator under panic conditions.

[1128]*1128Two counts are involved reading, respectively:

1. In a wringer, the combination of a frame; rolls mounted in the frame; a top bar; pressure means for the rolls exerting pressure from the top bar; and a safety device comprising a trip bar carried by the top bar extending across the front of the wringer, and means actuated by the trip bar releasing the pressure means.
2. In a wringer, the combination of a frame; rolls mounted in the frame; a top bar; pressure means for the rolls exerting pressure from the top bar; and a safety device comprising trip bars carried by the top bar and extending across the front and rear of the- wringer, and means responsive to the action of the trip bars releasing the pressure means.

It is necessary at the outset for us to consider and pass upon a question of law; viz.: Whether, where the Examiner of Interferences and the Board of Appeals have concurred in a narrow- interpretation of counts involved in an interference, holding that otherwise they would be non-patentable in view of the prior art (no motion to dissolve involving the question of patentability having been made), such interpretation is binding upon this court in an interference proceeding.

In this case all the findings of fact relating to conception and reduction to practice by the respective parties, made by the tribunals of the Patent Office, as hereinafter stated, were made upon the basis of their interpretation of the expression “a trip bar * * * extending across the front of the wringer,” appearing substantially in both the counts.

The examiner’s discussion and interpretation of the meaning of this expression is as follows:

The point to be decided is whether “across” is used to denote extent or merely direction.
In view of the use of the word “extending” it would" seem that the intention was to define the length of the bar. Such statements as that a bridge extends across a river or a' cable across an ocean clearly denote an extent from one side to the other and it would seem that this would be the normal meaning of the language here in question. While it is true, as stated by Kauffman, that the interfering applications do not show the bar passing from one extreme side of the wringer frame to the other, they do show it passing entirely over the front of the rollers, which form the effective part of the wringer. This extent is not merely arbitrary but serves to protect the entrance to the wringer so that if, for example, a person’s hair should be caught, the head would engage the bar and release the upper roller. It is believed, therefore, that the fair and natural meaning of the counts requires that the bar shall extend at least from end to end of the rollers.
It should be noted that if “extending across” is construed, as urged by Kauffman, as meaning merely that the bar extends in a crosswise direction, the limitation thus imposed would be purely arbitrary since, if the bar may be only an inch or two long it seems to be a matter of indifference whether it. extends vertically or horizontally. Moreover, if the counts are thus construed they are found to be literally readable on the patent to Webster 1,439,655, December 19, 1922, which would constitute a bar to the allowance of the counts to any of the parties. Applying count 1 to this reference, it is [1129]*1129found, that Webster shows a wringer having a frame (1 to 8), rolls (4 and 9)~ mounted in the frame, a top bar (15), pressure means (20, 23, 12, 11, 10) for tlie rolls, exerting pressure from the top bar, and a safety device comprising a trip bar (30) carried by the top bar and means (18). actuated by the trip bar releasing the pressure means. Movement of element 30 operates to trip the toggle and release the latch 18 and hence this element is properly designated a trip bar. Furthermore it will be seen that the member 30 is transverse to the face of the wringer and is of considerable extent (about one half the length of the rolls). Webster shows a similar trip bar (29) on the back of his wringer. It follows that if “extending across” relates merely to direction the counts are fully anticipated by Webster. This fact affords a further basis for considering the counts to be limited to structures in which the bars pass from one end of the rolls to the other and this construction is accordingly adopted.

In its decision the board said:

The examiner has held that the term “across” means “entirely across” while appellant argues that this term may be regarded as indicating a crosswise direction.
In discussing this question, it may be well to refer to the party Hoke’s reduction to practice of October, 1931, in which there is no definite proof as to the length of the roll space of the wringer employed and therefore no proof that the trip bar extended entirely across this space.
It is our opinion that at times the term “across” is employed in either manner. While we believe that usually it indicates that the thing under discussion extends entirely or at least substantially across something else. It is, we believe, sometimes used merely to indicate a transverse rather than a longitudinal direction.
As to whether it necessarily means “entirely across” when not employed to indicate direction, we might refer to a sign placed upon a highway to stop or warn travelers. If this sign is not long enough to obstruct the roadway, it would hardly be referred to as a sign “across” the roadway. On the other hand, if it were sufficiently long, so that it would be substantially impossible to pass, it would not be unusual to refer to it as extending “across” the road, even if it fell several feet short of the actual distance.
In discussing this question, the examiner has relied heavily upon the prior patent to Webster and we are fully in accord with 'his views.

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Bluebook (online)
97 F.2d 134, 25 C.C.P.A. 1127, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kauffman-v-etten-ccpa-1938.