Kirschbraun v. Doherty

90 F.2d 251, 24 C.C.P.A. 1183, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1937
DocketNo. 3798
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 F.2d 251 (Kirschbraun v. Doherty) 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
Kirschbraun v. Doherty, 90 F.2d 251, 24 C.C.P.A. 1183, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 113 (ccpa 1937).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

An interference proceeding was instituted in the United States Patent Office between the application of Lester Kirschbraun, for certain improvements in apparatus and process for treating hydrocarbon oils, filed April 1, 1920, and a pending application of one Henry L. Doherty, filed February 21, 1920, for a similar invention. There were originally five counts in the interference. Count 1 of the interference, as now before us, is the only remaining count which was in the original interference as count 3 thereof. Counts 2 and 3 of the present interference were added on the suggestion of the party Doherty. All three of the present counts originated in the Doherty application.

The three counts of the interference are as follows:

1. A process of distilling oil comprising heating a heavy hydrocarbon oil under pressure to a cracking temperature while it is being circulated in a stream, discharging the heated oil into an enlarged chamber while maintaining the xiressure therein to separate vapors from the oil, continuously leading the vapors and the oil in separate streams from the chamber into a body of oil maintained at a cracking temperature and pressure, bringing the vapors into direct contact with the oil of the body and leading off vapors from the body and condensing them.
2. A continuous process for cracking hydrocarbon oils, which comprises heating the oil in a confined stream of restricted cross section in a cracking zone, passing cracked oil from said zone through successive vapor releasing chambers of decreasing temperature and pressure, passing vapors released in a chamber of higher temperature through and in intimate contact with liquid oil in the next succeeding chamber of lower temperature, and withdrawing and condensing vapors from the chamber of lowest temperature.
3. The process of cracking hydrocarbon oils which comprises, heating the oil to be cracked to a cracking temperature in a confined stream of restricted cross section in a heating zone, passing heated oil from said zone through successive vapor releasing zoues of decreasing temperature and pressure, pass[1185]*1185ing vapors released in each vapor releasing zone except the last, into the next succeeding zone of lower temperature in contact with liquid oil constituents therein, subjecting vapors remaining uncondensed in said zones to dephlegmat-ing conditions to produce reflux condensate, passing reflux condensate produced by said dephlegmatic conditions to said heating zone for retreatment, and producing a final condensate from the vapors removed from the last vapor releasing zone.

The junior party Kirschbraun filed a motion to dissolve the interference on the ground that the Doherty application fails to disclose or teach the invention defined by the counts and will not support said counts.

The senior party Doherty moved to dissolve the interference on the grounds; first, on account of irregularity in its declaration; second, that the Universal Oil Products Company, the assignee of the junior party Kirschbraun, had waived its rights by failure to move to amend in interference No. 55,846 (Doherty v. Dubbs) and insert the counts of this interference in said interference; third, that the junior party’s aforesaid assignee is estopped by its failure for more than two years after knowledge thereof to copy the then allowed claims 3, 4, and 5 from the senior party’s application; fourth, that the junior party has no right to make counts 1 and 2 because of failure to disclose the subject matter defined by these counts, namely, and particularly, that it does not disclose the passage of “all of the cracked oil” and “dll vapors.” [Italics ours.]

The Examiner of Interferences sustained the Kirschbraun motion to dissolve as to counts 1 and 2 of the interference, and overruled it as to count 3, which was made, thereafter, count 1. The Doherty motion to dissolve was overruled in toto. Doherty’s motion to add proposed counts 6 and 7 was allowed and these were added as new. counts 2 and 3. The interference was dissolved as to counts 4 and 5 on the motions of both parties. The interference was then reformed with three counts as they are now before us.

On final hearing, the Examiner of Interferences awarded priority as to all counts to the senior party Doherty. On appeal, the Board of Appeals affirmed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences.

The matter comes to us on the appeal of the junior party Kirsch-braun, and a number of questions are raised which will require a rather extended survey of the record. Both parties took evidence as to priority of conception and reduction to practice.

The counts now in the interference are each for a process.

The application of the senior party discloses a process for distilling heavy hydrocarbon oils. The product desired to be obtained is lighter hydrocarbon oils, particularly gasoline, and other fractional distillates. The invention contemplates rapidly circulating-heavy oil through a heater in a comparatively small stream and [1186]*1186carrying a stream of vaporizing and agitating inert gas in contact and parallel witli the oil while it is being heated. The system inherently embraces the circulation of vapors and oil through a cracking chamber in countercurrent paths, thus bringing the vapors and oil in constant contact with each other. In order to effectively promote this process, the inventor passes the raw oil through a series of surface condensers where it receives heat from oil vapors which flow through the condensers countercurrent to the flow of oil. The oil is thus preheated by the vapors to from 300° to 450° F. and from the last of the condensers flows into the upper portion of a cracking chamber. This cracking chamber is 'an elongated tower with a conical base for the reception and collection of liquids, and the incoming oil flows downward through this cracking tower over a series of shallow pans or baffles from top to bottom of the chamber. The specification‘states, in part: “In the cracking chamber, the oil is formed into a series of bodies which are separated by trays or horizontal partitions.” As this oil passes downward, it meets a body of heated oil about one-third of the way downward through the cracking chamber. This heated oil enters through; a pipe by means of a pump from a chamber or a separator, in which oil from the still is separated into oil and vapors. As the down-flowing liquid proceeds in its course, near the bottom of the cracking chamber it meets an inflowing current of heated gases which comes from the same separator. These gases are at a cracking temperature and move upward through the cracking chamber, meeting the downflowing oil. The trays are so arranged with small openings that the gases, in ascending, will bubble through the oil passing thereover. The downflowing liquids are therefore commingled with gases and after this intermixture the liquids are drawn, off at the bottom and again sent back through the still for reheating. The gases which escape in the cracking chamber ascend, pass) through the surface condensers, and the condensate is removed from the system by proper apparatus. As to the rising gases in the cracking chamber, the specification states, in part: “In this way, the gas and vapors entering through the pipe 48 pass upwardly through the bodies of oil on the trays to actively agitate the oils and to transfer to the oil any superheat which they may possess.”

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90 F.2d 251, 24 C.C.P.A. 1183, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirschbraun-v-doherty-ccpa-1937.