Milton Oscar Schur and James C. Rickards v. Paul Adolf Muller

372 F.2d 546, 54 C.C.P.A. 1095
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7735
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 372 F.2d 546 (Milton Oscar Schur and James C. Rickards v. Paul Adolf Muller) 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
Milton Oscar Schur and James C. Rickards v. Paul Adolf Muller, 372 F.2d 546, 54 C.C.P.A. 1095 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

Schur and Rickards (hereinafter Schur) appeal from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority of invention to Paul Adolf Muller (hereinafter Muller).

The interference involves the application 1 of Schur and the Muller patent 2 granted on an application claiming priority of a Swiss application filed August 4, 1953.

The Schur application was filed as a continuation-in-part of their application serial No. 400,072, filed December 23, 1953, which issued as U. S. Patent No. 2,999,503 on September 12, 1961.

The invention in issue relates to a filtering means, particularly cigarette filters, made of paper which has been mechanically perforated in a particular manner to improve its filtering properties. The invention is defined in nine counts which are claims 1-7, 9 and 10 of the patent to Muller, copied by Schur to establish the basis for the interference.

Counts 1 and 3 are representative and read:

1. Filtering means for tobacco smoke and like gaseous medium; comprising at least two adjacent layers of fibrous material having surfaces provided with a plurality of spaced openings defined by open bases and projections extending from said open bases and beyond said surfaces of the respective layers, said projections of said layers being directed toward each other and spacing the surfaces one from the other, said projections being made of said fibrous material and terminating in irregularly shaped frayed ends, whereby the projections of one layer may interlace with the projections of the other layer, to thereby provide a tortuous path for said medium between said layers and to thereby enhance the filtering action when said medium streams between said layers and along said surfaces of the latter.
3. Filtering means for a gaseous medium; comprising a strip of material consisting of a plurality of adjacent layers made of the same fibrous material, each layer being provided with a plurality of spaced apart openings passing through the surfaces of said layers, and projections made of said material and extending from said openings and spacing opposite surfaces of adjacent ■ layers and terminating in irregularly shaped, frayed and fibrous ends, whereby the projections of one layer may interlace with the projections of the adjacent layer, thereby contributing to the enhancement of the filtering action by thus providing a tortuous path for the medium between said layers and along said surfaces of the latter.

We think it conducive to better understanding of the invention in issue to make reference to the disclosures of both parties.

The Muller patent describes the filtering means as follows:

The * * * invention relates to a filtering material suitable for all kinds of filters, such as air, dust, smoke and liquid filters. The invention is characterized by the employ *548 ment of a basic material formed by at least one perforated fibre pad (basic pad). This * * * pad may be of paper of various kinds, such as crepe paper. * * *
The * * * pad may be readily developed into an efficient filtering material in two fundamentally different ways. The * * * pad itself may be formed in a suitable manner so that the filtering action is particularly high, in that portions of the pad material displaced by perforating the material adhere to the * * * pad, these portions and/or the marginal zones of the perforations being preferably frayed to a greater or lesser degree. [Emphasis supplied.]

Muller’s figures 1, 2 and 3 illustrate the details of the perforated paper:

Muller states:

In Fig. 1-3 g is a fragmentary section of a perforated * * * pad formed of fibrous material, such as crepe paper having the perforations c. In all three embodiments the portions t displaced by and during perforation c adhere to the * * * pad. In * * * Fjg, i the portion t has smooth edges, i. e., they are not frayed. In * * * Figs. 2 and 3 the edges are frayed * * *. If it is desired to fray the fibres at the edges of the perforations and the displaced portions t to a considerable extent, a material should be chosen which frays to a large extent on tearing, e. g., a material similar to blotting paper. * * * [Emphasis supplied.]

It is noted that portions t extend out of the plane of the paper g. Muller perforates by a roller having prongs which perforate the paper with a tearing action.

The Muller filter is made by employing several layers of perforated paper as disclosed in Fig. 6 reproduced below:

The application describes Fig. 6 as follows:

* * pig. 6 shows a section through an embodiment of a filtering material composed of a multi layer filter body with several pads g, e. g., three superposed layer-pads being formed of the basic material according to Fig. 2 which achieve a relatively good filtering action by virtue of the action of the more or less interlaced portions or frayed projections £ * * *

In his brief counsel for Muller stresses the fact that:

* * * the projections t formed by perforating the paper extend out of *549 the planes of their respective layers of paper. Moreover, the projections t are directed toward an adjacent layer, and also space the layers apart to provide passageways or channels therebetween through which a gaseous medium to be filtered may stream.

Turning now to the Schur application, it discloses the perforating of paper, which may be crepe paper, by passing it between a rubber covered roll 20 and a still roll 21 having frusto-conical or pyramidal shaped teeth 22, as shown in figures 3, 5 and 6 reproduced below:

These rolls [20,21] are forced together under sufficient pressure ■ to force the teeth 22 of roll 21 through paper 1 to form a plurality of rents 23 therein of the general type illustrated in Figure 9. * * * [Emphasis supplied.]

Figure 9 is depicted as follows:

The effect which the perforating rolls produce is described by Schur as follows:

* * * the teeth are frusto-conical shaped but teeth of other shapes having a dull point such that the paper is torn and not cut can be utilized. * * * Sharp edges have a tendency to form clean cut paper edges rather than to tear the paper or pull the fibers apart, which is necessary in practicing this invention. [Emphasis supplied.]

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372 F.2d 546, 54 C.C.P.A. 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milton-oscar-schur-and-james-c-rickards-v-paul-adolf-muller-ccpa-1967.