Rion v. Ault

482 F.2d 948
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedAugust 23, 1973
DocketPatent Appeal No. 8591
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 482 F.2d 948 (Rion v. Ault) 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
Rion v. Ault, 482 F.2d 948 (ccpa 1973).

Opinion

ON REHEARING

RICH, Judge.

Our original opinion of February 24, 1972, was published at 455 F.2d 570. We there reversed the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority to Ault et al. (Ault) and remanded because we found “there is no interference in fact.” Ault petitioned for rehearing and Rion et al. (Rion) opposed. The Patent Office Solicitor called our attention to the fact that under the Patent Office Rules a holding of no interference in fact is not appropriate under the facts of this case and that the case of Brailsford v. Lavet, 50 CCPA 1367, 318 F.2d 942 (1963), which we had cited in support of the contrary proposition, was distinguishable on its facts. We now agree with this Patent Office position. We granted rehearing on November 9, 1972, and the ease was rebriefed at our request and reargued on February 5, 1973.

We have fully reconsidered the case, concluding that the reasoning of and result reached in our prior opinion was erroneous. Our opinion of February 24, 1972, is hereby withdrawn and replaced by the following opinion. The decision announced therein is vacated.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority of invention to Ault, the senior party, on the ground that Rion’s evidence failed to establish either a conception or reduction to practice prior to Ault’s filing date. The board also held, contrary to Rion’s contentions, that Ault had the right to make the counts and, in connection with this holding, ruled that the definition placed on the counts by the Primary Examiner, who drafted them and suggested them to both parties, is controlling.

This appeal by Rion does not question the board’s holding that Rion did not overcome Ault’s record date and, therefore, so far as priority in time is concerned, Ault must be accepted as the first inventor of whatever he invented. This appeal, as briefed and argued by Rion, essentially raises only the question of Ault’s right to make the counts. Ault, on the other hand, has raised a question as to whether the issue raised by Rion is ancillary to priority and whether we have jurisdiction to consider it. Ault does not see the issue as one of Ault’s right to make the counts but rather as a question of the definiteness of the counts which, he argues, is a question not ancillary to priority. Neither question can be intelligibly discussed without knowledge of the inventions of the parties and the counts on the basis of which the interference has proceeded.

Background of the Inventions

In the making of enameled sanitary ware such as bathtubs, basins, sinks, and the like, a coating of porcelain enamel is formed on a cast iron base. The enamel is formed by melting on the surface of the article a particulate material called “frit,” which is a special kind of glass composition. The white color in the enamel has long been produced by the use of antimony in one form or another as a frit ingredient. Rion calls this kind of opacification the “insoluble particle” method. It was appreciated that titania (titanium dioxide) would be a better and cheaper opacifier if it could be made to produce a uniform enamel but attempts to use it in the dry enameling process resulted in a mottled appearance. Rion and Ault both discovered that mottling could be eliminated by subjecting the titania-containing frit, before use, to a heat treatment to produce nucleation of the dissolved titania in the frit, the result being a more uniform crystallization of the titania in the enamel coating when it was formed on a hot iron surface.

Frit is produced by mixing the ingredients and melting them at a temperature of the order of 2000° F. or more to form a glass. The molten glass is con[950]*950verted to frit by, for example, pouring it between cooling rolls which form it into a ribbon which is quenched and broken up into particles which may be ground to the desired size. The nucleation heat treatment may take place while the frit is in its initial particulate form.

Rion’s Disclosure

Rion’s application, serial No. 252,622, filed January 21, 1963, contains a “flow diagram,” the steps of which are, in order, as follows, quoting Rion’s words:

Admixture of materials capable of fusing to a vitrified composition, said materials containing a soluble particle opacifier
Fuse materials to a fused mass
Quench said fused mass to the fritted state
Adjust temperature of frit to between 600° F. and 1300° F., below fusion point of said frit
Cool said frit below 600° F.
Apply frit to workpiece and fuse thereon.

With respect to the last step, the practice is to heat the workpiece, such as an iron bathtub or basin, to 1400°-1800° F. in a furnace from which it is withdrawn and coated with frit which is sprinkied onto the hot surface and fuses thereon to form a film. The workpiece is then returned to the furnace to complete the fusion process. This coating process may be repeated until the desired thickness of enamel is produced, after which the workpiece is cooled.

Rion’s application sums up his invention in a single paragraph as follows:

Briefly stated, our invention consists essentially of a method of producing a vitreous composition containing a soluble particle opacifier and adaptable to be used as a protective coating, comprising the steps of melting intimately mixed raw batch materials into a fused mass, quenching said fused mass to the fritted state, adjusting the temperature of said fritted vitreous composition to between about 600° F. and 1300° F., but below the fusion point of said frit, for a time sufficient to precipitate a quantity of the contained soluble particle opacifier, and cooling said fritted vitreous composition to a temperature below said previously adjusted temperature. Applying said fritted composition to a workpiece and fusing said fritted composition thereon provides a vitreous coating therefor of superior appearance and durability. Our invention further consists in the novel fritted composition obtained by said method.

Rion’s specification contains a number of definitions of the terms employed, among which are the following:

3. NUCLEATION TEMPERATURE : * * * shall mean the critical temperature, below the fusion point[,] to which a vitreous composition is adjusted following quenching, at which substantial incipient precipitation of soluble particles from solution in the glass matrix, occurs * * *
* * * * * *
6. FUSED MASS: Throughout the specification and claims, the term “fused mass” shall refer to a vitreous composition in its melted state.
* # * * ■>:■ *-
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
482 F.2d 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rion-v-ault-ccpa-1973.