Samuel S. Kistler v. Neill Weber

412 F.2d 280, 56 C.C.P.A. 1413
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1969
DocketPatent Appeal 8169
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 412 F.2d 280 (Samuel S. Kistler v. Neill Weber) 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
Samuel S. Kistler v. Neill Weber, 412 F.2d 280, 56 C.C.P.A. 1413 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

RICH, Acting Chief Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority to Weber in interference No. 95,538, involving Weber patent No. 3,218,220, for “Strengthened Glass Article And Method Of Producing Same,” issued November 16, 1965, on application serial No. 412,658, filed November 20, 1964, and Kistler application serial No. 435,683, filed February 26, 1965, for “Treatment of Glass.”

The Invention of the Count

The invention is a method of tempering or strengthening soda glass which involves contacting the glass with a molten potassium salt at a temperature below the strain point of the glass to effect replacement of sodium ions present in the surface layer of the glass with potassium ions from the salt. The replacement can be effected by ordinary diffusion or by diffusion biased by an electrical field.

*281 Because potassium ions are much larger than sodium ions, the replacement of the latter with the former causes a compressive stress in the surface layer and a concomitant, over-all strengthening of the glass. The single count in interference, claim 5 of the Weber patent, reads:

1. A method of tempering soda glass comprising replacing sodium ions in a surface layer of the glass by potassium ions by contacting the glass with a molten potassium salt while retaining the glass below the strain temperature thereof to place the surface in compression. [Emphasis ours.]

Proceedings Below

Weber filed his first application, serial No. 13,777, on March 9, 1960, and a continuation-in-part (“c.i.p.”) thereof on November 20, 1964. On November 16, 1965, the c.i.p. issued as the Weber patent involved here.

Kistler filed his first application, serial No. 69,251, on November 15, 1960 (about eight months after the filing of the Weber parent application) and filed the instant c.i.p. on February 26, 1965. Claims copied from the Weber patent were added to the c.i.p. on March 9, 1966 (about four months after the patent issued), for the purpose of provoking this interference. 1 Kistler took the position that Weber was not entitled to the benefit of the filing date of his parent application (for reasons discussed hereinafter), that his (Kistler’s) effective filing date was therefore senior to that of Weber so that no showing under Rule 204(c) 2 was required of him (Kistler). Notwithstanding Kistler’s. *282 position with respect to the necessity of his doing so, he submitted “a showing considered to meet the requirements of Rule 204 * '* * in order to expedite declaration of the interference.”

*281 204. Interference with a patent; affidavit by junior applicant.
S¡! # * * *
(c) When the effective filing date of an applicant is more than three months subsequent to the effective filing date of the patentee, the applicant, before the interference will be declared, shall file two copies of affidavits by himself and by one or more corroborating witnesses, supported by documentary evidence if available, setting out a factual description of acts and circumstances which would prima facie entitle him to an award of priority relative to the effective filing date of the patentee, and accompanied by an explanation of the basis on which he believes that the facts set forth would overcome the effective filing date of the patentee. Upon a showing of sufficient cause, an affidavit on information and belief as to the expected testimony of a witness whose testimony is necessary to overcome the filing date of the patentee may be accepted in Eeu of an affidavit by such witness. If the examiner finds the case to be otherwise in condition for the declaration of an interference he wiU consider this material only to the extent of determining whether a date prior to the effective fiEng date of the patentee is alleged, and if so, the interference wiE be declared. [Emphasis ours.]

*282 Although the examiner initially held that an adequate showing under Rule 204(c) had not been made, 3 the application was eventually forwarded to the board, and this interference was declared.

The declaration of interference accorded each party the benefit of the filing date of his parent application; as a result, Weber was made senior party. Mailed with the declaration of interference was an Order to Show Cause listing deficiencies that the board found in Kistler’s Rule 204(c) showing and indicating that unless Kistler showed cause why such action should not be taken, summary judgment would be entered against him, all in accordance with Rule 228. 4 Kistler filed a response to the show cause order (as permitted by Rule 228) together with an amplified affidavit of Kistler. In the response, Kistler again challenged Weber’s entitlement to the filing date of his parent application and Weber’s senior party status, and maintained that his amplified Rule 204(c) showing was sufficient prima facie to entitle him to an award of priority relative to the filing date of Weber’s parent application. As permitted by Rule 228, Weber presented his views on both of Kistler’s contentions. An oral hearing on the Order to Show Cause was had before the board, and its decision granting summary judgment against Kistler is the subject of this appeal.

Weber’s Right to Rely on His Parent Application

The arguments with respect to Weber’s right to rely on the filing date of his parent application revolve about the following two sentences therein:

The rate of exchange of potassium ions for sodium ions by ordinary diffusion at temperatures below the strain point of the soda glass, such as takes place when a soda glass article is immersed in a molten potassium salt is impracticably slow. On the other hand, it has been found that the rate of migration of potassium ions into the soda glass can be vastly increased if the diffusion is biased by an electric field in the proper direction. [Emphasis ours.]

Kistler argues that this disclosure teaches that the exchange of potassium ions for sodium ions in the absence of an electrical field is “inoperative” and “lacks utility” and from this argues that:

Weber cannot now retreat from his earlier admission against interest and *283 rely on the negative disclosure of his 1960 application as supporting the subject matter of the count or as constituting constructive reduction to practice of the invention of the count.

Weber replies as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
412 F.2d 280, 56 C.C.P.A. 1413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-s-kistler-v-neill-weber-ccpa-1969.