Slattery v. Larner

36 F.2d 298, 17 C.C.P.A. 725
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1929
DocketPatent Appeal 2149
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 36 F.2d 298 (Slattery v. Larner) 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
Slattery v. Larner, 36 F.2d 298, 17 C.C.P.A. 725 (ccpa 1929).

Opinion

GARRETT, Associate Judge.

This is an interference ease in which Slattery has appealed from the action of the Board of Patent Appeals on October 8, 1927, affirming a decision of the Examiner of Interferences according priority in favor of Lamer to an invention relating to “valves, particularly hydraulic valves of the' pressure operated plunger type.”

The devices involved in the controversy appear to be contemplated as being for use in water pipes or conduits of large dimensions, some of as much as 14 feet in diameter, installed in filtering plants, irrigation plants, hydro-electric plants, and other hydraulic works.

The pertinent history of the actions out of which the issues grew is that on July 22, 1919, Lamer filed an application, No. 312,-559, making certain claims. On June 1,1929, Slattery filed application which ripened into patent 1,483,991 on February 19, 1924, while the Larner application was still pending. On January 19, 1925, Larner copied as claims the five counts which are in issue; same being taken from the Slattery patent and added to his original application of July 22, 1919. On March Í7, 1925, Lamer filed application containing the claims as a division of the earlier application; it being a duplicate of the specifications and drawings of the parent application, and this divisional application was substituted in the interference.

The counts in issue are five in number, and correspond to Slattery’s claims 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6. 'No. 1 reads as follows:

*299 “In combination with a conduit, a valve comprising a casing, a hollow member within the casing having a plunger, means for shifting said plunger to open and close the valve, and means independent of the means for opening and closing the valve and extending to the exterior of the valve for maintaining within said hollow member substantially the same pressure that exists on the nose of the plunger.”

The other four counts cover the same structure in slightly different language, and it is not deemed necessary to quote them verbatim. Count 4 is apparently broader than the others, in that it does not contain the word “independent,” and No. 5 speaks specifically of an “equalizing pipe.” Otherwise the meaning of all the counts seems to be identical.

The assignments of error, in substance, submit two general questions: Eirst, whether Lamer had the right to make the claims forming the counts of the interference; and, second, whether he was estopped, by any of the facts shown, or by law, from making said claims.

The primary matter within the jurisdiction of this court is, of course, that of priority. The proofs of dates of conception and reduction to practice sustain the statement that the dates of Lamer are prior to those of Slattery. This Slattery concedes, and, did the dates constitute the only element to be considered, the question would be entirely answered and in Lamer’s favor. But there is a second element of the first factor, as we have stated the issues, and that is the insistence that Lamer did not have “a sufficient basis in the specification of his application * * * to support the subject-matter of the claims * * *“ when said claims are made in Lamer’s application.”

The contention upon the latter point revolves about the question of whether the pipe 34, shown in the Slattery drawing, so differs in its functioning or in its application to the functions performed, from pipe 12, shown in the Lamer drawing, as to preclude it being covered by the Lamer specification while being covered in the Slattery specification.

The Board of Appeals in its decision describes the respective structures and their functioning as follows:

“The invention of both parties relates to hydraulic valves of the pressure operated plunger type. Slattery moves his plunger 17 to open or closed position by hydraulic pressure applied to the piston 23 in a cylinder 22 located in the chamber A of the valve. Slattery provides an ‘equalizing pipe 34’ which the specification states is ‘to maintain the same pressure on the inner side of the valve plunger as exists on the nose of the plunger.’
“Lamer’s valve has a similar plunger 5 movable by hydraulic pressure but his means for moving it differs specifically from that of Slattery. The Lamer specification states—
“The main valve 5, is operated by control valves 10 and 11, for example, in either of two ways. Ports or connections 8 and 9, are either connected to a drain or otherwise discharge against atmospheric pressure; or they are connected to an independent pressure system carrying a pressure higher than that in the main valve. In the first case the plunger 5, is moved to open position by exhausting the chamber 6, through port 8, and is closed by exhausting chamber 7, through port 9. In the second case the plunger is moved to open position by admitting higher pressure to chamber 7, through port 9, and is closed by admitting higher pressure to chamber 6, through port 8. The valves 10 and 11, are normally closed, and they are alternately opened to move the plunger, but as soon as the plunger has completed its stroke they are closed.
“Lamer has a pipe 12 similar to Slattery’s pipe 34 connecting the valve chamber with the conduit beyond the closing position of the plunger. The question in controversy involves the structure and function of this by-pass pipe.”

The Board then continues:

“Slattery contends first, that the pipe 12 of Lamer is not independent but a part of his means for opening and dosing the valve. It is true that during the movement of the plunger the size of the chamber in the valve back of the plunger changes and there is flow of water through the pipe 12 into or out of said chamber. The same is likewise true of appellant’s pipe 34. Moreover, Lamer does not describe his pipe 12 as a part of his means for opening and closing his valve. In our opinion the term independent as used in the counts is as applicable to Lamer’s pipe 12 as it is to Slattery’s pipe 34.
“Slattery further contends that Lamer’s pipe 12 does not have the function of ‘maintaining within said hollow member substantially the same pressure that exists on the nose of the plunger,’ as called for in the count. Lamer’s specification states that his pipe 12 is provided to prevent the pressure on the nose of the plunger from becoming lower than in the chamber 6 when the valve is open which would result in closing the valve. The law examiner has carefully analyzed this matter. He finds that in both Lar *300

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 F.2d 298, 17 C.C.P.A. 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slattery-v-larner-ccpa-1929.