Snitzer v. Etzel

465 F.2d 899, 59 C.C.P.A. 1242
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedSeptember 14, 1972
DocketNo. 8668
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 465 F.2d 899 (Snitzer v. Etzel) 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
Snitzer v. Etzel, 465 F.2d 899, 59 C.C.P.A. 1242 (ccpa 1972).

Opinion

LaNE, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of patent interferences awarding priority of invention as to the two counts in issue to the junior party Etzel et al. from whose patent, U.S. Patent No. 3,028,009, issued September 25,1965, on an application filed April 30, 1962, the counts were copied. Appellant is involved on his application1 filed January 16, 1962, as a continuation-in-part of an application 2 filed October 27,1961. Neither party took testimony, and the award of priority rested, therefore, on the sufficiency of senior party appellant’s disclosure to support the counts. The board held that apellant “has. no right to make the counts here involved.” We reverse and remand for the reasons explained below.

The counts are directed to the activation of a glass laser with trivalent ytterbium ions. It appears that lasers operate by exciting the electrons of suitable ions to a higher than normal energy level. Excitation is induced by bombarding the ions with light energy, and the essential characteristic of lasers is that the ions spontaneously fluoresce in their excited state. A laser device depends upon a laser-active ion or atom and a laser-active host medium. Appellant states that the earliest laser-active host was gaseous. The experience of workers in the art with gas lasers suggested the need for a solid laser. A ruby laser was the first reported solid laser, and experience with it demonstrated disadvantages attendant the use of a crystalline solid. What followed was the development of lasers using a noncrystalline host medium — glass. Both of the counts at issue in this case are drawn to a laser wherein the host medium is glass and the laser-active ion is; trivalent ytterbium.

[1244]*1244Count 1 is representative of the counts and reads as follows:

1.In a laser, a solid luminescent sensitive element of optical regenerative •configuration and consisting essentially of a clear glass activated with, trivalent ytterbium ions to absorb optical pumping energy in the near infrared region at wavelengths of from 914 to 974 mu and exhibit stimulated emission of radiation in the near infrared region in a waveband of about 6 mu width which has its optical center at 1.015 microns.

Count 2 differs only to the extent that the host medium is defined as “clear silicate glass.” Count 2 presents no separate issue to the court, and the counts therefore stand or fall with count 1.

We think the issues on appeal can best be introduced by reproducing the board’s findings and conclusions in pertinent part as follows:

1. Etzel et al. (Etzel) assert that Snitzer does not have an adequate disclosure to support the specific limitations of- the two counts.
2. Snitzer * * * sets out various types of glass and transparent plasties which may be used in the laser.
3. * * * [H]e lists fourteen materials which may be used as active laser ingredients among which is listed trivalent ytterbium.
4. On page 28 of his specification Snitzer states — “While various rare earth •and other laser materials have been mentioned, for a more detailed examination ■of the energy levels of such materials reference is made to D. S. McClure, ■“Electronic Spectra of Molecules of Ions in Crystals’, Part II (Spectra of Ions in Crystals) Solid State Physics, No. 9, page399 (1959).”
5. On pages 30 and 31 of his specification Snitzer states that the pumping light source should have its energy concentrated in the absorption bands of the laser .material being used.
6. The Snitzer application is quite specific as to the glass neodymium laser.
7. In his brief Snitzer further refers to prior art publications relative to the absorption characteristics of various rare earth metals including ytterbium.
8. Based primarily upon items (1) to (7) above Snitzer asserts that his disclosure is adequate to teach one skilled in this art to make the subject matter •of the counts.
9. Etzel asserts that the disclosure of Snitzer is indefinite, ambigious and speculative because th,e statement in his specification that the ions may be used •separately or in various combinations gives rise to over 87 billion possible ■variations * * *.
10. Etzel supports the assertion in (9) by referring to an amendment filed April 28, 1966 * * * wherein Snitzer states that trivalent cerium and trivalent terbium (materials listed among the fourteen named in the specification) are not known to lase in a glass host. This amendment refers to an affidavit under Rule 132 by Snitzer filed concurrently.
11. In the abovementioned affidavit Snitzer as an expert in the field cor-xoborates the statement made in the amendment. Snitzer further states * * *—
The terbium and cerium activated calcium-floride host laser material of patent no. 3,079,347 is not pertinent to a laser using a glass-like host material and simply would not teach the suitability of these rare-earth ions for use in a glass-like host material. In this respect, it is known that the effect of the particular host material on the active laser ingredient makes it quite difficult, if not impossible to predict whether any given activating [1245]*1245material or materials suitable for use in a crystalline host material will or will not be suitable in a glass-Uke host material to attain lasering action. (Emphasis ours.)
12. Etzel has filed under Buie 282, three Snitzer publications dated October 1966, September 1967 and September 1966 respectively to show that even as late as 1966 Snitzer was aware that not all of the ions listed in his patent application were operative laser ingredients in a glass. This assertion seems to be based in part upon the first sentence of the October 1966 article which states— “The IONS which have been made to lase in glass are Nd3+, Yb3+, Er 3-|^, and H03+” with the implication that the others named in the Snitzer specification are not.

Appellees insist that a specification as speculative as Snitzer’s fails to provide support for the trivalent ytterbium species. Our principal difficulty with the argument is that we fail to see the relevance of the listing of several inoperative species when the species claimed is operative and performs as “speculated.” Whether it is labeled “discovery” or “speculation,” appellant’s conception of trivalent ytterbium as a laser-active material is no less his own, no less original, no less important technologically, and, on this record, earlier than appellees’. His constructive reduction to practice by filing a patent application disclosing the conception and setting in motion the steps by which the public will be apprised of the discovery is in no way diminished if the conception is characterized as “speculation” or if other related conceptions turn out to be practically or technically unsound.

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Bluebook (online)
465 F.2d 899, 59 C.C.P.A. 1242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snitzer-v-etzel-ccpa-1972.