Thomas A. Kirkham and Norman W. Rosenberg v. Thomas Victor Arden and Gilbert William Merriman

316 F.2d 242, 50 C.C.P.A. 1205
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6974
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 316 F.2d 242 (Thomas A. Kirkham and Norman W. Rosenberg v. Thomas Victor Arden and Gilbert William Merriman) 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
Thomas A. Kirkham and Norman W. Rosenberg v. Thomas Victor Arden and Gilbert William Merriman, 316 F.2d 242, 50 C.C.P.A. 1205 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

Kirkham et al., appellants, whose application, Serial No. 642,225, filed February 25, 1957, for alleged new improvements in Eleetrodialysis Process and Equipment, seek reversal of the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority of invention to Arden et ah, appellees, whose application, Serial No. 572,959, was filed March 21, 1956, for Eleetrodialysis Processes and Electrodialysis Cells.

The single count involved in this interference reads as follows:

“1. An eleetrodialysis apparatus comprising a plurality of juxtaposed multi-membraned units comprised of a plurality of parallel alternating anion-selective and cation-selective membranes forming alternate diluting and concentrating compartments having inlets and outlets, all the membranes of the apparatus *243 being parallel to each other, manifold conduit means interconnecting the outlets of all the diluting compartments of each unit to the inlets of the diluting compartments of another unit, thereby combining the effluents of the diluting compartments of a unit for passage as in-fluent for the diluting compartments of said other unit, and electric current supplying means consisting of an anode at one end of the apparatus and a cathode at the other end of the apparatus for passing a direct current transversely through all the membranes and compartments.”

The material aspects of the invention in issue are described by the board as follows:

“The invention in issue relates to the demineralization of water, that is to say the removal of dissolved salts from water, by electrodialysis. The basic cell, which is prior art to the present proceeding, is clearly shown in the figures of patent No. 2,708,658 granted to Rosenberg. A cation permeable membrane and an anion permeable membrane form a central chamber in a saline solution container. A cathode in one end chamber and an anode in the other end chamber induce ion migration and because of the selective permeability of the membranes deconcentration of the saline in the central chamber may be made to occur with attendant increase in concentration in the end chambers. By reduplicating membrane pairs a plurality [of] ‘central’ chambers may be formed such that in alternate ones of which deconcentration takes place (the witnesses mostly refer to this as dilution) and in the others, concentration. Mechanical details of one such arrangement is shown pictorially in patent No. 2,826,544 to D. R. Dewey II. The construction might be referred to as a stack of cells. It is our understanding that the individual deconcentration cells of stacks had been arranged with inlets and outlets connected either so that the solution flowed through them in seriatim or else in parallel to a receiver system.
“The invention in issue as set forth in the count is the organization of a plurality of cells energized by a single anode and a single cathode into groups, the flow through the deconcentration (dilution) cells of each group being parallel and the flow through the groups being in series, from group to group.” (Emphasis added.)

The decisive issue is whether appellants (junior party) have carried the burden incumbent upon them of showing by a preponderance of the evidence actual reduction to practice prior to the date (March 22, 1955) accorded to appellees (senior party).

The board held that the evidence submitted did not prove reduction to practice of the invention defined by the count and, accordingly, awarded priority of invention to appellees.

In support of their contentions, appellants took testimony. Appellees relied upon the filing of an application in Great Britain on March 22, 1955.

Appellants state that they rely primarily upon the testimony of witnesses Mintz and Lindstrom, “since they did the experimental work and are not applicants.”

The experimental work on appellants’ apparatus was done at two places, namely, Ionics, Incorporated, Cambridge, Massachusetts (hereinafter referred to as Ionics) and at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Massachusetts (hereinafter referred to as Woods Hole). Ionics is the assignee of appellants’ application.

Mintz testified that he was assigned to Ionics in December 1952 to construct an electrodialysis unit for the demineralization of sea water in compliance with a contract then in force with the Navy Bureau of Ships and that he received all of the necessary design and technical information, available at that time, from the witness Lindstrom, an employee of *244 Ionics assigned to pilot plant work relating to multiple electrodialysis. Mintz •did not recall ever seeing the contract ■with the Bureau of Ships but did see ■“some of the technical specifications for it.” The contract itself, though in the possession of the assignee, was never introduced in evidence. The witness testified in detail explanatory of various •drawings relating to the construction and testing of a 15-gallon per hour sea water demineralization unit according to the terms of the contract with the Bureau of Ships. He defined the term •“stage” as a group of cells operated hydraulically in parallel and described a “cell” as a fluid chamber defined by a pair of permselective membranes. The •objective sought was to produce drinking water, “approximately 200 parts per million water and also, initially, 5 ppm water from sea water.” (Emphasis ours.) He testified that the fluid flow in two ■streams through stages was through .alternate membranes in each stage; that the stream which is desalted is referred -to as a diluting stream and the other .a concentrating stream, each stream going through the stages in series and the •current which produces electrodialysis flows in series through stages 1 to 4. He stated that this group of stages, referred to as a subcombination, is a part of the entire apparatus and of itself meets the count.

A careful analysis of the testimony of Mintz is productive of the conclusion that the series of tests run at Ionics -were not of the complete apparatus but were units of it consisting of several stages between a single pair of electrodes. An engineering report was introduced stating in part that “BuShipsTrouble-shooting continues, latest data indicates 6-series stages reduced salts from 37,000 to 2,000 ppm.” Mintz’s explanation of this report was that “This would probably reflect the fact that we b#d tested only a portion of the entire •system labeled ‘S-l’ or any of the subsequent designs and the water had been .demineralized to the extent shown.” After the series of tests were run at Ionics using mostly sodium chloride solution, the apparatus was shipped to Woods Hole where tests were resumed with the use of sea water, applying the same staging procedure followed at Ionics. Various changes were made for various purposes in the arrangement of the apparatus. That which was described as the “rough demineralizer” succeeded in reducing sea water at 32,000 ppm to 8,000 ppm. Testing with further stages in the stack with separate electrodes salinity was reduced at different times to around 100-250 ppm. The period of time consumed by the testing at Woods Hole ran from June 1953 to around the middle of August 1953.

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316 F.2d 242, 50 C.C.P.A. 1205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-a-kirkham-and-norman-w-rosenberg-v-thomas-victor-arden-and-ccpa-1963.