Wilcox v. Danner

53 F.2d 711, 19 C.C.P.A. 802
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
DocketPatent Appeal Nos. 2816, 2817
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 53 F.2d 711 (Wilcox v. Danner) 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
Wilcox v. Danner, 53 F.2d 711, 19 C.C.P.A. 802 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

LENROOT, Associate Judge.'

These are cross-appeals in an interference proceeding, No. 53,854, declared by the United States Patent Office. Eighteen counts are involved, of which counts 6, 9, and 10 are illustrative' and read as follows :

“6. The art of drawing glass which consists in supplying molten glass to an overflow chamber or spillway in the upper portion of a member having downwardly converging side portions, and causing the glass to freely flow from said receptacle down the converging side portions of said member without any contact with any auxiliary means.”

“9. In a glass drawing apparatus, a directing member having downwardly converging side portions, said member having a glass-receiving recess at a point disposed intermediate the side .portions and adjacent the upper edges thereof, the recessed part forming a spillway, means for directing molten glass into the recess whereby the glass is caused to- flow over the wall of the recess and down the outer side portions of said member, the said member being spaced laterally from any means which might contact with any portion of the glass from the time it leaves the receiving recess until it leaves the lower end of said member whereby the uninterrupted and unobstructed flow of the complete mass of glass along the side portions of the member is insured, and means spaced below the directing member for guiding away the glass therefrom.

“10. In a glass drawing apparatus, the combination of a directing member down the outer surface of which molten glass is intended to flow-in film form, the directing member having a glass overflow chamber or spillway at a point spaced upwardly from the lower end thereof, and means for delivering molten glass into the chamber whereby the glass is caused to flow in different directions from the said chamber and thence down over the outer surface of the directing member, which directing member constitutes a spacing medium for inner portions of the film formation.”

The application of the party Wilcox, No. 449,285, was filed on March 3, 1921.

There are two applications of the party Danner involved in this interference: One, No. 563,107, filed on May 23, 1922, and the other, No. 722,899, filed on June 28, 1924.

The examiner of interferences awarded priority of invention upon all of the counts in issue to the party .Danner. Upon appeal *713 to the Board of Appeals, that tribunal reversed the examiner as to counts 6, 7, 10, 11, and 12, and awarded priority as to them to the party Wilcox. Upon all the other counts it affirmed the decision of the examiner.

Both parties have appealed, Wilcox upon the counts awarded to Danner, and Danner upon the counts awarded to Wilcox.

The subject-matter of the interference is described in the decision of the Board of Appeals as follows: “The subject-matter related to a method and apparatus of drawing glass in which the molten glass is caused to pass down converging sides of a member and then be drawn off in the form of a sheet or tube. In the applications involved in interference the molten glass passes into a receptacle from which it overflows in its passage down the converging sides of the member previously referred to. In the applications of Wilcox and Allen the outer surface of the glass in its passage down the converging member is unobstructed while in the application of Danner scraper blades are placed in engagement with the outer surface of the flowing glass. The applications of Danner and Allen disclose the manufacturing of flat glass while that of Allen [Wilcox] discloses the making of a tube.” (Italics ours.)

The reference to Allen in the above quotation is to a third party to the interference in the Patent Office, who is not a party to these appeals.

It appears that, as to counts 6, 7, 8, 9, and 12, each of them includes an element that the glass must flow from the overflow chamber or spillway down the converging side portions of the member specified without interruption, or in an uninterrupted manner. It further appears from a stipulation in the record that in certain proceedings had in the Patent Office the law examiner, and, upon appeal, the .Board of Examiners in Chief, held that the party Danner did not have the right to make the claims corresponding to the said counts because Danner’s application shows an intercepting member consisting of blades for ganging the thickness of the glass, thus preventing the glass from flowing down the converging side portions of the member without interruption.

Upon appeal to the commissioner, it was held by him that Danner did have the right to make said counts.

Tn the decision of the Board of Appeals from which these appeals are taken, the board held that, this question having been decided in favor of Danner by the highest tribunal of the Patent Office, the parties were not entitled to have the matter reopened. The party Wilcox assigns error in the holding that Danner had the right to make said counts.

We are of the opinion that the decision of the commissioner, quoted in said stipulation, was correct. It was there held that the intercepting blades above referred to were adjustable and could be moved out of engagement with the molten glass, that omission of such blades would he obvious to one skilled in the art, and therefore Danner had a right to make the counts in which such intercepting means was omitted.

This conclusion is fortified by the fact that two of Danner’s original claims, viz., 47 and 48, in his May 23, 1922, application, make no reference to the use of such blades, thereby indicating that they might be omitted, and he was entitled to claims that did not include them.

We hold that Danner has the right to make all of tho counts here in issue.

The Patent Office tribunals held that counts 13, 14, 17, and 18 are broad enough to read upon the Danner application, No. 722,899, here in interference, and also upon an application filed by Danner in April, 1919, that there was a continuity of said application No. 722,899, dating back to said 1919 application, and that therefore said last-named application acts as a constructive reduction to practice of the invention embraced in said counts 13, 14, 17, and 18.

The party Wilcox contends that if said counts be given tho broad interpretation that was given them by the Patent Office tribunals, then there is no patentable difference between said counts and the claims of a patent issued to Danner on September 29, 1925, No. 1,555,358, which was offered in evidence 'by Wilcox, and that double patenting would result if tho counts have been properly interpreted by the tribunals of the Patent Office. Wilcox therefore insists that the claims should not be so broadly interpreted as to make the claims obviously invalid upon the ground of double patenting, and, if not so interpreted, resort cannot be had to the 1919 application of Danner for reduction to practice.

We think the Patent Office tribunals have correctly interpreted said counts, and if their allowance to Danner would result in double patenting, thkt is a matter for ex parte consideration by the Patent Office tribunals, as *714 is suggested in the decision of the examiner of interferences.

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Bluebook (online)
53 F.2d 711, 19 C.C.P.A. 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-danner-ccpa-1931.