Application of Armand Jean Marie Bonjiovanie

314 F.2d 584, 50 C.C.P.A. 1147
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6953
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 314 F.2d 584 (Application of Armand Jean Marie Bonjiovanie) 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
Application of Armand Jean Marie Bonjiovanie, 314 F.2d 584, 50 C.C.P.A. 1147 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 5 through 9, all of the remaining claims of appellant’s application Serial No. 413,416, filed March 1, 1954, alleging certain new and useful improvements in “Epiderm Treating Product.” The claims were rejected on the grounds of unpatentability over the prior art and for lack of utility.

The invention relates to a beauty cream composition and to a method for preparing same. Appellant states that an object of the invention is “an improved product for the treatment of the epiderm and which actually does exert on the skin tissues a rejuvenating action, even when used in very small quantities.” Another stated object is a cosmetic “of any kind containing any proportion of royal jelly.” It is stated that the “product may be incorporated to any type of composition used externally, such as an emulsion or a solution forming a dry or fat cream, a lotion, a jelly, a powder, a lipstick or the like”; that the desired effects “are to make the wrinkles disappear, the skin become firmer”; that royal bees jelly “shows extraordinary rejuvenating properties;” that “the proportion of royal jelly with reference to the sum of the other components may range advantageously between 1:10 and 1:10,000”; and that “Generally speaking, excellent results are obtained with a proportion of about 0.05%.”

Claims 8 and 9 are representative and read as follows:

“8. A method for preparing a composition for rejuvenating skin and removing wrinkles therefrom consisting in preparing a cosmetic carrier base and incorporating in said base, at a maximum temperature of 40° C. a small amount of whole royal bees jelly.
“9. A composition for rejuvenating the epidermis and making the same firmer comprising a cosmetic carrier base and between about 0.1 and 0.001% by weight of whole royal bees jelly intermixed in said base.”

The references of record relied on by the examiner and the board are:

Berndt (France) 906,701 May 28, 1945
Krumml, German application 30th 2/04K 11714, published October 2, 1952
Rubinstein (France) 1,054,555 October 7, 1953
DeNavarre, “The Chemistry of Manufacture of Cosmetics,” 1941, pp. 655-659.
Technique of Beauty Products, 1949, pp. 163-167.
Modern Drug Ency. & Therapeutic Index, 1949, 4th Ed., p. 932.
Root, “ABC and XYZ of Bee Culture,” 1947, pp. 567, 569.

In addition, the examiner and the board cited as “References added for their teaching”:

Statement of Arthur S. Flemming, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, at News Conference on Tuesday, November 18, 1958, pp. 1-5.
Recent Enforcement Actions in Federal Courts Involving Food Supplements, HEW, Food and Drug Administration, November 18, 1959, pp. 1-5.

*586 An analysis of the prior art references, insofar as material to the issues, shows:

Berndt teaches a process in which “the nutritive juice or alimentary paste of bees is added to the cream base products.” The paste or juice is fed to the larvae so that they need not provide food for themselves. This juice “has a particularly high hormone and vitamin content.” By adding “up to 10% hormone-containing nutritive juice” to a cosmetic, it is asserted that the invention “makes it possible to utilize in another manner the bee products that have hitherto served exclusively for the propagation of bees.”

Krumml discloses an ointment for external application for the cure of suppurative wounds which contains a “cephalic gland secretion” produced by worker bees for feeding to “young bees, and which particularly promotes the development of the queen bee from egg to puberty.” The “hormone-containing nutritive juice” may be processed and used in ointments, emulsions and tonics.

Rubinstein relates to utilization of flower pollen, gathered by bees in the preparation of cosmetic products. It is disclosed that “royal jelly” can be utilized as one of the components of cosmetic cream.

DeNavarre, in discussing “Facial Creams” and the claims made as to their effect on “wrinkles and lines of the face and neck,” teaches that to claim that “a cream, or other preparation, will eliminate or remove wrinkles * * * is misleading,” and that they “may impart a transitory feeling of smoothness” as a result of the massaging action but not from the cream per se. The author notes that no value should be attributed to a cosmetic product because of its vitamin content and that reference to glandular extracts or hormones makes no valuable contribution to the product as a cosmetic.

Technique of Beauty Products discloses the use of vitamins and hormones in cosmetics.

Root, in his discussion of “Royal Jelly and Development of the Worker and the Queen Honeybee,” states that during their early stages of development all larvae of honeybees receive a special food described as royal jelly, which is “elaborated in the pharyngeal glands located in the heads of the bees” and that royal jelly contains vitamins and hormones. It is also stated that, “Latest investigations indicate that the production of either a worker or a queen is due not to the change of food but to the amount of nutrients consumed by the queen and worker, larvae.”

Modern Drug Encyclopedia and Therapeutic Index describes a vitamin A and D ointment topically applied for its emollient and tissue stimulating action.

The relevant portion of the Flemming statement is as follows:

“For bees, royal jelly is indeed a miracle food, but it has no practical value for humans as a food, drug, or cosmetic. The claims made for it are groundless.”

“Recent Enfoi'cement Actions in Federal Courts Involving Food Supplements,” November 18, 1958, catalogs a number of products containing royal jelly which have been condemned for misrepresentation.

In support of his application for a patent on the claimed composition, the appellant introduced the affidavit of Dr. Philippe Decourt, formerly interne in Paris hospitals and former chief of the clinic at the Faculty of Medicine of Paris, and the affidavit of Dr. Santiago Nogues More, a Spanish physician and specialist in Dermatology and Cutaneous Aesthetics. These affidavits will hereinafter be referred to as Decourt and More and considered in the light of their relevancy to the issues involved.

The board sustained the examiner’s rejection of all claims as lacking invention over Berndt or Krumml either alone or in view of Rubinstein, DeNavarre, Technique of Beauty Products, Modern Drug and Root.

*587 The board also sustained the examiner’s rejection of the claims for lack of utility “in absence of convincing evidence that the composition is effective and reliable for the intended use and will accomplish the rejuvenation alleged.”

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314 F.2d 584, 50 C.C.P.A. 1147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-armand-jean-marie-bonjiovanie-ccpa-1963.