Application of Carl Arnold and Heinrich Brandt

315 F.2d 951, 50 C.C.P.A. 1166
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6843
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 315 F.2d 951 (Application of Carl Arnold and Heinrich Brandt) 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 Carl Arnold and Heinrich Brandt, 315 F.2d 951, 50 C.C.P.A. 1166 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office affirming the Primary Examiner’s *952 rejection of claims 18 through 28, the only remaining claims, of appellants’ application for a patent on a process for producing a welding flux product. Some question has arisen as to the sufficiency of the reasons of appeal in this case.

We shall dispose of this matter before discussing the merits of the appeal. The reasons of appeal are as follows:

1. It was error to affirm the decision of the Examiner in his rejection of claims 18 to 28.

2. It was error to refuse to allow the rejected claims.

The question of whether the reasons of appeal are sufficient under 35 U.S.C. §§ 142, 143, 144, has caused much controversy in this court. There really is no hard and fast rule upon which we can rely. However, the case of In re Kopplin, 146 F.2d 1014, 32 CCPA 848, seems pertinent to the discussion here. There this court held that the following reason of appeal was sufficient to comply with the statutes: 1

The Board of Appeals erred in rejecting said claims and each of them for the reasons and on the references cited against them, respectively.

This decision was approved in In re Howell, 298 F.2d 949, 49 CCPA 922.

This court stated in the Kopplin opinion :

“While it is quite true that there is no specific mention of the Dodge, Fowler and Novotny patents in the reasons of appeal, appellant assigned as his first reason of appeal that ‘The Board of Appeals erred in rejecting said claims and each of them for the reasons and on the references cited against them, respectively.’ (Italics ours.) That reason is the equivalent of setting out in separate reasons of appeal the Dodge, Fowler and Novotny patents. The only reason for rejecting the claims was that they were unpatentable over the prior • art. Therefore we are of opinion that that reason of appeal is sufficient.”

We see no significant difference in the language of the reasons of appeal in the Kopplin case and the language used in the case before us. This is especially true because the examiner and the board relied on only one reference as, the basis for rejection of the claims in this case. Consequently we consider the reasons here to adequately disclose the basis of the appeal. We therefore will not dismiss this appeal for insufficiency of the reasons of appeal and we will now discuss the merits involved herein.

Claims 18 and 22 are representative and read:

“18. A method of producing a particulate welding flux product, comprising the steps of forming granules having a size greater than a predetermined size of substantially uniform composition of a liquid and a mixture of solid particles; adapted to serve as a welding flux,, said granules containing components, which give-off gas when heated above a first predetermined temperature and said granules melting only above a second predetermined temperature which is above said first predetermined temperature, and heating said granules at a temperature between said first and said second predetermined temperatures so as to degassify [sic] said granules while preventing substantial fusing of the same, thereby forming a degassified [sic] welding flux consisting substantially of individual granules of uniform composition and being free of small dust-like particles.
“22. A method of producing a particulate welding flux product, comprising the steps of mixing a mixture of solid particles adapted to serve as a welding flux with a liquid so as to form a wet mixture; forming granules of substantially uni *953 form composition from said wet mixture of solid particles adapted to serve as a welding flux, said granules containing components which give-off gas when heated above a first predetermined temperature and said granules melting only above a second predetermined temperature which is above said first predetermined temperature ; and heating said granules at a temperature between said first and said second predetermined temperatures so as to degassify [sic] said granules while preventing substantial fusing of the same, thereby forming a degassified [sic] welding flux consisting substantially of individual granules of uniform composition.”

The single reference relied on is

Landis et al. 2,474,787 June 28, 1949

Appellants’ application relates to •the producing of welding flux granules of •substantially uniform composition by a process which includes granulation of a mixture of basic fluxing materials such .as mullite, alumina, silica, etc. with ad-ditives such as “for example sodium .silicate glass, iron oxide, borax, * * * fluorides of calcium, lithium, sodium, potassium, cryolite, etc.” The basic flux ingredients, which are conventional, generally vary between 20-80 parts by weight with the additives making up the balance of the mix. The formed granules are said to be degasified by heating without melting the mass of the ingredients substantially. Appellants disclose •that “Generally during heating of the .granules so as to degassify [sic] the same, at least a portion of the granules adhere to each other and these adhering masses must be broken up before utilization of the welding flux.” The method is ■described as effective in preventing substantial fusing together of the granules and in holding the formation of fines to a value below 5%.

The Landis et al. patent also relates to granular free-flowing particles of a weld-flux composition wherein the component materials are uniformly distributed in said particles. The patentees state that prefused granular fluxes which had been ground to a particle size, which imparted to them a free-flowing property, had provided the most satisfactory performance in arc welding. They found, however, that a satisfactory flux composition could be produced without subjecting the ingredients to prefusion and subsequent grinding. The desired flux ingredients are mixed in finely powdered form with a liquid solution of water glass, using the minimum amount required to bind together or agglomerate the flux ingredients. The resulting mass is thereupon dried at a temperature below the fusion point of the ingredients. The water is driven off thereby, and the product is then reduced to the desired particle size as by passing it through sizing rolls.

In affirming the examiner’s rejection of the claims as unpatentable over the Landis et al. patent, the board found that the patentees disclosed forming granules from their starting materials, that the heating step of the reference satisfies the degasifying step of the claims, and stated that it was not convinced that the method of forming granules recited in appellants’ claims is patentably distinct from the granule-forming method of the reference.

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315 F.2d 951, 50 C.C.P.A. 1166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-carl-arnold-and-heinrich-brandt-ccpa-1963.