Application of Edgar G. Heyl

379 F.2d 1018, 54 C.C.P.A. 1608
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7881
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 379 F.2d 1018 (Application of Edgar G. Heyl) 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 Edgar G. Heyl, 379 F.2d 1018, 54 C.C.P.A. 1608 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals, adhered to on reconsideration, affirming the rejection of claims 30-35 and 40-46 in application serial No. 505,415, filed May 2, 1955, entitled “Closure for Bottles and Other Containers.” A rejection of claims 36-39 was also affirmed but appeal from that decision has been withdrawn. No claim has been allowed.

The Claimed Invention

The invention is a method for the formation of a closure at the opening in a container (e. g., at the top of a bottle) in which a sheet of polymer is placed over and around the opening and then heat shrunk to form the closure. Claims are *1019 directed to the closure itself, the method, and apparatus. The following are illustrative :

30. A method of forming a closure having a central portion and a skirt for containers from a heat shrinkable polymer and applying the same to said containers comprising placing a sheet of said polymer over the top of a container, forming from said sheet a cover portion thereof of an area to overlie the open end of the container and to have an edge portion extending downwardly over the lip of the container to form a skirt therearound, and applying heat to the skirt portion of said sheet whereby the heated area of the skirt portion will shrink and snugly fit the coextensive external area of the container.
34. A closure having a central portion and a skirt for containers made of a heat shrinkable plastic material, said closure being relatively thin and in substantially unshrunk condition over the major area of the central portion thereof, said closure terminating in a substantially shrunk skirt which, when in closing relation with a container, snugly fits the coextensive area of the container.
40. An apparatus for shaping and shrinking shrinkable film comprising means for simultaneously holding said film in place on an object, and for folding the edges of the film down and means for heating said folded edges to shrink the same while the balance of the film is held in place.

Claims 31 and 32 are dependent on claim 30 and are limited to closures which include biaxially oriented polyethylene and a laminate of that polyethylene and shrinkable polyethylene terephthalate, respectively. Claims 33 and 46 are similar to claim 30.

Claim 42 is dependent on claim 30 and and specifies a shrinkable polymer of an ester of terephthalic acid and a glycol having 2 to 10 carbon atoms. Claim 43 is dependent on claim 42 and specifies an ester of polyethylene terephthalate. Claim 44 is' also dependent on claim 42 and requires that the container be filled before sealing and that the contents be subsequently heat treated.

Claim 35 is directed to the combination of container and closure, the latter being described in language similar to that of claim 34. Claim 41 is dependent on claim 35 and is limited to closures of heat shrinkable polyethylene terephtha-late and containers of pressure beverages.

The Rejections

The following references were relied on:

Engels 825,116 July 3, 1906

Dreyfus et al. 2,976,655 Mar. 28, 1961

Engels discloses a plastic, heat shrinkable closure which, like appellant’s, is made up of a central part and a skirt. The skirt is shown in several of the drawings as heat shrunk about the part of a container adjacent the covered opening. Engels’ examples disclose celluloid as the plastic.

Dreyfus et al. is assigned to W. R. Grace and Co., owners of appellant’s application. It contains, inter alia, the following claims:

1. A method of forming a cover having an elastic edge comprising positioning a film of a high shrink energy polymer over and beyond the lip of a container, maintaining pressure on the film over the container, forcing the excess film downwardly around the container to form a gathered skirt and heating a band of said skirt briefly to shrink the skirt and provide a gathered but relatively elastic edge.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the polymer is irradiated, biaxially oriented polyethylene.
3. A machine for forming covers made of a heat shrinkable material on a dish shaped container comprising a container support, means for maintaining a film cover on a container positioned on said support and for gathering the edge of the film extended beyond the edge of the dish into a downwardly depending skirt and impulse *1020 heat sealing [means] positioned adjacent said support so as to heat shrink the gathered edge of said film.

The examiner rejected closure claims 34, 35, and 41 as obvious in view of Engels under 35 U.S.C. § 103. The specification of heat shrinkable polyethylene terephthalate in claim 41 did not, in the examiner’s opinion, impart patentability since “such a film is admittedly old as noted from * * * the specification. Accordingly, to substitute heat shrinkable polyethylene terephthalate for the heat shrinkable celluloid employed by Engels would be obvious.” The limitation to use with a pressure beverage he deemed an obvious expedient.

The examiner rejected method claims 30-33 and 42-46 for double patenting in view of claims 1 and 2 of Dreyfus et al. He seemed to think that appellant’s claims were drawn to the same invention as those of the patent. He also argued that the same “inventive concept” was involved in each set of claims. He also thought obvious the additional limitations of claims 44 and 45.

He rejected claim 40, the apparatus claim, for double patenting in view of claim 3 of Dreyfus et al. The recitation of impulse heat sealing means in the patent claim did not, in the examiner’s opinion “render the rejection improper" since claim 40 “is clearly readable on claim 3 of Dreyfus et al. and would extend the monopoly.” He also cited In re Christensen, 330 F.2d 652, 51 CCPA 1236 (1964).

The board, in a concise opinion, affirmed the examiner’s rejections. Claims 34, 35, 40 and 41 were treated in an especially pithy fashion:

With regard to the rejection '~of claims 34, 35, 40 and 41 supra, in our opinion the reasons for the rejection as set forth in the Examiner’s Answer are considered sound. We perceive no compelling reasons in appellant’s arguments for holding otherwise.

The other rejections were approved since “the gist of the invention is the same in both cases.”

Appellant then filed a terminal disclaimer and requested reconsideration by the board. In an opinion refusing to make any change, the board commented thus on the disclaimer:

It is not the practice of the Board to consider a terminal disclaimer filed after the Board’s decision since to do so would amount to a reopening of the prosecution which is contrary to Rule 198. However, in passing, we note the terminal disclaimer does not appear to be appropriate in this application in view of the overlapping

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Bluebook (online)
379 F.2d 1018, 54 C.C.P.A. 1608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-edgar-g-heyl-ccpa-1967.