Application of Hudson

205 F.2d 174, 40 C.C.P.A. 1036
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1953
DocketPatent Appeal 5950
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 205 F.2d 174 (Application of Hudson) 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 Hudson, 205 F.2d 174, 40 C.C.P.A. 1036 (ccpa 1953).

Opinion

COLE, Judge.

The issue presented in this appeal relates to the patentability of a method of removing excess impregnant from impregnated wood.

Concededly, the appellant’s application discloses novel subject matter, the tribunals of the Patent Office having allowed accompanying claims. Claim 8, however, was somewhat controversial and was finally rejected on the ground that it was too broad, indefinite, and unpatentable over the prior art of record. The sole question for determination here concerns the correctness of that decision.

Wood is preserved by impregnation with chemicals such as creosote. In the course of subsequent commercial usage of such treated wood, the impregnant therein has a tendency to “bleed” onto the surface of the wood, thereby presenting a wet or sticky exterior which is objectionable in many ways, particularly in interfering with the successful utilization of the wood product.

The applicant asserts that the “bleeding” characteristic of the impregnated wood, commonly demonstrated in the case of creosoted telephone poles and railroad cross-ties, has never, until his inventive process was discovered, satisfactorily been overcome. Applicant’s method of removing the excess impregnant, as set forth in rejected claim 8, reads as follows:

“8. The method of removing excess impregnant from impregnated wood and thereby minimizing subsequent bleeding of the impregnant onto the surface thereof, which comprises heating the impregnated wood in a closed space by introducing into said dosed space vapors of an organic solvent for the impregnant having a boiling point at the pressure in said closed space not higher than about 320° F. so that said heating is carried out at a temperature substantially below the temperature at which said wood would be damaged by heating, but said boiling point being not less than 25° F. *176 to 50° F. higher than the initial temperature of said impregnated wood whereby said wood is heated .by said vapors so that excess impregnant in the outer layers of the wood is' effectively expanded and forced to the surface of said wood, continuing introduction of said organic solvent vapors until said excess impregnant is extracted to a desired extent by condensate of said organic solvent continuously formed on the surface of said wood in said closed space for solvent action at full strength, and draining and recovering said condensate and extracted excess impregnant from said wood.”

In general, it may be observed that the method involves treating the impregnated wood with vapors of an organic solvent, (which is a solvent for the particular im-pregnant employed) said solvent having a boiling point above the temporature of the wood to be treated. More specifically, the claim is drawn to a method whereby the organic solvent vapors are utilized for the dual function of heating the impregnated wood to a temperature sufficiently high so as to expand and force the excess impregnant to the surface of the wood, and secondly to extract said impregnant by condensation of the organic' solvent vapors on the surface of the impregnated wood as it is heated by the vapors.

The admittedly novel feature of applicant’s method is found to reside in the .dual function obtained, i. e., heating and solvent action. Unquestionably, this is the very essence of the disclosure. The examiner made it explicit in his opinion, and we quote from the text thereof, “that it is by selecting solvents of certain boiling points that appellant gets.the dual function of the solvent and the heating effect of the vapor.” Bearing this in mind, but with complete regard for the rule that ordinarily action by the Patent Office in rejecting or granting claims is not citable as sufficient authority in appeals before this court from decisions affecting other claims in the same application, we now observe wherein the allowed claims of the application differ from the claim in question.

Each of the allowed claims contains a limitation which defines the boiling point range of the solvent used in the process. At standard pressure, or at the pressure in the closed space, the recitation of the boiling point range as being-from 240° F. to 320° F. was considered to be an adequate definition, neither.unduly broad nor indefinite. The method of these claims was considered patentable and no prior art was cited in opposition to patentability.

Rejected claim 8 differs from the allowed claims in one material respect. The lower limit for the solvent boiling point range is not stated in the same succinct terms as it is in the allowed claims, but instead defines the lower limit in' a manner indicative of the temperature differential above the initial temperature of the impregnated wood to be treated. Considering again the actual language of the appealed claim, the controversy is predicated upon the alleged indefiniteness of the following:

“ * * * having a boiling point at the pressure in said closed space not higher than about 320° F. * * * •but said boiling point being not less than 25° F. to 50° F. higher than the initial temperature of said impregnated wood * * * ”

Claim 8 is intended to cover the use of solvents boiling below 240° F.

The examiner, after noting that the upper boiling limit was properly defined in terms corresponding to those set forth in the allowed claims, rejected claim 8 on the basis of the following reasons:

The references relied on are:

“Clark, 322,521 July 21, 1885;
“Bohm 649,155 May 8, 1900;
“Newton 1,203,038 Oct. 31, 1916;
“Teesdale 1,295,828 Feb. 25, 1919;
“Booty et al 2,118,036 May 24, 1938.
* * * * * *
“Claim 8 stands rejected as being unpatentable over either Newton or Teesdale in view of either Clark, Bohm or Booth [Booty] et al. Each of the primary references discloses that it is old to remove excess impregnant from impregnated wood by applying steam *177 to the wood in a closed chamber. Each of the secondary references teaches the use of organic solvents for removing excess impregnant from impregnated materials. * * * claim 8 is not limited as indicated * * * to the use of organic solvents having boiling points within the range from 240° F. to 320° F. at standard pressure, or at the pressure in the claimed close space, but includes the use of organic solvents that may have boiling points at standard pressure or at the pressure within said closed space equal to or below the temperature of the steam used in the Newton or Teesdale process. * * *
******
“Claim 8 stands further rejected as 'being unduly broad and indefinite in the recitation of ‘an organic solvent— not less than 25° to 50° F. higher than the initial temperature of said impregnated wood’. Since this claim does not define what the initial temperature of the impregnated wood should be, the claim does not limit the organic solvents that appellant employs to any ‘certain boiling points’ * * * but includes the use of organic solvents that may have boiling points equal to or well below the temperature of the steam employed in the Newton Process. * * *»

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Bluebook (online)
205 F.2d 174, 40 C.C.P.A. 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hudson-ccpa-1953.