Application of Kunz

181 F.2d 239, 37 C.C.P.A. 943
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1950
DocketPatent 5644
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 F.2d 239 (Application of Kunz) 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 Kunz, 181 F.2d 239, 37 C.C.P.A. 943 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the rejection by the Primary Examiner of all the claims, eight in number, of appellants’ application, serial No. 519,000, filed January 20, ,1944, for patent entitled “For Ge'fcnicidal Soaps Containing Halogenated Dihydroxy Diphenyl Methanes.” Broadly the rejection seems to have been based upon lack of invention in view of prior art.

It appears that the application is a continuation in 'part of an application of appellants, serial No. 324,054, which was pending January 20, 1944, but which was later abandoned.

The claimed invention relates to germicidal detergent washing and toilet soaps, both solid and liquid, defined in the following claims:

“1. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and a minor proportion ' of 2, 2'-dihydroxy halogenated diphenyl methane.
“2. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and 1 to 3% of a 2,, 2'-dihy-droxy-halogenated diphenyl methane.
“3. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and minor proportion of 2, 2'-dihydroxy-3, 5, 6-3', 5', ó'-hexachloro diphenyl methane.
“4. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and 1 to 3% of 2, 2'-dihy-droxy-3, 5, 6-3', 5', 6'-hexachloro diphenyl methane.
“5. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and minor proportion of 2, 2'-dihydroxy-3, 5-3', 5'-tetrachloro diphenyl methane.
“6. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and 1 to 3% of 2, 2'-dihy-droxy-3, 5-3', 5'-tetrachloro diphenyl methane.
“7. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and minor proportion of 2, 2'-dihydroxy-3, 5-3', 5'-tetrabromo diphenyl methane.
“8. A germicidal detergent soap comprising soap and 1 to 3% of 2, 2'-dihy-droxy-3, 5-3', 5'-tetrabromo diphenyl methane.”

The following references were relied on in the rejections by the respective tribunals of the Patent Office:

Bruson, 1,987,228, Jan. 8, 1935;
Andersen, 2,059,195, Nov. 3, 1936;
Gump, 2,250,480, July 29, 1941;
Hartung, 2,251,934, Aug. 12, 1941;
Hartung, 2,251,935, Aug. 12, 1941;
I.G.F.A.
(French), 690,820, June 30, 1930;
Lever Bros.
(British), 427,324, Apr. 23, 1935.

The claims are self-explanatory, and, as pointed out by the board, Nos. 2, 4, 6, and 8 are identical with Nos. 1, 3, 5, and 7, except that in the latter group “minor proportion” is used instead of “1 to 3%.”

Claims 1 and 2 are generic claims. Claims 3 and 4 constitute the elected group of species claims, the Primary Examiner having required election. Claims 5 and 6 constitute the first nonelected group and claims 7 and 8 the second. The two latter groups were rejected by the examiner “as not readable on the elected species.” The board said: “The rejection of * * * claim 5 through 8 as restricted to non-elected species, is affirmed.” ■

The Primary Examiner rejected claims 1 to 4, inclusive, as lacking in invention, first, over the French patent; second, over the Gump patent; and, third, over either the Andersen patent or the British patent.

The examiner stated, with respect to the French patent, that it disclosed: “ * * * that the compound 2, 2'-dihy-droxy-3, 5-3', 5'-tetrachloro diphenyl methane is a well known germicide and bactericide. The French patent also discloses the dichloro derivatives of the compounds specified in claims 1 and 2.”

*241 We do not find the word “germicide” used in the patent, but “bactericides” is used along with “disinfectants.” The product is said to be “capable of destroying microbes” and “capable of preserving objects from attack by microbes.” Other recitations are the treatment of “infected objects or those in danger of being infected” and the impregnation of “bandages, etc. which will remain odorless after use” with the product named in examples recited in the patent.

A further recitation of the patent is: “We can preserve seeds by treating them with a mixture of di- or triphenylemthane products with talc. The seeds are not attacked by erysiphaceae (mildew), etc. Also we can avoid the formation of moisture spots, similar damages to textiles, papers, leather and wood, cosmetics, etc.”

There is no suggestion that the product is capable of being used to produce a germicidal detergent soap.

The patent of Gump (one of the appellants in the instant case) discloses that the phenol, 2, 2'-dihydroxy-3, 5, 6, 3', 5', 6'-hexachloro-diphenyl methane is a white, practically odorless and tasteless solid crystalline compound; that it exhibits antiseptic and disinfecting action against microorganisms particularly against bacteria of the type of staphylococcus aureus; and that it may be employed with substances such as tooth powders, tooth pastes, ointments, creams, and cosmetics. There is no suggestion in the patent of employing it to produce a detergent soap having germicidal properties.

In his statement the examiner says, relative to his rejection on the Andersen and British patents: “ * * * The patents show soap containing a germicide and capable of killing bacteria of the type disclosed by applicants in accordance with standard tests. The germicides disclosed by Andersen and the British patent are characterized by low toxicity and retain their germicidal activity when incorporated in soaps. See page 3, first column of the patent to Andersen. The addition of other well known germicides having such properties to soap to produce a germicidal soap would not, in the opinion of the Examiner, involve invention over Andersen or the British patent.”

The examiner did not recite in his statement the character of the germicide used in the Andersen and British patents. This was done by the board, however, in the following: “Andersen and the British Patent 427,324 disclose mercurial compounds that are germicides admixed with soap. As pointed out in the brief [for appellants] on page 15, mercurial germicides have the disadvantage of cumulative toxicity on the user. (Italics supplied.)

“This fact has caused much investigation to substitute a phenolic type of germicide in soaps for its germicidal action. By reference to Hampil, Journal of Bacteriology, volume XVI, pp. 287-300(1928) and by presentation of affidavits, appellants seek to establish that the incorporation of phenolic substances in minor proportion (e. g. 1-3%) in soaps so as to have both the detergent action of the soap and the germicidal action of the phenolic substance has long been recognized as desirable but that all such mixtures that have been tried and tested have either proven ineffective or but poorly effective probably due to some inhibiting action of the soap on the activity of the germicide.”

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189 F.2d 620 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
181 F.2d 239, 37 C.C.P.A. 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-kunz-ccpa-1950.