Application of Lionel Alexander Bethune Pilkington

411 F.2d 1345, 56 C.C.P.A. 1237
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1969
DocketPatent Appeal 8052
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 411 F.2d 1345 (Application of Lionel Alexander Bethune Pilkington) 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 Lionel Alexander Bethune Pilkington, 411 F.2d 1345, 56 C.C.P.A. 1237 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the rejec *1346 tions of the only claim in appellant’s application 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 103 and as an improper product-by-process claim.

Appellant is the inventor of the “float glass” process for making sheet glass. 2 According to the specification, a ribbon of glass is drawn onto the horizontal surface of a bath of molten metal, considerably wider than the ribbon and is then heated above its melting point. The glass liquefies and, under the influence of gravitational and surface tension forces, flows freely across the surface of the bath without any lateral restraint until it attains a condition of equilibrium on that surface. At this time the molten glass is in the form of a thin layer of uniform thickness with upper and lower parallel surfaces which are flat except at the very edges. The glass is cooled sufficiently to solidify it, and then withdrawn from the bath. The application on appeal is directed to the sheet glass product produced by the float process. According to appellant, that glass has qualities including a fire finish on both surfaces as well as flatness and freedom from imperfections, stresses and distortion, 3 which render his sheet glass superior to sheet glass produced in other ways.

The application as originally filed contained conventional product claims and also produet-by-process claims. In response to the first and second letters from the examiner criticizing the inclusion of product-by-process claims, appellant cancelled the initial produet-by-process claims but reserved the right to reinstate those claims if the invention could not be patentably distinguished by conventional product claims. Subsequent to another letter of the examiner confirming the examiner’s final rejection of the article claims, appellant submitted an amendment cancelling all the claims and substituting a single product-by-process claim, claim 17, which reads:

17. A sheet of glass cut from a ribbon of glass produced by delivering glass at a controlled rate to a bath of molten metal and advancing the glass along the surface of the bath under thermal conditions which assure that a layer of molten glass is established on the bath, maintaining said glass layer in molten condition until there is developed on the surface of the bath a buoyant body of molten glass of stable thickness by permitting said layer of molten glass to flow laterally unhindered to the limit of its free flow under the influence of gravity and surface tension, and thereafter continuously advancing the buoyant body in ribbon form along the bath, and sufficiently cooling this ribbon as it is advanced to permit it to be taken undamaged out of the bath by mechanical means.

In the examiner’s Answer, the following rejections of claim 17 were set forth:

(1) rejection as an improper product-by-process claim, the examiner taking the position that the product could be claimed without re *1347 sort to a product-by-process claim, as exemplified by the other product claims that had been sought.

(2) rejection as unpatentable over either of the following references, separately:

Pedersen et al. 2,167,905 Aug. 1, 1939

Tooley, “Handbook of Glass Manufacture”, published by Ogden Publishing Co., (N.Y.), 1953, (Vol. 1, pages 391-420).

Pedersen discloses a process for making sheet glass, which is most readily described by reference to Figure 1 of that patent:

In Fig. 1, a sheet of glass S is drawn upwardly from the surface of a bath of molten glass and, passes in “wiping or sliding contact” over the surface of a cooled guide member 18 having a ground and polished surface. Of the guide members, the patent states:

* * * Tendencies toward irregularities in the sheet are smoothed out by the wiping action of roll 18 in sliding contact with the sheet, and the coolers 22 and 23 then set the sheet so that above this zone the glass sheet is set to final thickness substantially non-plastie. This is highly desirable, since if stretching and thinning of the sheet occurs thereafter by the pull of the drawing rolls the sheet is liable to become warped or drawn out of line in parts thereof.

*1348 The Tooley article relates to annealing and tempering sheet glass and discusses control of the internal stress in plate glass by those methods.

The board, sustaining the rejection of claim 17 as an improper product-by-process claim, stated:

We are not convinced that the product characteristics of parallelism, reflective properties, and internal stresses cannot be definitely defined, and that sufficient physical, characteristics cannot be drawn to distinguish from the prior art if they are present.

The board also sustained the rejection of the claims under 35 U.S.C. 103 in view of the references cited by the examiner, stating:

We share the Examiner’s view that claim 17 does not patentably distinguish over Pedersen et al. or Tooley. We are left in ignorance as to what degree the parallelism, smoothness, flatness, homogeneity and other physical characteristics of appellant’s glass sheet differs from the glass of Pedersen et al. These are all characteristics that the glass of Pedersen et al. would in some degree possess. Appellant’s product is not patentable [merely] because the process by which it is made is patentable as pointed out in the Examiner’s Answer. The differences in the product over the prior art must be such that they are not obvious to a person having ordinary skill in the art. The Pedersen et al. patent points out on page 7, lines 17 to 33, as noted by the Examiner, that the fire-polished surfaces of their glass are substantially as optically correct as that of ground and polished plate glass.
We are not persuaded that appellant’s product patentably distinguishes over the prior art cited.
We sustain the rejection of claim 17 on the references applied under 35 U.S.C. 103.

In resolving this appeal, we take as a starting point the position that patentability of a claim to a product does not rest merely on a difference in the method by which that product is made. Rather, it is the product itself which must be new and unobvious. As we said in In re Dilnot, 300 F.2d 945, 49 CCPA 1015 (1962):

The addition of a method step in a product claim, which product is not patentably distinguishable from the prior art, cannot impart patentability to the old product.

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411 F.2d 1345, 56 C.C.P.A. 1237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-lionel-alexander-bethune-pilkington-ccpa-1969.