Application of Max O. Robeson

331 F.2d 610, 51 C.C.P.A. 1271
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 14, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7094
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 331 F.2d 610 (Application of Max O. Robeson) 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 Max O. Robeson, 331 F.2d 610, 51 C.C.P.A. 1271 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

Robeson appeals from the board’s af-firmance of the rejection of claims 2 to 31, all the claims of his application 1 for a patent on a chemical process.

The invention relates to the production of trimethylolpropane, hereafter TMP, and its recovery from the reacted mixture. In that process formaldehyde is reacted with butyraldehyde in the presence of sodium hydroxide. Sodium formate is produced as a by-product.

The claims may conveniently be divided into three groups. Claim 8, representative of claims drawn to a process for the production of TMP, reads:

"8. Process for the production of trimethylolpropane which comprises continuously reacting, in an aqueous medium, a mixture of butyralde-hyde, formaldehyde and sodium hydroxide, there being about 6 to 10 moles of formaldehyde per mole of butyraldehyde, to produce trimeth-ylolpropane and sodium formate, continuously reducing the pH of the reacted mixture, continuously removing unreacted formaldehyde by distillation from the mixture and separating the trimethylolpropane from the sodium formate.”

Claim 2, representative of claims drawn to the recovery of TMP by solvent *612 extraction from a reaction mixture containing sodium formate, reads:

“2. Process for the separation of trimethylolpropane from an aqueous solution containing trimethylol-propane and sodium formate, which comprises extracting said solution with ethyl acetate to obtain a first liquid phase comprising a water solution of sodium formate and a second liquid phase comprising an ethyl acetate solution Of trimeth-ylolpropane, physically separating said phases to free said second liquid phase from said first liquid phase, and recovering the trimeth-ylolpropane from said second liquid phase.”

Claim 25, illustrative of claims drawn to the washing of the solvent extract with water to remove residual sodium formate, reads:

“25. Process for the separation of trimethylolpropane from an aqueous solution containing trimethylol-propane and sodium formate, which comprises extracting said solution with a liquid, substantially water-immiscible, solvent, for trimethylol-propane to obtain first liquid phase comprising a water solution of sodium formate and a second liquid phase comprising a solution of trimethylolpropane in said solvent, said solvent having a solubility of less than 0.5'% in said water solution of sodium formate, physically separating said phases to free said second liquid phase from said first liquid phase, washing said second liquid phase with water to remove sodium formate therefrom while retaining the trimethylolpropane in solution in said solvent, and recovering the trimethylolpropane from the washed second liquid phase.”

The references are:

Walker et al. 2,135,063 November 1, 1938

Poitras et al. 2,420,496 May 13, 1947

Elgin 2,479,041 August 16, 1949

Robeson 2,790,837 April 30, 1957

(Filed June 8, 1954)

Gottesman et al. 2.806.889 September 17, 1957

(Filed May 20, 1954)

Gottesman 2.806.890 September 17, 1957

De Lorenzo 2,806,892 September 17, 1957

(Filed June 2, 1954)

Albert (France) 1,081,691 June 9, 1954

Certain of the claims are rejected on the ground of double patenting, others as being obvious in view of the prior art. The rejections will be treated separately and the references will be discussed in connection with each ground of rejection.

Doioble Patenting

Claims 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15 and 30, drawn to the reaction of butyraldehyde, formaldehyde, and sodium hydroxide, are rejected as being obvious over the claims of Robeson, appellant’s own patent, 2 *613 either alone or in view of De Lorenzo and Poitras et al.

Claim 1 of the Robeson patent reads:

“1. Process for the production of trimethylolethane, which comprises continuously reacting, in an aqueous medium, a mixture of pro-pionaldehyde, 5 to 15 moles of formaldehyde per mole of propionalde-hyde and sodium hydroxide, to produce trimethylolethane and sodium formate, continuously reducing the pH of the reacted mixture, then continuously removing unreacted formaldehyde by distillation of the mixture under superatmospheric pressure, and thereafter isolating crystals comprising trimethylole-thane from the mixture.”

The only material difference between the claimed process, as illustrated by claim 8, and that of Robeson’s patent claims is the substitution of butyralde-hyde for propionaldehyde to obtain tri methyldlpropane (TMP) instead of trimethylolei/mwe (TME). No alteration in the type of reaction appears to be involved since the reaction claimed in the patent takes place at the functional groups and the present process merely involves lengthening the side chain by a CH2 group.

Claims 7 and 8 additionally recite the extraction of TMP with ethyl acetate. For that reason the examiner also relied on De Lorenzo and Poitras et al. De Lorenzo discloses the extraction of trimethylolethane with ethyl acetate, and Poitras et al. disclose that TMP and TME have similar solubility characteristics. The claims of the Robeson patent recite extraction of TME with a lower aliphatic alcohol.

The examiner was of the opinion that, in view of the similar solubility characteristics of TME and TMP, extraction of one with ethyl acetate would suggest extraction of the other in the same way. Appellant submitted an affidavit to show that ethyl acetate was an unexpectedly superior solvent for the extraction of TMP. Although we shall comment on that affidavit further in considering the remaining claims, we note that with respect to the claims rejected on the ground of double patenting, appellant has not argued or even asserted in his brief that the claimed process is unob-vious in view of that claimed in the Robeson patent. Indeed, at oral argument, counsel for appellant expressly conceded obviousness of the process herein over that already claimed in the earlier patent.

Appellant takes the position that, notwithstanding the conceded obviousness of the process now being claimed from that already patented, the two processes are distinct and the execution of his terminal disclaimer, of record, obviates all objection's to issuance of a second patent claiming subject matter distinct from, but obvious in view of, the claims of the first patent.

Whether a terminal disclaimer can overcome the objections to double patenting has been the subject of much discussion. The second paragraph of 35 U.S.C. § 253, 3 providing for a terminal disclaimer, was first enacted in 1952 and has no known antecedent in the earlier patent statutes. The legislative history *614

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331 F.2d 610, 51 C.C.P.A. 1271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-max-o-robeson-ccpa-1964.