Application of Norman A. Altmann and William H. Bureau

264 F.2d 894
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1959
DocketPatent Appeal 6389
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 264 F.2d 894 (Application of Norman A. Altmann and William H. Bureau) 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 Norman A. Altmann and William H. Bureau, 264 F.2d 894 (ccpa 1959).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Acting Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the Primary Examiner’s rejection, as unpatentable over the cited art of record, of claims 11 to 15, inclusive, in appellants’ application for a patent on a method of deinking waste paper. Claim 11, which is representative of the appealed claims, reads as follows:

“11. The method of deinking waste paper in cool or cold water without cooking and use of deinking chemicals, so as to reclaim a large per cent of the fiber content as clean pulp suitable for re-use in paper-making, comprising, coarsely pulping waste paper in cool or cold water, refining the resulting coarse pulp slurry by passing it at least once through a revolving disk refiner in a few seconds while maintaining the temperature of the pulp below about 112° F. so as to shatter the ink from the fibers, said refiner having closely set opposed refining surfaces having a relative speed of at least several thousand feet per minute to produce an intense refining and shattering action, subjecting an enclosed stream of the resulting slurry of refined pulp to the action of a plurality of submerged jets of wash water so as to intensely agitate the slurry stream and disperse the fibers and shattered ink particles throughout the water vehicle without dewatering and with a substantial lowering of the consistency, and then dewatering the slurry so as to separate the ink particles from the fibers.”

The references relied on are:

Wurster 807,228 Dec. 12, 1905
Hammond 1,026,578 May 14, 1912
Moeller (British) 258,630 Sept. 24, 1926
Farley et al. 1,984,869 Dec. 18, 1934
Inglis 2,394,182 Feb. 5, 1946
Hill et al. 2,641,164 June 9, 1953
Casey Pulp & Paper-Yol. 1, page 325; 1952.
Pulp & Paper Manufacture — Vol. 2, pages 138, 159, 167 and 180 — 1951.

*895 Appellants’ application discloses a process of removing ink from waste paper which, as described and claimed, involves four principal steps, namely: (1) Coarsely pulping the paper in cold water; (2) Fiberizing a slurry of such pulp in a revolving disk refiner at high speed and low temperature to shatter the ink particles and loosen them from the paper fibers; (3) Subjecting an enclosed stream of the resulting slurry of refined pulp to the action of submerged high velocity jets of wash water; and (4) Dewatering the washed slurry whereby the ink is finally removed. It is stated in the specification of the application that a temperature below about 112° F. and a high speed of rotation are essential in the disk refiner.

The patent to Hill discloses a method of processing fibrous pulp in which the pulp is fed centrally between two plates which are spaced a short distance apart. One of these plates is fixed while the other is given a gyratory movement and the adjacent faces of the plates are provided with projections which grip and agitate the pulp. Water in excess of that which can be retained by the pulp is supplied through openings in the upper plate and, after passing through the pulp, is drained off through openings in the lower plate. The pulp moves outwardly and is discharged at the periphery of the plates. The plates are shaped so that they are more closely spaced at the periphery than at the center and the pulp is thus compressed as it moves outwardly. After leaving the plates the pulp is collected in a trough and then removed from the machine.

The patent to Hill suggests several ways in which the apparatus just described may be used in the deinking of paper, either with or without the use of chemicals. In such deinking the paper may be “partially disintegrated,” as by hammer milling, or may be “essentially repulped” by means, such as a disk refiner, after which it is fed to the previously described apparatus, where it is “completely repulped to individual fibres” and the ink particles are “freed from the fibres.”

The British patent to Moeller discloses a deinking process in which wet paper pulp is coarsely disintegrated by tearing and is then passed along an agitating and washing conveyor, after which it is ground in one or more rotary cylindrical grinders and again agitated and washed. The initial tearing may be done in any suitable device, the preferred procedure comprising reciprocating plates provided with spikes. The washers are in the form of cylindrical rotary screens through which the pulp passes axially while it is agitated and water is sprayed on it.

The patents to Wurster and Farley were cited to show that it is old to use disk refiners for disintegrating paper pulp. Farley also suggests the operation of such a refiner at a speed comparable to that called for by the appealed claims.

The remaining references were held by the board to be merely cumulative and were not discussed in detail. They are clearly no more pertinent than the references above discussed and accordingly need not be further considered here.

The appealed claims were rejected on either Hill or Moeller, considered alone, or in conjunction with Wurster or Farley. The two latter patents, as above noted, were merely cited^to show that disk refiners of the kind referred to in the claims are old and, since that does not appear to be disputed, the respective-grounds of rejection are essentially the same with, or without, the secondary references.

Each of the claims recites the four principal steps referred to above in the description of appellants’ invention, and it is evident that all the claims must stand or fall together. Accordingly, they will not be discussed individually.

In holding the claims unpatentable over Hill the board pointed out that the patent to Hill teaches that the pulp may be subjected to the action of a disk refiner before being acted on by the gyrating plate device which forms the princi *896 pal feature defined by Hill. The board was of the opinion that the introduction of wash water into the latter device would necessarily lower the consistency of the pulp slurry and would produce a washing action comparable to that called for by the appealed claims. No specific reference was made by the board to the coarse pulping step which is recited in each of these claims. With respect to the dewatering step, the board stated that the slurry of Hill “is ultimately dewatered just as appellants’ slurry is finally dewatered.”

Notwithstanding the similarities noted by the board, there appear to be several material distinctions between the disclosure of the Hill process, and that defined by the appellants’ claims. In the first place, Hill does not suggest coarse pulping of the paper before subjecting it to the action of the disk refiner. Coarse pulping by a hammer mill is suggested as an alternative to the disk refining and not as preliminary to it.

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264 F.2d 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-norman-a-altmann-and-william-h-bureau-ccpa-1959.