Application of Norman P. Williams

223 F.2d 291
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1955
DocketPatent Appeal 6139
StatusPublished

This text of 223 F.2d 291 (Application of Norman P. Williams) 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 P. Williams, 223 F.2d 291 (ccpa 1955).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United *292 States Patent Office affirming the holding of the Primary Examiner rejecting, as unpatentable over the prior art, claim 20 of appellant’s application for a patent for “Individually Frozen Eggs and Process of Making the Same.”

Claim 20, the only claim on appeal, relates to a method of quick-freezing a whole egg, with its yolk intact, which has been removed from its shell. Broadly, the method consists of the steps of removing the egg from its shell and placing it in a flexible air-impermeable container, and freezing it. The first two steps are performed in the presence of an inert gas, and the egg is sealed in the container while still in the presence of the inert gas. The egg in the sealed container is then frozen. It appears that the purpose of using the inert gas environment to perform the process is to exclude atmospheric oxygen which has a deleterious effect on eggs.

Claim 20 reads as follows:

“20. The process of freezing an individual egg, comprising inserting said egg in the raw state with its yolk intact and without its shell into a flexible air-impermeable container, in the presence of an inert gas displacing atmospheric oxygen, sealing said container, thereby enclosing said egg in said inert gas out of contact with atmospheric oxygen and freezing said egg in said container.” The references relied on are:

Nierinck 2,001,628 May 14, 1935; Damuth 2,525,096 October 10, 1950 (Filed May 20, 1946); White (British) 346,031 April 1, 1931.

The Damuth patent relates to a method for preserving whole eggs, with intact yolks, which have been removed from their shells. It is stated in the Damuth specification that “The principle thought involved in the present invention is to protect an egg when removed from its shell from the oxidizing effect of air by enclosing the egg in an area devoid of oxygen and sealing the area.” Claim 6 pf the Damuth patent succinctly sets forth the process, and is therefore quoted in its entirety as follows:

“6. The method of preserving a fresh egg in storage, which consists in removing the egg from its shell in an unbroken condition, placing the single egg without its shell in a transparent, flexible case of impervious material, said case having an open end and a capacity substantially equal to the mass of the egg, pressing the sides of the case to urge the egg contained therein upwardly towards the open end to discharge any air which may be contained therein out of the case, hermetically sealing the case while the egg is in its upper position and the air is removed therefrom, and then deep-freezing the egg while in its ease.”

The Nierinck patent relates to a method for preserving foodstuffs, including eggs in their shells. The portion of this patent which is pertinent to the present casé teaches the placing of unbroken eggs in an autoclave which is evacuated for the purpose of “withdrawing the oxygen from the air chamber of the eggs and the oxygen which is dissolved in the liquid of the eggs.” Evidently this can be done by virtue of the fact that diffusion is possible through the egg shells because of. their permeable nature. After the evacuation of the oxygen, an inert gas such as nitrogen, which is not detrimental to eggs, is forced into the autoclave under pressure, and this gas is allowed to diffuse through the' shell and into the liquid of the eggs. The eggs, thus treated, can then be removed to a cooled chamber for storage.

The White patent relates to a method of making an egg product which can be preserved for a reasonable period of time. The method consists of treating liquid egg material (beaten egg yolks or beaten yolks and whites) by adding a freezing point depressant, which will lower the freezing point of the egg material, and subjecting the product to a refrigerating temperature above the freez *293 ing point of the mixture but below the freezing temperature of the untreated egg material. The purpose of adding the freezing point depressant is to prevent the extreme viscosity which is inherent in the freezing of eggs. That is, the eggs may be maintained at freezing temperatures without becoming solid. It is further stated in the patent that the container holding the treated egg material, prior to being subjected to low temperatures, may be subjected to a vacuum to remove air from the egg material and from the container since the air would impair the flavor of the egg material during storage. The air, which is removed, is replaced with an inert gas such as carbon dioxide or nitrogen.

The Primary Examiner rejected claim 20 as being unpatentable over (1) Damuth, and (2) Damuth in view of Nierinck. The substance of the first rejection is that Damuth teaches all of the steps of claim 20 except the use of an inert atmosphere, but since Damuth teaches the elimination of air from the container containing the egg, he teaches the use of non-oxidizing conditions. The examiner further stated in this respect that the use by applicant of an inert atmosphere is the equivalent of Damuth’s procedure of maintaining non-oxidizing conditions. With respect to the second rejection, the examiner stated that the use of nitrogen as an inert medium for preserving foodstuffs, particularly eggs, is conventional, as shown in the Nierinck patent. ’He further stated that “the concept of employing nitrogen for the preservation of raw eggs in the instant case clearly fails to rise to the dignity of invention.”

The Board of Appeals affirmed the rejection of claim 20 on Damuth, and, as it appears from the record, also sustained the rejection on Damuth in view of Nierinck. The reasons given were substantially the same as those given by the examiner. The board also pointed out the teaching of the White patent to the effect that inert gases are used in preserving egg material. It appears that the substance of the board’s reasoning in sustaining the examiner’s rejections was that since appellant does not obtain any unobvious result by packaging the egg in the presence of nitrogen, and since it is “so old and common to eliminate the presence of air from packaged foods, including shelled and unshelled eggs by surrounding them with nitrogen, it involves no invention to use this expedient in conjunction with packaging of shell-less frozen eggs, the yolks of which are intact.”

The primary issues before us on appeal are whether the secondary references, White and Nierinck, were properly combined with the primary reference, Damuth, for rejecting claim 20; and whether the claim is unpatentable over Damuth, taken by itself.

It is often a perplexing question when features of various references are combined to determine whether their combination would have occurred to the person skilled in the art, or whether the combination of references was made only after applicant’s teaching was known.

However, one criterion has been formulated in the past for aiding in the determination of this question. This criterion was reiterated recently in our recent case of In re Demarche, 219 F.2d 952, 956, 42 C.C.P.A., Patents, 793, as follows:

“ * * * It is well settled that prior patents may be combined to anticipate claims. In re Delancey,

Related

Application of De Vaney
185 F.2d 679 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1950)
In Re Larkin
187 F.2d 645 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1951)
Application of Demarche
219 F.2d 952 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1955)
In Re Fridolph
134 F.2d 414 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1943)
In re Miller
159 F.2d 756 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1947)
In re Delancey
177 F.2d 377 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1949)

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