Application of Prutton

200 F.2d 706, 40 C.C.P.A. 724
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1952
DocketPatent Appeals 5869
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 200 F.2d 706 (Application of Prutton) 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 Prutton, 200 F.2d 706, 40 C.C.P.A. 724 (ccpa 1952).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the examiner rejecting numerous claims of *707 appellant’s application for a patent (serial No. 520,548) entitled “Lubricant Improving Agent and Lubricant Containing Same.” No claims were allowed, but many of those rejected were not included in the appeal to us and several of those which were included in the appeal as taken were withdrawn in the brief before us and at the hearing. As to those so withdrawn the appeal is hereinafter formally dismissed.

Those before us for consideration are numbered 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 33, 43, 75, 76, and 77.

In the official statement of the examiner after the appeal to the board had been taken, the following description was given:

“The alleged invention relates to- lu-ricating oil compositions containing additives effective to reduce the tendency of the lubricating oils to oxidize or to form corrosive products. Such additives are, broadly, the reaction products of a phosphorus sulfide with un-saiurated hydrocarbons, which may be olefines, olefine polymers, aromatic hydrocarbons, terpenes, etc. A preferred class are the bicyclic terpenes, such as alpha-pinene, beta-pinene or turpentine, the latter being the elected species.
“The hydrocarbon-P2Ss reaction product may, if desired, be neutralized with hydroxides, oxides or salts of metals such as the alkali metals. Another feature of the alleged invention is the stabilization of the reaction product against decomposition by the addition of a small amount of an alcohol, such as butyl alcohol.”

In the decisions below the claims were divided into groups and many of those not brought before us were grouped with others which are before us. This has created some difficulty in determining the relevancy of some of the expressions below to the particular claims we have to consider, but we have been aided by the briefs upon this as upon other phases of the controversy.

The application was filed January 31, 1944, so the controversy has been long-drawn out, caused, in the main, by interference proceedings.

In the brief for appellant before us it is said, inter alia:

“The invention of the claims in issue relates to the use in lubricating compositions of certain reaction products prepared by chemically reacting an unsaturated hydrocarbon with a phosphorus and sulphur-containing reagent. Since the exact mechanism of the chemical reaction of an unsaturated hydrocarbon and a phosphorus and sul-phur-containing reagent is unknown and the chemical structure of the product or products formed is unknown, it is necessary to refer to them as ‘reaction products.’
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“All of the retained claims, Nos. 6 to 8, 13, 14, 27 to 31, 33, 43, and 75 to 77, are now limited to lubricating compositions which comprise a major proportion of a lubricating oil, the effectiveness of which has been increased by the inclusion therein of a minor amount of said reaction products. That is the basic invention to which appellant is believed entitled to protection.
“Certain of the claims, Nos. 27 to- 31, 33, 43 and 75 to 77,- are directed to refinements in o-r improvements on such basic invention. One such refinement is the stabilization of the reaction product by reacting it either with an alcohol (claims 43 and 75 to 77) or an alkali (claims 28, 33) for the purpose of suppressing the generation of haze in the lubricant containing the reaction product, which haze is the result of lack of complete solubility of the reaction product in the oil, or decomposition of such reaction product. Claims, Nos. 29 to 31, set forth a further refinement or improvement in the basic invention in the combined use of these reaction products with other improving agents (detergents) .with , which they cooperate in an unexpected manner when present together in the same oil.
“As previously indicated, appellant does not claim to be the first inventor of these reaction products. He does *708 claim to be the first to discover their utility in small concentrations in lubricating oils.
“This basic invention was first disclosed by appellant in an application filed in the Patent Office on January 22, 1937. Appellant has been claiming that basic .invention since that time. In the interval, appellant has been involved in certain Interferences.
“One of those Interferences, No. 81,-936, was concerned with a narrow class of such reaction products produced at a specific temperature. Another' Interference, No. 82,746, was concerned with the combined use of such reaction products with free alcohol. The remaining Interference, No. 82,747, was concerned with the prod-duct made by chemically combining such reaction product with an alcohol.
“There was a determination of priority of inventorship adverse to applicant in each of Interferences, Nos. 81,936 and 82,746. Interference 82,-747 was dissolved, without an adjudication of priority, on the ground that appellant had no basis in his application for the counts of that Interference. That question is here for review, the particular claims being Nos. 43, 75, 76 and 77.
“As will be shown, hereinafter, the earliest dates alleged and established by the prevailing parties in said interferences were all subsequent to January 22, 1937, appellant’s constructive reduction to practice by the filing of his parent application.”

The board selected claims 1, 27, and 75 as illustrative. Inasmuch as claim 1 is not before us, we substitute claim 6 therefor, and in addition quote claims 29 and 43:

“6. A liquid lubricating composition suitable for use as the lubricant in the crankcases of internal combustion engines comprising a major proportion of a refined mineral lubricating oil and a minor proportion of a phosphorus and sulphur containing material derived from an unsaturated hydrocarbon by a process which includes the step of reacting such unsaturated hydrocarbon with a sulphide of phosphorus.
“27. A lubricating composition comprising a major proportion of lubricating oil and a minor amount of the neutralized reaction product of a cyclic terpene with P2S5.
“29. A lubricating composition comprising as essential constituents, (a) a product derived from an unsaturated hydrocarbon by a process which includes the step of reacting such unsaturated hydrocarbon with a phosphorus and sulphur containing reagent and (b) a detergent.
“43. A lubricating oil composition comprising a petroleum lubricating oil and a proportion effective to retard oxidation of the composition of an inhibitor such as results from the reaction of a monohydroxy aliphatic alcohol with a condensation product of turpentine and phosphorus pentasul-fide,
“75..

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Related

Application of Francis J. Honn and Willard M. Sims
364 F.2d 454 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1966)
Carl F. Prutton v. Everett W. Fuller and Ellwood M. Johnson
230 F.2d 459 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1956)

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200 F.2d 706, 40 C.C.P.A. 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-prutton-ccpa-1952.