Application of Sabatino R. Orfeo and Kevin P. Murphy

440 F.2d 439, 58 C.C.P.A. 1123
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1971
DocketPatent Appeal 8468
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 440 F.2d 439 (Application of Sabatino R. Orfeo and Kevin P. Murphy) 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 Sabatino R. Orfeo and Kevin P. Murphy, 440 F.2d 439, 58 C.C.P.A. 1123 (ccpa 1971).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals, adhered to on reconsideration, affirming the rejection of claims 5-8 of appellants' application, entitled “Fluorocarbon Compositions,” 1 as unpatentable under the *440 provisions of 35 U.S.C. § 103. No claims have been allowed.

The invention relates to a low temperature refrigeration process utilizing an azeotropic mixture of trifluoromethane (CHF3; boiling point of —82.0° C.) and monochlorotrifluoromethane (CC1F3; boiling point of —81.4° C.). The CHF3/CC1F3 azeotrope, consisting of 49 — 51 mole % CHF3, exhibits a boiling point of about —87.9° C. at 14.65 psia. Appellants disclose that mixtures of CHF3 and CC1F3 substantially in the range of about 20% to about 75% CHF3 have boiling points within about 1° C. of the azeotropic boiling point and exhibit only negligible fractionation on boiling under refrigeration conditions.

Claim 5 is representative:

5. The process of producing refrigeration which comprises condensing a mixture consisting of trifluoromethane and monochlorotrifluoromethane, in which mixture the mole % of trifluoromethane is in the range of about 20-75, and thereafter evaporating said mixture in the vicinity of a body to be cooled.

Claims 6-8 recite successively narrower ranges of proportions of CHF3 and CC1F3. That is, claim 6 recites a mixture in which the mole % of CHF3 is in the range of about 36-64, claim 7 calls for 42-55% CHF3, and claim 8 recites the azeotropic proportions of 49-51% CHF3.

The references relied upon are:

Midgley et al. (Midgley) 1,968,050 July 31, 1934
Thomson-Houston (Great Britain) 668,609 March 19, 1952
Fiske, "Low Temperature Freon Refrigerants," Refrigeration Engineering, April 1949, pages 336, 338-339.

Thomson-Houston discloses a method of preparing fluorochlorohydrocarbons. The reaction products of the process are distilled through a low temperature distillation column to give a number of fluorocarbons and fluorochlorocarbons. Among the identified compounds recovered from the distillation column is a mixture of CC1F3 CHF3, and listed in Tables I and II as having a boiling point of -88° C. at a pressure of approximately 762mm (14.73 psi.) and listed in Table III as having a boiling point of -90° to -86° C. (758 mm.; 14.66 psi.). It is disclosed that the process is “eminently suitable for making easily and economically fluorochloro compounds which find utility as refrigerants, for example, CF2 Cl2 and CHF2 Cl.” It is further disclosed that “the process permits the preparation more easily of fluorochlorocarbon compounds which have desirable temperature ranges and which make them suitable for low temperature refrigerations.”

Midgley discloses using CHF3 and CC1FS individually as refrigerants in a low temperature refrigeration process which includes evaporating the desired compound in the vicinity of the body to be cooled.

Although the examiner cited, and the board apparently relied on, the Fiske article, it was not included in the record before us. Therefore, we must assume that Fiske discloses the features for which it was cited. In re Kaufmann, 193 F.2d 331, 39 CCPA 769 (1951). According to the board, Fiske was cited as “demonstrating knowledge in the art of the employment of fluorocarbon components in low temperature refrigeration processes.”

The examiner rejected all the claims under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as unpatentable over Thomson-Houston in view of Midgley. Fiske was cited by the examiner to show the state of the art. The board affirmed, stating:

The employment of a mixture of known refrigerants in a conventional process of refrigeration (exemplified in Midgley et al. and Fiske) is clearly obvious to one having ordinary skill in the refrigeration art.

Appellants in effect admit that the above-quoted statement of the board is correct. That is, they admit that the claimed invention is prima facie obvious *441 in view of the references cited. Appellants state in their brief:

Appellants further admit that one skilled in the art would have expected that mixtures of CHF3 and CC1F3 would have been useful in producing refrigeration.

Despite this concession, appellants strenuously urge that the prima facie case made out by the Patent Office has been rebutted by the Atwood affidavit. The Atwood affidavit was submitted in accordance with Rule 132 to show that the use of the CHF3/CC1F3 mixture in a low temperature refrigeration process produces a new, unexpected, and unobvious result in power requirement.

In response to appellants’ arguments concerning new and unexpected results, the board stated:

The argued additional advantage to which the Atwood affidavit is directed, lower power requirement as compared with that for either component of the mixture alone, does not represent any unexpected process coaction and does not render unobvious appellants’ process which clearly follows the specified suggestions in the art.

It is the solicitor’s contention, as set forth both in the brief and at oral argument, that the new and unexpected results evidenced by the Atwood affidavit cannot be considered or, if considered, cannot be deemed persuasive since the claimed invention is either anticipated by Thomson-Houston or “ultimately obvious” in view of the references cited.

First, we wish to point out that no matter how hard the solicitor tries to find one, there is not and never was a rejection of the claims in this case under 35 U.S.C. § 102 as anticipated by Thomson-Houston. Therefore, we think that the evidence of new and unexpected results as set forth in the Atwood Rule 132 affidavit must be considered. As long as there is a question of obviousness, no matter how trivial that question may seem, we think appellants have the right to have considered the Rule 132 affidavit which allegedly shows new and unexpected results. If that affidavit is strong enough in its showing of new and unexpected results, the Patent Office’s position that the claimed invention is obvious may be found to be rebutted. We find that to be the situation here.

After taking the Atwood affidavit and appellants’ arguments concerning it into consideration, we are convinced that the claimed invention achieves new and unexpected results to the extent that appellants’ invention as a whole would not have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art. The Atwood affidavit shows that the CHF3/CC1F3 azeotrope, contrary to all expectation, exhibits a power requirement lower than the power requirements of the CHF3 or CC1F3 components of the mixture.

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440 F.2d 439, 58 C.C.P.A. 1123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-sabatino-r-orfeo-and-kevin-p-murphy-ccpa-1971.