Application of Shackell

194 F.2d 720, 39 C.C.P.A. 847
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1952
DocketPatent Appeal 5854
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 194 F.2d 720 (Application of Shackell) 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 Shackell, 194 F.2d 720, 39 C.C.P.A. 847 (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 rejection by the Primary Examiner of three claims, being all the claims, of appellant’s patent application, serial No. 536,054, filed May 17, 1944, entitled “Germicide.”

The claims are numbered 649, 650, and 651 respectively. All three were rejected as being unpatentable over prior art cited, and numbers 649 and 650 on the additional ground that they are unduly broad, indefinite, and functional and do not meet the statutory requirement for particularity in claiming.

First consideration will be given the rejection based on prior art.

Appellant, representing himself, filed, an elaborate brief which covers seventy-five printed pages and constitutes an interesting treatise on the chemical phases of the case. The legal questions at issue are argued in great detail and approximately one hundred court decisions are cited, many of them being quoted from and analyzed. Different text books on chemistry are cited and quotations are made from Robinson on Patents.

As we view the case, it is not necessary to its decision to attempt answers to all the refinements and ramifications of reasoning in which appellant indulges. The subject matter, as is true of almost all chemical cases, is highly technical, but there is nothing particularly abstruse about the issues involved.

The following (page references being deleted as indicated by asterisks) from the “foreword” to appellant’s brief gives a clear idea of the composition of matter which appellant claims to be patentable: “Each of the rejected claims * * * is drawn to a substantially water-free germicidal composition that is adapted as such *722 for direct local application, comprising, in substantially homogeneous physical admixture, a highly caustic phenol and a nitrogenous polar material; the latter being defined by a number of limiting characteristics recited in each claim. The phenol, — typified by carbolic acid * * *,- — is the essential germicidal agent, but by itself, or even when in dilute solution in water * * *, is corrosive to tissues when applied directly thereto. The nitrogenous polar material serves to reduce or eliminate the causticity of the phenol without proportionately reducing its germicidal power. In the specification * * *, and occasionally in this brief, the nitrogenous polar material may be referred to as causticity-reducing agent and as phenol-tempering agent. * *

The following is quoted from appellant’s brief concerning the claims:

“None of the appealed claims is drawn to a composition consisting of an individual compound; instead, each claim is for a product — that is, for a composition made up of certain distinct ingredients. * * *
“Claim 649, the broadest of the appealed claims, is drawn generically to the use of a nitrogenous polar material * * * possessing characteristics which also are recited in that claim.
“Claim 650 is a generic claim, but narrower in scope than claim 649' in that the nitrogenous polar material is limited to an amide. * * *
“Claim 651 is a specific claim; the nitrogenous polar material being limited therein * * * to the single compound acetanilid, which is the second one of the amides disclosed in Example 5. * *

The claims read as follows:

“649. A substantially water-free, phenolic, germicidal composition that is adapted as such for direct local application, said composition comprising a highly caustic phenol in substantially homogeneous physical admixture with a-nitrogenous polar material that is preponderantly anionoid in molecular structure and further characterized (a) by being chemically compatible with the caustic phenol, and (b) by being capable of forming a substantially homogeneous physical system with more than its weight of the caustic phenol; said physical system, when so formed and when applied to a substantially dry cutaneous surface, exhibiting a delay in the time of onset of caustic effect of the phenol of at least 100 per cent beyond the time of onset of caustic effect of a control mixture containing the same phenol in the same proportion by weight as in said physical system, but with said nitrogenous polar material being substituted in the control mixture by a substantially nonpolar hydrocarbon of the class consisting of cyclohexane, pinene, p-xylene and a mixture of isomeric xylenes; said composition, upon standing in a closed container at room temperature, remaining substantially free from segregation therein of ingredients thereof; said composition containing the caustic phenol in an effective germicidal concentration; and said nitrogenous polar material being present in the composition in an amount sufficient to reduce the causticity of the phenol without proportionately reducing its germicidal power.
“650. A substantially water-free, phenolic, germicidal composition that is adapted as such for direct local application, said composition comprising a highly caustic phenol in substantially homogeneous physical admixture with a nitrogenous polar material in the form of an amide that is preponderantly anionoid in molecular structure and further characterized (a) by being chemically compatible with the caustic phenol, and (b) by being capable of forming a substantially homogeneous physical system with more than its weight of the caustic phenol; said physical system, when so formed and when applied to a substantially dry cutaneous surface, exhibiting a delay in the time of onset of caustic effect of the phenol of at least 100 per cent beyond the time of onset of caustic effect of a control mixture containing the same phenol in the same proportion by weight as in said physical system, but with the amide being substituted in the control mixture by a substantially nonpolar hydrocarbon of the class consisting of cyclohexane, pinene, p-xylene, and a mixture of isomeric xylenes; said composition, upon standing in a closed *723 container at room temperature, remaining substantially free from segregation therein of ingredients thereof; said composition containing the caustic phenol in an effective germicidal concentration; and said amide being present in the composition in an amount sufficient to reduce the causticity of the phenol without proportionately reducing its germicidal power.
“651. A substantially.

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194 F.2d 720, 39 C.C.P.A. 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-shackell-ccpa-1952.