Application of Sigurd I. Lindell

385 F.2d 453, 55 C.C.P.A. 707
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7847
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 385 F.2d 453 (Application of Sigurd I. Lindell) 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 Sigurd I. Lindell, 385 F.2d 453, 55 C.C.P.A. 707 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals 1 affirming the final rejection of claims 1-8 in appellant’s application serial No. 174,-777, filed February 21, 1962, entitled “Circuit Interrupter Construction.” No claim has been allowed.

The invention is a circuit breaker in which an are is formed when the circuit is interrupted and in which the arc-confining surfaces are made of fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP). Except for the use of this material the claimed structure is old.

Claim 1 is illustrative (emphasis ours):

1. An electric circuit interrupter comprising, in combination, means between which an arc is formed on interruption of the circuit, and a structure adapted to confine said are having its arc confining surface formed of fluorinated ethylene propylene.

The other claims described the structure in greater detail. The issue in this case is solely the obviousness of making the arc-confining surface of FEP.

The examiner cited the following patents:

Lindell 2,591,950 April 8, 1952

Browne et ar. 2,924,690 Feb. 9, 1960

Gordon 3,057,952 Oct. 9, 1962 He also cited a sales bulletin of the DuPont Company, entitled “Teflon 100 FEP,” 2 which was received in the Patent Office on September 6, 1961.

The Lindell 3 and Browne et al. patents show generally the structures of the claims. In the Lindell disclosure, however, the arc-confining surface is of fiber and methyl methacrylate; in Browne et al. it is of polytetrafluoroethylene (TEFLON). The Gordon patent and the sales bulletin were cited to show the obviousness of substituting FEP in the arc-confining surface for the materials used in the Lindell and Browne et al. circuit breakers. Gordon teaches that FEP approaches TEFLON in its desirable qualities and is more tractable and that each can be used as electrical insulation. The DuPont sales bulletin reports essential equivalence in the “outstanding electrical properties” of FEP and TEFLON. It discloses that FEP has high dielectric strength and that “like TEFLON TFE resins, TEFLON 100 has good arc resistance and will not carbon track.”

The examiner relied heavily on the sales bulletin in her rejection, stating in her Examiner’s Answer:

Since the publication compares FEP with TFE and indicates that these materials are alike, and have essentially the same properties, it would appear apparent that a practitioner in the art would be led to the use of “fluorinated ethylene propylene” in the locales in which polytetrafluoroethylene has found favor for many years, as for example the patent to Brown [e] Jr. et al.
Further since TFE as utilized in the Brown[e] Jr. et al. patent has been demonstrated as having general utility in circuit interrupter structures which previously utilized other resinous ma *455 terials, such as the methyl methacrylate resin of Lindell, it clearly follows that FEP could likewise be used in such locales.

Appellant focuses attention on the examiner’s immediately subsequent restatement of the rejection in which she said:

Stated differently; as newer resins are developed and become known — together with their advantages, capabilities, and comparisons with prior resins — such as FEP as disclosed by the Gordon patent and the publication, it would be logically expected that the person skilled in the art would at least try their substitution for existing materials of the same usage; as for example, the polytetrafluoroethylene and methyl methacrylate materials of the Brown[e], Jr. et al. or Lindell patents. The fact that routine experimentation may be necessary to determine the exact capabilities of the newer resin does not detract from the obviousness of the use of the newer resin as a substitute for previously used resins.

The board adopted the examiner’s position and added:

It is our opinion that the disclosure in the DuPont bulletin would at least suggest to one skilled in the art to try fluorinated ethylene propylene in circuit breakers of the type shown in Lin-dell and Browne et al. 4

Appellant argues that the “obvious to try” test seemingly applied is not the test prescribed by the statute and that the unobviousness of his invention is shown not only by the failure of any of the references to suggest the utilization of FEP in the old circuit breakers but also by his own affidavit which affirmatively declares that the invention was, indeed, unobvious at the time it was made.

Appellant also notes the superior performance of the circuit breakers of the invention compared with those of the references under certain conditions. He does not, wisely we think, argue that these data alone establish patentability. Superior results do not necessarily preclude a finding of obviousness, even when they are not precisely forecast by the relevant art. The statutory mandate is for an evaluation of the invention as a whole. In re Schnell, 370 F.2d 596, 54 CCPA 1266 (1967).

On the other hand, a refusal to consider superior results is no more warranted by the statute than a total preoccupation with them. Accordingly, we have criticized the “obvious to try” test on several recent occasions. In re Henderson, 348 F.2d 550, 52 CCPA 1656 (1965); In re Huellmantel, 324 F.2d 998, 51 CCPA 845 (1963).

Furthermore, application of the “obvious to try” test would often deny patent protection to inventions growing out of well-planned research which is, of course, guided into those areas in which success is deemed most likely. These are, perhaps, the obvious areas to try. But resulting inventions are not necessarily obvious. Serendipity is not a prerequisite to patentability. Our view is that “obvious to try” is not a sufficiently discriminatory test. In re Tomlinson, 363 F.2d 928, 53 CCPA 1421 (1966).

However, the solicitor argues that use of the phrase “obvious to try” is not per se error since it may reflect no more than a prudent recognition of the possibility of failure. See In re Pantzer, 341 F.2d 121, 52 CCPA 1135 (1965); In re Ruscetta, 255 F.2d 687, 45 CCPA 968 (1958). Possibly the board here used the phrase in this sense. We prefer to rest our decision, however, on the board’s formal adoption of the examiner’s straightforward finding of obviousness.

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385 F.2d 453, 55 C.C.P.A. 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-sigurd-i-lindell-ccpa-1967.