Application of Victor Mills

281 F.2d 218, 47 C.C.P.A. 1185
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedAugust 11, 1960
DocketPatent Appeal 6455
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 281 F.2d 218 (Application of Victor Mills) 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 Victor Mills, 281 F.2d 218, 47 C.C.P.A. 1185 (ccpa 1960).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the final rejection of claims 3-9 and 11-13 in application serial No. 304,853 filed August 16, 1952, entitled “Detergent Composition.” No claims have been allowed.

Claim 3 is representative and reads as follows:

“3. A wetting, sudsing and detergent composition in small solid particle form which comprises a mixture of an organic detergent agent, selected from the group consisting of water soluble salts of alkyl substituted mononuclear aryl sulfonic acids and mixtures thereof with water soluble salts of alkyl sulfuric acid esters, all containing from 8 to 22 carbon atoms in the alkyl chain, the said organic detergent agent being characterized by its tendency to promote caking in detergent compositions and a water soluble salt of methyl sulfate in an amount at least 1.5% by weight of the detergent composition and sufficient to inhibit the caking thereof.” [Emphasis ours.]

The other claims specify more particularly the amount of caking inhibiting agent present in the composition, name the sodium salt of methyl sulfate as a specific caking inhibiting constituent. *220 and define the detergent component in more limited terms.

The invention is directed to a detergent composition made up of the various stated ingredients, one of which is a sulfonate detergent, specifically the water soluble salts of certain alkyl aryl sulfonic acids. When such a detergent composition is produced in its granular form and is subjected to humid conditions the granules tend to cake or stick to each other. Such caking destroys the desired free flowing characteristic of the composition. It is this undesirable caking of the sulfonate detergents which appellant seeks to minimize by incorporating in the composition a sufficient quantity of the water soluble salts of methyl sulfate as a caking inhibitor.

The board affirmed the examiner’s rejection of all the claims as being un-patentable over Lewis, U. S. Patent No. 2,631,980, issued March 17, 1953, filed July 22, 1949, the only prior art reference of record applied by the board.

The Lewis patent specifically teaches that by adding lauryl sulfate detergent, as the “preferred additive” to water soluble sulfonate detergent compositions, freer flowing products are obtained than when such sulfate detergent is absent. Lewis also states that “other alkyl sulfates within the 8 to 12 carbon atom range may be utilized to impart substantial beneficial properties to the detergent composition.” Lewis also indicates that the alkyl sulfate additives within this range function as detergents in addition to having an “anti-caking” effect.

Appellant’s claims and the Lewis disclosure call for compositions whose anti-caking materials are members of an homologous series. Appellant admits this. The methyl sulfate of appellant’s claimed detergent compositions is the Cx alkyl sulfate. The alkyl sulfates of the Lewis reference are the C8 to C12 alkyl sulfates.

Since the Lewis reference does not disclose the claimed methyl sulfate, the issue here is whether the Lewis disclosure would, at the time this invention was made, make it obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to use a methyl sulfate as a caking inhibiting component of an alkyl aryl sulfonate detergent composition. Before we pass to the resolution of this issue, it is necessary to consider and dispose of some subsidiary issues which have been raised.

Both the board and the examiner have suggested that claim 3 of the Lewis patent is broad enough to cover all alkyl sulfates and, therefore, directly anticipates the claim at bar. Claim 3 reads as follows:

“3. A non-caking detergent composition containing an alkali metal salt of a monoalkyl benzene sulfonic acid and an alkyl sulfate as the active ingredients, the ratio by weight of alkyl sulfate to sulfonic acid salt being in the range 10:90 to 30:70.” [Emphasis ours.]

It is clear to us from reading the claim as well as the specification, that the expression “active ingredients” makes reference to detergent activity. Although the higher alkyl sulfates, those of Lewis, are detergents, the sodium methyl sulfate of the instant application is not, and as such does not fall within the terms of this claim.

A novel argument has been presented here to support the solicitor’s attempt to have the Korpi et al. patent, 1 stand as prior art, despite the specific holding of the board that it “is no longer a reference for any of the appealed claims.” The Korpi et al. patent has claims drawn solely to processes for preparing detergent compositions having reduced tendencies to cake, those compositions comprising alkyl aryl sulfonates and the Ci to Ce alkyl sulfates. If this patent were available as prior art, it would be a direct anticipation of the claims at bar.

*221 Appellant filed a Rule 131, 35 U.S.C. Appendix, affidavit swearing back of the May 22, 1952 filing date of the Korpi et al. patent. That affidavit made reference only to the methyl sulfate-containing composition as having been invented by appellant prior to the Korpi et al. filing date, there being no indication that prior to that date appellant produced a detergent composition containing the C2 to Ce alkyl sulfates disclosed therein. Because of that the Patent Office, in a supplemental brief, states:

“ * * * that the disclosure of other species of alkyl sulfates in the Korpi et al. patent is prior art against the appealed claims, and that the last two sentences of the decision of the Board proper [i. e., Korpi et al. is not a reference for any of the claims] must be construed as holding only that Korpi et al. is not anticipatory of the species (methyl sulfate) to which the appealed claims are limited.”

The board, in clear, unequivocal and unambiguous language, held that Korpi et al. was not prior art against any of the claims on appeal. We can find nothing in the board’s opinion to which can be attributed the limited meaning now attempted to be engrafted thereon by the solicitor. The board’s holding that the Korpi et al. patent was not available as a reference against the claims forecloses us from applying it against those claims. See In re Bloomer, 178 F.2d 407, 37 CCPA 770.

With respect to the main issue herein, the board stated:

“The rejection on Lewis is based on the proposition that appellant’s methyl sulfate caking inhibitor is a member of the same homologous series as the alkyl sulfates of the reference. According to the examiner it would be expected that the anti-caking function would be one .common to all alkyl sulfates.”
The board’s final conclusion was:
“We do not think appellant has successfully rebutted the legal presumption that his methyl sulfate, an admitted homolog of the alkyl sulfates of the reference, is but the obvious and unpatentable equivalent of the other members in this series. In re Henze, 37 C.C.P.A. 1009; * * * 181 F (2d) 196; 85 USPQ 261.” [Emphasis ours.]

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Bluebook (online)
281 F.2d 218, 47 C.C.P.A. 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-victor-mills-ccpa-1960.