Application of Victor v. D'ancicco, William G. Collings and Daniel Robert Shine

439 F.2d 1244, 58 C.C.P.A. 1057
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1971
DocketPatent Appeal 8460
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 439 F.2d 1244 (Application of Victor v. D'ancicco, William G. Collings and Daniel Robert Shine) 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 v. D'ancicco, William G. Collings and Daniel Robert Shine, 439 F.2d 1244, 58 C.C.P.A. 1057 (ccpa 1971).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 4, 5, 9, 10, and 12 in appellants’ application serial No. 520,085, filed January 12, 1966, as a continuation-in-part of their copending application, serial No. 120,524, filed June 29, 1961, for rigid polyurethane foams and a method for making them. We affirm.

THE INVENTION

The methods recited in claims 9 and 10 for making the products recited in claims 4 and 5 comprise the reaction of specified polyisocyanates and specified polyhydroxy compounds. The foams and the methods for making them are said to distinguish over the prior art solely in the composition of the polyisocyanate reactant, which is the subject of claim 12. Accordingly, we reproduce only claim 12 1 as adequately exemplificative *1245 for purposes of this appeal (rewritten in independent form as explained in footnote 1, subparagraphing supplied by us):

A mixture of diisocyanates, triiso-cyanates, and higher molecular weight polyisocyanates
produced by the phosgenation of. the mineral acid-rearranged product of condensation of aniline and formaldehyde in proportions to give a product
with from 50 to 55 parts of said mixture being a diisocyanate and
with a combined amount of diiso-cyanate and triisocyanate being from 60 to 75 parts per hundred parts of the mixture; and
with the remainder of the mixture being of sufficiently high molecular weight that the number average molecular weight for the mixture is at least 381;
said mixture having
a viscosity of less than about 1090 centipoises at 25 °C. and
an isocyanate equivalent of 127 to not higher than 140.

Use of this particular polyisocyanate mixture in a process conceded to be old for the production of polyurethane foams except for the specific polyisocyanate ingredient is said to result in rigid foams.

* * * which [,] over periods of continued exposure to relatively high temperatures of about 400 °F., are characterized by retention of rigidity or nonflexibility, of high compressive strength and[,] in the case of our improved foams that have been cured at relatively high temperatures, good dimensional stability.

Since, additionally, the specific polyiso-cyanate ingredient is quite close to poly-isocyanate ingredients disclosed in the prior art as useful for the production of polyurethane foam, appellants have attempted to rebut the inference of obviousness to be drawn from this similarity by filing Rule 132 affidavits comparing certain properties of polyurethane foams made according to their disclosure with polyurethane foams made according to the disclosures of the references. These affidavits, they argue, demonstrate the superiority of their invention to the prior art, which suggests that their invention would have been made sooner if it had been obvious in view of the prior art.

THE REJECTIONS

The examiner rejected all claims over various combinations of eight references. The board affirmed the rejections on the basis of only four of the eight, stating that the other art rejections were “cumulative, at best,” and the parties have agreed that the additional references and the rejections based thereon “require no further consideration herein.” Accordingly, the references here are:

Seeger et al. Abbotson et al. (Australia) French Patent Chapman et al. (Great Britain) 2,683,730 221,411 1,233,854 874,430 July 13, 1954 May 15, 1958 May 9, 1960 Aug. 10, 1961 2

Additionally, the examiner rejected claims 1, 6, and 11 under 35 U.S.C. 132 as “containing new matter by the insertion of the recitation ‘1090’ for ‘1000’ in the specification” and claims 6-10 as “merely reciting an obvious method of preparing a polyurethane foam,” citing In re Farkas, 368 F.2d 1016, 54 CCPA 845 (1966), In re Larsen, 292 F.2d 531, 49 CCPA 711 (1961), and section 706.03 (q) of the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure. The board affirmed both rejections insofar as they still applied after appellants’ withdrawal from issue of most of the claims, reading the new matter rejection as applying to claims 4, 5, 9, 10, and 12 as well as 1, 6, and 11 be *1246 cause all are dependent from the rejected claims and thus incorporate the challenged language by operation of law. 35 U.S. C. 112. Our resolution of the first issue renders unnecessary consideration of the second and third issues.

THE REFERENCES

Abbotson discloses how to make polyurethane foams by reacting a polyester with a polyisocyanate mixture “comprising a major proportion of diphenylme-thane diisocyanate and at least 5% by weight of polyisocyanate of functionality greater than two * * It will be recalled that claim 12 recites a mixture of polyisocyanates “with from 50 to 55 parts of said mixture being a diisocyanate and with a combined amount of diiso-cyanate and triisocyanates being from 60 to 75 parts per hundred parts of the mixture,” indicating that the percentage of triisocyanate in the mixture would be between 5 and 25 percent. Abbotson states that

The method whereby the polyisocy-anate of functionality greater than two is introduced into the polyisocyanate composition is not critical, provided the content thereof is between 5% and 50% by weight of the composition (preferably between 15% and 40%).

Additionally, one of the four methods disclosed by Abbotson for preparing the requisite polyisocyanate mixture is the “phosgenation of crude diaminodiphenyl-methane” to produce diphenylmethane diisocyanate, during which process “triamines and other polyamines are also phosgenated and give rise to polyiso-cyanates of functionality greater than two.” It will also be recalled that claim 12 recites the production of the polyiso-cyanate mixture “by the phosgenation of the mineral acid-rearranged product of condensation of aniline and formaldehyde * *

Chapman is similar to Abbotson except that it discloses the use of a poly-ether rather than a polyester as the other reactant. Specifically, it discloses how to produce a rigid polyurethane foam using a diphenylmethane diisocy-anate composition “prepared by phosgen-ating crude diaminodiphenylmethane, containing about 15% of polyamines (mainly triamines) obtained by condensing formaldehyde with aniline in the presence of hydrochloric acid.”

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439 F.2d 1244, 58 C.C.P.A. 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-victor-v-dancicco-william-g-collings-and-daniel-robert-ccpa-1971.