Application of Wiegand

182 F.2d 633, 37 C.C.P.A. 1101
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1950
DocketPatent Appeal 5630
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 F.2d 633 (Application of Wiegand) 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 Wiegand, 182 F.2d 633, 37 C.C.P.A. 1101 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office upholding that of the Primary Examiner rejecting the three claims (the only claims in the case) numbered 19, 20, and 21 of appellants’ application, serial No. 448,806, broadly entitled “Carbon Black,” filed June 27, 1942, as a continuation of applicants’ co-pending application, serial No. 349,908, filed August 2, 1940.

The claims read as follows:

“19. A furnace carbon bla-ck comprising not less than 97% fixed carbon and having a surface area within the range extending from 7.5 to 10 acres per pound.
“20. A furnace carbon black comprising not less than 97% fixed carbon, having a color approximating that of ‘standard rubber grade impingement' carbon black,’ a surface area within the range extending from 7.5 to 10 acres per pound, oil absorption characteristics within the range of about 85 to 125 gallons per 100 pounds of carbon black, a pH not less than about 7 and a tinctorial strength at least 90% that of ‘standard rubber grade impingement carbon black’ in conjunction with a relatively blue undertone.
“21. A furnace carbon black comprising not less than 97% fixed carbon, having a color approximating that of ‘standard rubber grade impingement carbon black,’ a surface area within the range extending from 7.5 to 10 acres per pound, oil absorption characteristics within the range of about 85 to 125 gallons per 100 pounds of carbon black, a pH not less than about 7, and a tinctorial strength at least 90% that of ‘standard rubber grade impingement carbon black,’ in conjunction with a relatively blue undertone, and rubber compounding characteristics such that in ‘vulcanized standard tire tread compound’ it exhibits in conjunction a tensile strength within the range of about 3800 to about 4200 pounds per square inch,, a rebound of about seven-tenths, an energy of rupture within the range of about 800 to about 1000 pounds per cubic inch, a Log R electrical resistivity not in excess of about 4, and ageing characteristics superior to those of ‘standard rubber grade impingement carbon black’ in ‘standard tire tread compound.’ ”

It will be noted that all are product claims. Patent for a method appears to have been granted in a divisional application. No question of double patenting is involved.

It appears that carbon black is used in the making of inks, paints, lacquers and the like, but that its greatest use is in articles made of rubber, particularly automobile *634 tires. The brief for appellants states that “In that [automobile tire] field, it is known as a ‘reinforcing agent’, and is used to the extent of millions of pounds per year.”

The brief also states: “The carbon blacks now used in industry are (1) impingement or channel black, (2) furnace black, (3) thermal decomposition black, (4) acetylene black and (5) lamp black.”

The method of producing each of the foregoing types or kinds of carbon black is set forth in the brief, and it is said (page references to the record being omitted) :

“Thermal decomposition black, acetylene black and lamp black are made in what might be considered a furnace and for that reason alone they might superficially be called furnace blacks. However, as the term is used in the present specification, thermal decomposition black, acetylene black and lamp black are not classified as furnace blacks * * *.
“The foregoing brief exposition of the kinds of carbon black heretofore available and the uses to which they have been put suffices to show that these blacks differ widely one from another, so much so that some are not used at all in rubber compounding. To the eye, they are all the same. With the finest instrumentalities now available, the differences of structure between them can be determined to only a limited degree. But important differences do exist. They must exist because of differences of great moment in-products made with the different blacks. A consequence of this condition is that it is not possible to go as far as might be desired in defining a new carbon black by its physical properties alone. Beyond that, one must resort, for purposes of definition, to the results flowing from the use of the new black, such as the properties of a rubber product made with the black. That is what the art has done heretofore * * * and it has been done in this instance because no better form of definition is available. Also, it is in accordance with the comment of the Supreme Court in General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance Corp. et al., 304 U.S. 364 [58 S.Ct. 899, 82 L.Ed. 1402], more particularly on, page 368, wherein the claims under consideration were, quite obviously as it seems to us, insufficiently definitive of the claimed new product.” (Italics quoted)

The brief then states:

“In the three, claims before the court, the product is defined as ‘a furnace black’ and that is intended to exclude from the scope of the claims all channel blacks, thermal decomposition blacks, acetylene blacks and lamp blacks.
“This furnace black is further defined in the three claims by reference to its mean particle size. This item of mean particle size is commonly defined in terms of the aggregate surface area of a unit weight of the black, such as a number of acres per pound * * *. Channel black, as now and heretofore made, has a surface area on this basis of 10.6 to 22.2 acres per pound. Furnace blacks as made prior to this invention were of a surface area not exceeding 3 to 4 acres per pound * * *
“A distinctive feature of the product of these claims is a furnace black of an extremely fine particle size, a mean particle size represented by an aggregate surface area of 7.5 to 10 acres per pound. Such a carbon black of the furnace type or any other type, had never been produced prior to this invention. And such a carbon black has utilities extending beyond those of any prior form of carbon black. It may be and is being used for making tread stock for automobile tires. That is a use for which the prior furnace blacks were not adapted and in that use this new black presents advantages even over the channel black which the art had commonly used * *

In his statement following the appeal to the board the Primary Examiner cited as references eight publications and seven patents and discussed them in connection with his reasons for rejection. Some of those references had not been mentioned in the decisions of the Primary Examiner — not even in his decision of January 18, 1946, which was declared to be his final decision. So, appellants had had no opportunity to meet or discuss the Primary Examiner’s view of the applicability of the newly cited references during the prosecution of their application before him.

*635 The Primary Examiner apparently recognized the situation which had resulted from his failure to cite those references in his prior rulings because, in his statement, he said:

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182 F.2d 633, 37 C.C.P.A. 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-wiegand-ccpa-1950.