Application of William C. Rainer, Joseph H. Hitov, Edward M. Redding, Arthur W. Sloan and William D. Stewart

390 F.2d 771, 55 C.C.P.A. 853, 156 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 334
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 1968
DocketPatent Appeal 7825
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 390 F.2d 771 (Application of William C. Rainer, Joseph H. Hitov, Edward M. Redding, Arthur W. Sloan and William D. Stewart) 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 William C. Rainer, Joseph H. Hitov, Edward M. Redding, Arthur W. Sloan and William D. Stewart, 390 F.2d 771, 55 C.C.P.A. 853, 156 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 334 (ccpa 1968).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals, 1 affirming the rejection of claims 20-21 and 23-25 in application serial No. 694,-662, filed November 5, 1957, entitled “Polyethylene.” Claims 1-8, 10-13, 15-19, 22, 26-28 have been allowed.

.The invention includes certain poly-ethylenes and their methods of preparation. The following are the independent claims on appeal:

20. An irradiated foamed polyethylene, the irradiation having been carried out with high energy ionizing irradiation to an extent of at least about 2 x 106 REP.
21. A process comprising irradiating a foamed polyethylene with an irradiating dosage of high energy ionizing irradiation of 2 x 106 to 100 x 106 REP.
23. A process comprising cross-linking polyethylene by the use of both high energy ionizing irradiation at a dosage of between 2 and 200 x 106 REP and a free radical polymerization catalyst.

Claims 24 and 25 are dependent on claim 23 and define the irradiation more specifically, claim 24 specifying radiation of “at least about . 750,000 electron volts” and claim 25 that radiation is carried out with electrons.

The references relied on are:

Gaylord 2,907,675 October 6, 1959

Rubens et al. 2,948,665 August 9, 1960

Gaylord discloses a process of subjecting polyethylene to high energy particles, in an atmosphere of a free radical engendering compound, to prepare the polyethylene to be coated by an ethylen-ically unsaturated monomer which is polymerized in situ. Typical free radical engendering compounds disclosed by Gaylord are benzoyl peroxide, azo-bis-isobutyronitrile, tetraphenylsuccinoni-trile, and N-nitrosoacylanilides.

*773 Rubens et al. discloses a process in which a foaming agent is uniformly dispersed through molten polyethylene, the mixture is fed past a source of ionizing radiation, and then extruded into a zone of sufficiently lower pressure to cause expansion of the polymer with resultant formation of a shaped body of cellular construction with good stability and resiliency.

Claims 20 and 21 were rejected by the examiner as obvious in view of Gaylord and Rubens. “[T]he irradiation of ‘foamed’ polyethylene * * * is known to the prior art as is evidenced by Rubens et al.”

Claims 23-25 were rejected by the examiner as “met by Gaylord.”

Appellants argued before the board that they had overcome the cited references by a series of affidavits 2 and exhibits. The inventors’ affidavits allegedly show that they successfully prepared transparent polyethylene by the method of the invention before the effective dates of the references. They used four different free radical engendering catalysts: methyl ethyl ketone peroxide, benzoyl peroxide, azo-bis-isobutyronitrile, and polynitroso dimethyl terephthalate. Their attorney’s supplemental affidavit shows that a draft application, similar to that on appeal, had been prepared before the effective dates of the references, after a conference between the inventors and their attorney, containing the following:

It has now been found that these objects can be attained and transparent substantially colorless, i. e., water-white, solid polyethylene can be prepared in a form which can be reproduced, regardless of the subsequent physical change of the polyethylene, by treating polyethylene with a free radical engendering substance and also irradiating the polymer. The irradiation treatment can be carried out before, simultaneously with, or subsequent to the treatment with the free radical engendering material. * * *
******
WE CLAIM:
1. A process comprising cross-linking polyethylene by the use of both irradiation and a free radical engendering substance.

The board did not feel that the affidavits sufficed to overcome the references. It said:

Since appellants’ affidavits and exhibits show the use of only three free radical polymerization catalysts, i. e., methyl ethyl ketone peroxide, benzoyl peroxide, and azo-bis-isobutyronitrile in the claimed cross-linking process, and do not antedate the N-nitroso-acylanilides and tetraphenylsuccinoni-trile catalysts * * * of Gaylord, this patent is still available as a reference for broad claims 23, 24 and 25.

The board also sustained the rejection of claims 20 and 21 which, as may be seen above, contain no catalyst limitation at all, explaining:

These claims are not limited to the use of the disclosed free radical polymerization catalysts in the production of irradiated polyethylene foam. Consequently, appellants’ Rule 131 affidavits and the exhibits do not overcome the rejection of these claims based on the Gaylord patent which shows that it is old to irradiate polyethylene and the Rubens et al. patent which discloses irradiated polyethylene foam.

Appellants’ basic argument is that the draft application proves their “possession” of the generic invention and the experiments with four different free radical engendering agents establish their “completion” of it before the effective dates of the references.

It is settled, of course, that an anticipatory disclosure, not a statutory bar, may be removed as a reference against a generic claim by a Rule 131 affidavit *774 showing prior reduction to practice of as much of the claimed invention as the reference shows. In re Stempel, 241 F.2d 755, 44 CCPA 820 (1957). (See further explanation of Stempel in In re Tanczyn, 347 F.2d 832, 52 CCPA 1630.) The Patent Office Board of Appeals, in that case, had held such a showing insufficient, requiring, rather, proof of prior “possession of the generic invention.” We held that this involved too literal a reading of Rule 131 3 and that “all the applicant can be required to show is priority with respect to so much of the claimed invention as the reference happens to show.” And this priority need not always be shown directly. When that species of the generic invention which has been completed prior to the effective date of the reference would make obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art the species disclosed in the reference, the reference may be said to have been “indirectly antedated.” In re Clarke, 356 F.2d 987, 53 CCPA 954 (1966); 34 G.W.L.Rev. 507, 525 (1966).

Appellants do not, however, assert that they have shown a reduction to practice of as much of the generic invention as is shown in the references. They do not argue, with respect to claims 23-25, that they have reduced to practice the invention using, as free-radical engendering agents, the tetraphenylsuccinonitrile and N-nitrosoacylanilides of Gaylord.

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390 F.2d 771, 55 C.C.P.A. 853, 156 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-william-c-rainer-joseph-h-hitov-edward-m-redding-ccpa-1968.