In re Chamberlin

94 F.2d 232, 25 C.C.P.A. 838, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 1938
DocketNo. 3883
StatusPublished

This text of 94 F.2d 232 (In re Chamberlin) 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
In re Chamberlin, 94 F.2d 232, 25 C.C.P.A. 838, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 38 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the examiner rejecting six claims, being all the claims, contained in appellant’s application for patent entitled “For Fibrous Compositions.” The claims are numbered 7 to 12, inclusive. Of these, Nos. 7, 8 and 9 [839]*839relate to a method of molding a composition, and 10, 11 and 12 to the composition itself.

Claim 9 was taken by the board as representative. As this claim appears in the board’s opinion and in the list quoted at the end of the record, as required by our rule, certain amendments which the examiner refused to enter, but entry of which was allowed by the board, do not appear.

We quote it in its amended form, the form in which the board considered it, as appears from its opinion:

9. Process of preparing compositions containing spinnable fibers in un-knotted condition and random arrangement suitable for hot-press molding which comprises coating the fibers twisted into elements of lengths providing overlapping in the composition but free from knottability associated with the unspun fibers of corresponding length with a heat-hardening resin in solution, and drying the composition.

Claim 8 calls for a specific form of solution for coating, and claim 7 further restricts the process to twisting the fibers into elements ranging in length from one-quarter of an inch to an inch or more.

Of .the product claims we quote No. 10:

10. Composition containing a resinous binder and spinnable fibers in unknotted condition and random arrangement suitable for hot-press molding comprising spinnable fibers twisted into elements of lengths ranging from one-quarter of an inch to an inch or more to provide overlapping in the composition but free from knottability associated with unspun fibers of corresponding length, and coatings on said elements of a heat-hardening resinous binder, the whole forming a mass of separable and variously directed coated elements.

Claim 11 omits the specific range of length but limits the composition to one of approximately equal parts of elements and resinous binder. Claim 12 omits the limitation as to proportion contained in claim 11.

It is not contended that the limitations in the different claims require any separate consideration upon the general issue of patent-ability. All of them stand or fall together.

The prior art references cited are:

Talley, 1,223,216, Apr. Í7, 1917.
Smith, 1,557,730, Oct. 20, 1925.
Weldon, 1,640,433, Aug. 30, 1927.
McIntyre, 1,844,434, Feb. 9, 1932.

There also appears in the record a patent to one Willard H. Kempton, assignor to Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, assignee of the Talley patent. The Kempton patent, issued October 28, 1924, is referred to in appellant’s present application. It is argued here that it supports a contention of appellant to the effect that the Talley patent was inoperative, a contention which, under the facts of this case, we do not deem important.

[840]*840The brief of the Solicitor for the Patent Office states:

The grounds of rejection as applied by the examiner in his statement appear to he two in number. The first ground of rejection refers to an earlier application of appellant’s in which the examiner held that there was a final adjudication as respects claims which differed in scope only from the claims involved in the instant appeal. The examiner • indicated that the difference between the two groups of claims was not such as to impart patentability in view of the cited art. The second ground of rejection applied by the examiner was that the appealed claims are unpatentable over the cited art as applied in detail in the examiner’s statement. The Board of Appeals did not state that any ground of rejection advanced by the examiner was wrong but on the contrary made a general affirmance of the examiner’s action.

In a reply brief filed by permission of the court, appellant challenges the solicitor’s interpretation of the examiner’s decision, as affirmed by the board, and insists that the only rejection in the record was based on' prior art.

The record apparently does not disclose all the office actions with respect to the claims, but it is noted that the examiner’s final action dated April 16, 1935, is limited to rejection upon the prior art. In his statement after the appeal to the board, however, we find the following:

The instant application purports to be a division of application Serial No. "274,360, filed May 1, 1928. The earlier filed case was before the Honorable Board of Appeals on substantially the same question as is here involved, viz. whether the use of fibers free from anti-lcnotting involved invention. In said case, the Examiner was affirmed, both tribunals being of the opinion that Talley, supra', was the best reference. The specification of the instant application omits all -reference to natural fibers, such as manila, sisal, etc., which is disclosed' in the ■second paragraph of page 3 of the earlier filed case. A comparison of the appealed claims in these two cases will show that those of the later filed case ■differ from those of the earlier filed case in scope only; those claims under instant consideration being more specific than the ones of the earlier case. This 'difference in scope of the instant appealed claims, however, does not eliminate •the rejections of these claims on the cited art.

Also, at another place in his statement, attention was directed to an equity suit then pending which the board commented upon as follows: ■ •

The examiner has called attention to Equity Suit, No. 55,555, brought under R. S. 4915, Cherry vs. Coe now pending in the Courts. The records of this suit are, of course, open to the public. It is found that in this suit are involved claims which cover almost the identical subject matter claimed here, and that said claims stand rejected on the same references, which are of record In the present case. This case is now awaiting decision by the Court of Appeals, D. C., on an appeal taken from an affirmative decision by the Supreme Court, D. C.

It may be said that that case, under the style of Economy Fuse & Mfg. Co. v. Coe, was decided by the United States Court of Appeals [841]*841for the District of Columbia November 2, 1936, 86 F. (2d) 850, 31 USPQ 193, the decision of the lower court being affirmed.

It must be confessed that it is not altogether clear to us whether the examiner based his rejection upon two grounds as suggested by the solicitor. Upon the whole, we are inclined to the view that it was based solely upon prior art, and that the decision rendered by the board respecting appellant’s earlier application, of which the present is said to be a continuation, was not cited as res adjudicate but rather as persuasive, -the same .as was the decision in the Economy, Fuse & Mfg. Co. case, supra, to which latter appellant was not a party.

We tliinlr it was entirely legitimate and proper to refer to the-decisions in those cases for such purpose.

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94 F.2d 232, 25 C.C.P.A. 838, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chamberlin-ccpa-1938.