In Re Collins

75 F.2d 1000, 22 C.C.P.A. 1053, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1935
DocketPatent Appeal 3451
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 75 F.2d 1000 (In Re Collins) 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 Collins, 75 F.2d 1000, 22 C.C.P.A. 1053, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 130 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, affirming that of the Examiner in rejecting claims 32 to 55, inclusive, of an application for patent relating to alkyd type resins. All the claims in the application are product claims except process claims 42, 43, 44, 50, and 51. Claims 40, 41, 45, 46, 54, and 55 contain certain modifications not found in the other claims and, as was evidently true before the Board, appellant has not argued with much insistence that the rejection of the same was erroneous. Claims 32, 47, 50, and 55 are illustrative and follow:

“32. An alkyd type resin formed by the combination and condensation of a mixture containing an organic polybasic acid, gly-cerine, ethylene glycol, and di-ethylene gly--col. , (
“47. An alkyd type resin formed by the combination and condensation of a mixture containing phthalic anhydride, glycerine, ethylene glycol and di-ethylene glycol, and less than 50 per cent of a fatty acid modifier.
“50. The process of producing the herein described resinous product, which comprises heating a mixture containing an organic polybasic acid, a polyhydric alcohol, ethylene glycol, a poly-ethylene glycol and a fatty acid.
“55. An alkyd type resin formed by the combination and condensation of a mixture containing phthalic anhydride, ethylene glycol, glycerine in an amount less than that of the ethylene glycol, and a fatty acid.”

These claims were copied by appellant from the patent to Pieper, No. 1847783, of March 1, 1932, for the purpose of interference. The claims were all rejected upon the ground of want of disclosure of the subject-matter in the application as filed. The Board, in considerable detail, which we need not repeat here, has copied from the Pieper specification his teachings which fully disclosed the subject-matter of the involved claims, and we think has pointed out, as also did the Examiner, the particulars in which appellant’s disclosure is deficient

*1001 The appellant in this court quotes the following from his specification, “By the term ‘polyhydric alcohol-polybasic acid resin’, as used herein, I mean the resinous condensation product resulting from the interaction of one or more polyhydric alcohols and one or more polybasic acids, with or without one or more modifying ingredients. * * * Although the above examples are limited to the use of glycerol and ethylene glycol as the polyhydric alcohol, phthalic anhydride, succinic acid and maleic acid as the polybasic acids, and linseed oil acids, Chinawood oil acids, castor oil acids and rosin as the modifying ingredients, I desire to have it understood that the invention is applicable generally to the other members of these classes, such as polyethylene glycol, pentaerythrite, citric, fumaric, adipic, buty-ric, oleic and stearic acids, cocoanut oil acids and perilla oil acids, and to all synthetic resins falling within the above definition of modified polyhydric alcohol-polybasic acid resins, * * * ” and relies upon this, together with his six examples, which are set out in the specification, as amounting to a disclosure sufficient to support the claims at bar.

It will be noticed that claim 32, like most of the other claims,, calls for a definite combination and condensation of a mixture of certain definitely named materials. For instance, said claim 32 calls for a combination with an organic polybasic acid of three definitely named materials — glycerine, ethylene, glycol and di-ethylene glycol. None of the examples given sets out a combination of two or more alcohols. Appellant argues here that he has broadly covered this combination of elements by his above-quoted statements in his specification.

The decision of the Examiner and that of the Board rejecting the claims are based •chiefly upon the proposition that one cannot support his specific claims of definite mixtures of definite materials upon a disclosure which teaches the use in no particular quantities or of no definitely named ingredient by broadly naming the group in which the claimed ingredients may be found. The Solicitor for the Patent Office illustrates appellant’s position as being comparable to that of an applicant for mechanical patent who would disclose a list of mechanical .elements as gears, levers, cams, bolts, etc.,, and state that they could be combined in combinations of twos, threes, fours, etc.,.as desired and then argue that the skilled mechanic could make the combination, and that the alleged inventor who first mentioned that those elements could be combined in the manner stated should be regarded as the first inventor.

On this phase of the case, the Examiner made the following pertinent statement:

“Counsel argues that in view of the language quoted above applicant originally intended to cover resins in which more than one polyhydric alcohol was used, and that applicant is unquestionably entitled to a claim which calls for the use of the specific alcohols, glycerol, ethylene glycol and polyethylene glycol. However, the evidence of such intention was lacking in the case as filed for neither in the objects of invention nor in the original claims is there found any reference to the use of mixtures of poly-hydric alcohols. At the most, the specification treats the various alcohols mentioned in the portions quoted as equivalents and that any one of them may be substituted for those specifically mentioned in the examples. Moreover, if counsel’s argument be carried to its logical conclusion, applicant would also be entitled to claim resins in which more than one polybasic acid was used with a single polyhydric alcohol or with mixtures of polyhydric alcohols, and also various combinations and permutations of these ingredients. To permit an applicant to lay claim to such specific products on the basis of an indefinite general statement would appear to be flying in the face of that portion of the Statute which requires an applicant to ‘set forth the precise invention for which a patent is solicited, and explain the principle thereof and the best mode in which the applicant has contemplated applying that principle.’ Applicant’s specification fails to meet this statutory requirement; and, as stated by the Court of' Appeals of the District of Columbia in Lindley v. Shepherd (1928) 58 App. D. C. 31, 24 F.(2d) 606, ‘it is not enough that he (the applicant) may'have had a conception' of the invention he seeks to appropriate. His application must disclose it.’ ”

And with reference to certain of the claims stated:

“Obviously, applicant neither discloses nor even suggests the specific ratio of the ethylene glycol to the other polyhydric alcohols set forth in claims 45, 46, 54 and 55. No real contention has been made by counsel .as to applicant’s right to make these claims. Clearly applicant’s specification lacks any basis for this specific invention, for even a broad general statement is no warrant • for, specific claims particularly in *1002 view of the fact that the mixture of alcohols in the ratios mentioned yield special and peculiar results.”

The Board' of Appeals, speaking, of appellant’s specification and contentions, said:

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Bluebook (online)
75 F.2d 1000, 22 C.C.P.A. 1053, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-collins-ccpa-1935.