In re Crossley

158 F.2d 993, 34 C.C.P.A. 818, 72 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 325, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 448
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1947
DocketNo. 5181
StatusPublished

This text of 158 F.2d 993 (In re Crossley) 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 Crossley, 158 F.2d 993, 34 C.C.P.A. 818, 72 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 325, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 448 (ccpa 1947).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Primary Examiner of the United States Patent Office rejected all of appellants’ claims, 14,15,16,17, and 18, in their application for a patent on “improvements in the production of chemical pulp.” Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals the examiner’s decision was affirmed and appellants have here appealed from the board’s decision.

[819]*819The alleged invention described and claimed in appellants’ application relates to the production of chemical pulp for the manufacture 'of white paper from unbarked wood, which is that portion of trees such as twigs or shoots not exceeding one and one-half inches in diameter, which process comprises-cooking such wood under super-atmospheric pressure in a chemical pulping liquor.

It is stated in appellants’ application that at present the principal raw material for chemical pulp is the wood of forest trees and that in cutting these trees, which are usuallyabout twenty-five years of age, the branches are lopped off and are left lying in the woods or are burned; that the logs, and sometimes the larger peeled branches, are transported to mills for use in making pulp; that the “loppings” of the trees are considered waste material and, if used at all, are used for fuel, and that the same is true of the annual prunings of domestic trees, including orchard trees. Owing to the fact that it was believed necessary to remove the bark from these small pieces of wood if chemical pulp suitable for use in making white paper was desired, it was thought that the only utility of such loppings, aside from fuel, would be to make a loiv-grade paper and that the bark would form a discoloration that could not be economically bleached.

Appellants, for the most part, base their claimed invention upon the alleged discovery that the stated objection to the use of bark applied only to bark of a certain age and that the objectionable bark contained living cells known as cork cells which are absent in the young shoots or twigs of the size heretofore referred to.

While appellants seem to prefer twigs of about three-eighths of an inch in diameter, it is stated that it is safe to use twigs having a diameter up to one and one-half inches without removing the bark, it being explained that “the permissible variations in the application to this general rule can be determined in particular circumstances by analyses of the bark of which it is proposed to make use.” Two of the claims limit the diameter of the unbarked wood to not over one and one-half inches and one of the claims calls for a maximum diameter of three-eighths of an inch, while the others mention no definite diameter measurement of the twigs.

Appellants state in their application that twigs having a maximum thickness of about three-eighths of one inch are separated from other wood and treated alone and that the claimed process comprises “any one of those now ordinarily used, namely, the sulphite, soda or sulphate’ process, depending on the character of the pulp desired, or any other one found- suitable,” and that “The conditions under which the raw material is acted on by the treating liquor may be substantially the same as those now used in commercial practice with the liquor in [820]*820question, although variations in these conditions may be found possible.” After cooking is completed,' the pulp is blown from the digester- and is then “washed, refined, bleached and otherwise subsequently treated in the same manner as ordinary soda pulp.”

Claim 14 is regarded as illustrative of the appealed subject matter and follows:

14. The method of producing pulp suitable for the manufacture of white paper, which comprises reducing to pulp a material including a substantial proportion of unbarked wood of coniferous or deciduous trees, which wood has a diameter before splitting or crushing of not over one and one-half inches and a bark free from scale, solely by cooking said material including said unbarked wood in a chemical pulping liquor under superatmospheric pressure.

Claim 15 substitutes “caustic soda liquor” for the “chemical pulping liquor” of claim 14. Claim 16 omits the size limitation and calls for “unbarked wood * * * the bark of which wood contains substantially no cork.” Claim 11 is specific to “unbarked fruit tree prunings,” and claim 18 to “unbarked twigs * * *, which twigs have a maximum diameter of about three-eighths of an inch.”

The examiner based his rejection of the claims upon the following patents :

Vautier, 33,551, October 22, 1861,
Allen, 323,771, August 4, 1885,
Johnson (British), 437, of 1S61,
Balmanno (British), 7,794, of 1838,
Duda (British), 17,803, of 1911;

and called attention to two publications, to wit :

Pruning-Book by Bailey, published 1898 by MacMillan Co., New York, N. Y., pages 35 to 37;
The Manufacture of Pulp and Paper, Vol. 3, 3rd Ed., 1937, published by McGraw-Hill Book Go., New York, N. Y., pages 37 and 38 of Section 1.

The Vautier ^patent discloses a process of extracting the filamentous matter of a silky, cottony, and the like nature which is contained in the bark and leaves of mulberry and other trees and shrubs so as to render the product thus obtained convertible into yarns and tissue.

Allen taught the making of paper pulp of the limbs and bark of trees previously thought to be useless for pulping, by boiling the wood which had been split and crushed. This was done in water, acid or alkalies, and the material was then crushed, ground, and pulped. No mention is made of the size of the limbs nor of the nature of the bark thereof.

The British patent to Johnson discloses the making of pulp from “the young green shoots of all kinds of trees and shrubs.”

The British patent to Balmanno discloses the making of paper pulp from the “bark of trees and young shoots of trees.” There is nothing [821]*821in this patent that suggests that the bark of trees can be generally used for making white paper and the reference is cited solely for the reason that it discloses the use of young shoots of trees in making pulp.

The British patent to Duda speaks of utilizing the bark of osiers and evidently was cited to meet the term “twigs,” in claim 18 at bar, it being noted that the term “shoots” instead of “twigs” is used by the first two British patents.

In addition to rejecting claim 14 as being unpatentable over British patent 437, the examiner rejected this claim on the United States patent to Allen, in view of any of the British patents or Yautier, and pointed out that Allen pulps the limbs and bark of various trees by boiling in water., acid, or alkalies. The examiner held that no invention is seen in selecting limbs with bark having no “fiberless part.”

Twenty-four affidavits, embracing about sixty pages of the record, were submitted by appellants and considered by the tribunals below. Affidavits are often very helpful to the Patent Office tiibunals and the courts in considering a patent application. A German trade publication and a Russian article, both relating to the pulp-making industry, are also found in the record, having been submitted to the examiner by appellants.

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158 F.2d 993, 34 C.C.P.A. 818, 72 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 325, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crossley-ccpa-1947.