In re Egan

159 F.2d 452, 34 C.C.P.A. 843, 72 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 442, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 450
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1947
DocketNo. 5212
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 F.2d 452 (In re Egan) 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 Egan, 159 F.2d 452, 34 C.C.P.A. 843, 72 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 442, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 450 (ccpa 1947).

Opinion

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the Primary Examiner rejecting claims 16, 17, and 19 to 22, inclusive, in appellants’ application for a patent for an invention relating to dispersions of rubber in polar organic liquids.

Claims 11 and 18 in appellants’ application were allowed by the Primary Examiner.

Claims 16,19, and 22 are illustrative of the appealed claims. They read:

16. A polar organic liquid dispersion of rubber and a protective colloid which is swellable in the polar organic liquid and insoluble in water said liquid being a non-solvent for rubber.
19. A polar organic liquid dispersion of rubber and a protective colloid which is swellable in the polar organic liquid and is insoluble in water said liquid being a non-solvent for rubber, sufficient liquid being present to form a continuous phase.
22. A container closure, the sealing element of which comprises the dried residue of a polar organic liquid dispersion of crude rubber and a protective colloid which is swellable in the polar organic liquid and is insoluble in water said liquid being a non-solvent for rubber.

The references relied upon are:

Plauson, 1,392,849, October 4, 1921.
Hazell, 1,916,421, July 4, 1933.

It will be observed from quoted claim 19 that appellants’ composition is a liquid dispersion of rubber in a polar organic liquid which is a nonsolvent for rubber, the liquid being present in sufficient quantity to “form a continuous phase.” A protective colloid which is insoluble in water and swellable in the polar organic liquid is also present in the composition.

Claim 16 is broader than claim 19 in that it does not call for a sufficient amount of a polar organic liquid to form a continuous phase, as does claim 19.

Claim 17 specifies that the polar organic liquid is an alcohol.

Claims 20 and 21 call for a container sealing composition composed of the composition defined by claim 16.

Quoted claim 22 calls for a container sealing element which comprises the dried residue of the composition defined b.y claim 16, except that instead of the broad term “rubber,” it calls for an “organic liquid dispersion of crude rubber.” [Italics ours.]

Appellants state in their application that the lower alcohols, ketones and certain acids may be used as the polar organic liquids which [845]*845are nonsolvents for rubber. They also state that the protective colloid materials which are swellable in the polar organic liquids and insoluable in water are:

Any colloidal materials whiclr sioell or are soluble in the polar liquids may be used as the swellable colloidal material to be associated %oith the rubber in accordance with this invention. The celulose esters, the prolamines, certain gums such as Loba gum, and the polymerized vinyl acetate and polyvinyl acetal resins are good examples of such colloidal materials, but persons shilled in the art will recognize that these are merely representative of a large class of materials which have a tendency to swell or dissolve in the polar organic solvents. [Italics ours.]

In the examples set forth in appellants’ application it is stated' that the rubber used is “* * * unmilled smoked sheet rubber * * It is further stated therein, however, that “By the term, ‘rubber’ in the specification and in the appended claims, we intend-to include all rubber-like materials, either natural or synthetic.”

The appealed claims were rejected by the tribunals of the Patent Office “for lack of patentable invention over either of the patents to. Plauson or Hazell.”

The indent to Plauson relates to “Improvements in the Manufacture' of Dispersoids [dispersed substances], Colloid Powder and Masses-Therefrom.”

The patentee states in Example 1 that:

1 part of neutral soap is dissolved in 100 parts of 96% alcohol and then 5 to 10-parts of i>reviously coarsely comminuted gelatin is added. This mixture is disintegrated at very high speed for from 2 to 5 hours in a mill provided with beaters having a liquid-tight stuffing box about its axis. Continuous treatment is then obtained by using a colloid mill or by providing a pump to circulate the' alcohol-gelatin mixture through the disintegrator to a suitable reservoir and. back again to the disintegrator.
In the course of time an excessively fine dispersion of gelatin in alcohol is obtained. [Italics ours.]
* * * * *

The patentee also states that instead of gelatin which is used in his Example 1, “* * * other solid colloids can be employed under the same conditions, e. g. glue, agar-agar, tragacanth, gum, starchy dextrin, carrageen moss, casein, albumen, yeast, phenol condensation products, hard rubber and the like * * [Italics ours.]

The patentee further states, in substance, that after the- desired degree of dispersion of rubber is secured, a homogeneous powder may be obtained by removing the “excess of alcohol * * * by centri-fugalization” and the powder thus obtained by his process may be used as an -“adhesive” and for other purposes.

It will be observed that the patent to Plauson discloses, among: other things, a dispersion of hard rubber in a polar organic liquid — ■ alcohol — and a neutral soap which accelerates the dispersion of the [846]*846hard rubber. The patentee obtains an exceedingly fine dispersion of hard rubber in alcohol in the intermediate stage of his process. It is that disclosure in the patent which the tribunals of the Patent Office relied on in rejecting the appealed claims. Owing to the fact that the patentee obtained in the intermediate stage of his process an exceedingly fine dispersion of hard rubber in alcohol, there would seem to be sufficient liquid present “to form a continuous phase,” as called for by appealed claim 19.

It is argued by counsel for appellant that the Plauson patent taught how to make a powdered dispersion of hard rubber which is known as “ebonite” or “vulcanite”; that hard rubber is both physically and chemically different from the kind of rubber referred to in appellants’ application which, it is argued, is “soft, tough, resilient, elastic rubber,” such as “crude rubber”; and that the soap- referred to in Example 1 of the Plauson patent is not a colloid, “swellable” in the polar organic liquid and insoluble in water. Counsel for appellants concede, however, that the term “rubber,” as they state in their brief “* * * has at least three technical meanings, via, crude rubber, soft vulcanized rubber, and hard rubber which is ebonite. As in every problem of semantics, the context must be resorted to for the true meaning of the word. In the Plauson patent, the context shows that it means a hard, rigid substance composed of rubber and sulphur while applicants’ specification shows that elastic non-rigid rubber was intended.” It is further argued by counsel for appellants that the term “rubber” in the appealed claims should be.

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Bluebook (online)
159 F.2d 452, 34 C.C.P.A. 843, 72 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 442, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-egan-ccpa-1947.