In Re Eger

184 F.2d 193, 38 C.C.P.A. 715
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedSeptember 29, 1950
DocketPatent Appeals 5707
StatusPublished

This text of 184 F.2d 193 (In Re Eger) 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 Eger, 184 F.2d 193, 38 C.C.P.A. 715 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

GARRETT; Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals "of the United States Patent Office affirming that of the Primary Examiner denying, as unpatentable over prior art cited, four claims/ numbered respectively 16, 17, 18, arid 19, of appellants’ patent application entitled “For Butadiene Copolymer Impregnated Sheet.” Two claims, numbered respectively 14 and 15, were allowed by the Primary Examiner. All the appealed claims and both of the allowed claims'are product claims.

We quote the following descriptive matter from the decision of the board:

“The claims are directed to a flexible fibrous sheet of web, such as paper, which has been impregnated with an unvulcanized copolymer of butadiene with styrene, acrylonitrile, isobutylene, or methacrylates, which are generally known ‘synthetic rubbers, and (claim 19) to a pressure sensitive tape comprising a backing of such sheet and a pressure sensitive adhesive united thereto. The particular points of novelty urged by appellants as patentable distinctions reside in the use of a butadiene copolymer wherein the copolymerizing agent such as styrene is present to the extent of 35% to 70% of the weight of the copolymer, and in saturating the fibrous web with such copolymer to the extent of 40% to 60% of the weight of the web.” The appealed claims read:

“16. A flexible sheet characterized by high tensile strength and great resistance to splitting and to delamination, said sheet comprising a porous fibrous web internally bonded by an agent which is "present in the web to the extent of 40 to 60% of its weight and which includes an unvulcanized copolymer of butadiene and styrene present to the extent of 35 to 70% of the weight of the copolymer.”

“17. A flexible sheet characterized by high tensile strength and' great resistence to splitting and to delamination, said sheet comprising a porous fibrous web internally bonded by an agent which is present in the web to the extent of 40 to 60% of. its weight and which includes an unvulcanized copolymer of butadiene and an initially unsaturated compound present to the extent of 35 to 70% of the weight of the copolymer and selected from the group consisting of styrene, the unsaturated nitriles, isobuylenes, and the methacrylates, the particles of said copolymer being predominantly less than 4 microns in diameter.

“18. A flexible sheet characterized by high tensile strength and great resistance to splitting and to delamination, said sheet comprising a porous fibrous web internally bonded by an agent which is present in the web to the extent of 40 to 60% of its weight and which includes an unvulcanized copolymer of butadiene and an initially unsaturated compound present to the extent of 35 to 70% of the weight of the copolymer and selected from the group consisting of styrene, the unsaturated nitriles, isobuylenes, and the methacrylates.

“19. A pressure-sensitive adhesive tape comprising a backing made of sheet mate *195 rial according to claim 18 and a pressure-sensitive adhesive united thereto.”

The following references were cited and discussed by both tribunals of the Patent Office: Konrad et al., 2,335,124, Nov. 23, 1943; Fowler, 2,351,498, June 13, 1944; Paper Trade Journal, Nov. 5, 1942, pp. 29-32; Kautschuk Gesellschaft (French patent), 838,906, Mar. 20, 1939.

The French patent and the patent to Fowler are characterized in the brief of the Solicitor for the Patent Office as “only cumulative” on the question of whether it is broadly old to impregnate fibrous material with a dispersion of a butadiene-styrene copolymer, and it is said in the brief: “ * * * if the Court should consider the appealed claims patentable over the Paper Trade Journal article and Konrad et al., taken singly or in combination, it would necessarily follow that the claims would be patentable over Fowler and the French patent.”

We think the position so taken by the Solicitor for the Patent Office is sound and, therefore, we limit our consideration to the Konrad et al. patent, upon which all the appealed claims were rejected, and to the disclosure in the Paper Trade Journal.

There is no contention that any one of the appealed claims contains any limitation which differentiates it patent-ably from any other appealed claim. So, the four stand or fall together.

Claim 18 appears to be the broadest of the appealed claims. Claim 19 identifies, or names, the product as a pressure-sensitive adhesive tape. In the specification it is said, inter alia: “* * * it is manifest that there has been produced a sheet having many applications which hitherto were barred to the use of internally bonded, fibrous, non-hygroscopic sheets. For instance, in the form of a backing for normally adhesive tapes and in other forms as well, the product can be used in the aircraft, automotive, typewriter, and other machine industries to mask parts during application and high temperature treatment of baked finishes and enamels. The sheets will perform equally well in similar masking operations in finishing electrical, radio, and electronic equipment. The ability of the sheet to resist cold is of great importance in connection with aircraft designed for high altitude flying, and in the locker industry for packaging foods and other perishables for long storage at low temperatures.”

This quotation is immediately succeeded by the following: “While the foregoing advantages may be obtained using standard butadiene styrene copolymers as the impregnant for the sheet, the surprising discovery has been made that the tensile and internal strength is vastly improved if butadiene styrene copolymers are used having a higher than conventional ratio of styrene to butadiene. Heretofore, the usually available butadiene styrene copolymers, such as Buna S or G R S had a styrene content of about only 25 per cent by weight. In so far as this invention is concerned, however, it is preferred that the styrene content of the butadiene styrene copolymer range between 35 and 70 per cent by weight. The increased olefin content reduces the elastic properties and improves the plastic properties of the copolymer, thereby rendering the copolymer substantially superior as an impregnant for fibrous sheeting.

As we understand the foregoing, it definitely teaches that, prior to the entrance of appellants into the field, butadiene styrene copolymers having a styrene content of “about only 25 per cent by weight” were available from which there might have been obtained the advantages incident to the sheets developed by appellants, but appellants allege that a better product for the purposes stated results when the styrene content ranges between 35 per cent by weight and 75 per cent by weight. The specification states that “Creamed dispersions of butadiene styrene copolymer suitable for practicing the invention may be obtained commercially.”

In the specification of the patent to Konrad et al., application (serial No. 334,574) for which appears to have been filed May 11, 1940, it is said: “It has now been found that the hitherto unknown products of the conjoint emulsion polymerization of butadiene and styrene, the styrene content of *196

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184 F.2d 193, 38 C.C.P.A. 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-eger-ccpa-1950.