In re Eisenhut

245 F.2d 481, 44 C.C.P.A. 974, 114 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 287, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 148
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1957
DocketNo. 6274
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 245 F.2d 481 (In re Eisenhut) 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 Eisenhut, 245 F.2d 481, 44 C.C.P.A. 974, 114 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 287, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 148 (ccpa 1957).

Opinion

Johnson, Chief Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals, affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 19, 23 and 25 to 33 as unpatentable over the prior art, in appellant’s application serial No. 217,879, filed March 27, 1951, for “Process for the Manufacture of Washable, Cloth-Like Material From Cellulose Fibres Without Spinning or Weaving.” The foregoing claims are the only claims remaining in the case.

At oral argument, counsel for appellant admitted that the essence of his alleged invention was set forth in claim 19; that the ancillary details included in claims 23 and 25 to 33 added nothing of patentable moment to the basic process otherwise set forth in those claims; and that, therefore, claims 23 and 25 to 33 would necessarily stand or fall together with claim 19. We will, accordingly, restrict our discussion to the latter claim, which reads as follows:

19. A process for the production of a firm washable material resembling woven cloth without spinning or weaving from carded fleece, at least the greater part of the entire fleece consisting of regenerated cellulose fibers, consisting of the steps of passing the said fleece through a lye bath containing from 5% to 15% NaOH at a temperature of from —5° O to +25° O for five seconds up to one minute and neutralizing, rinsing, and drying the said material.

The alleged invention relates to a process of preparing a felted material resembling woven cloth from a carded fiber fleece, the greater portion of which consists of regenerated cellulose fibers,1 with or [976]*976without natural fibers, such as cotton or the like. The process involves treating a layer of the fibers with an aqueous solution of caustic soda of a stated strength for a stated time at a stated temperature. These conditions are set forth in claim 19, supra. The treated fibers are then neutralized, rinsed and dried.

The references relied upon are:

Prevost, 615,045, November 29, 1898.
Hahn, 1,757,755, May 6, 1930.
Schwartz 1,1,757,756, May 6, 1930.
Tagliani, 1,776,052, September 16, 1930.
Schwartz II, 1,791,248, February 3, 1931.
Weiss, 2,203,375, June 4, 1940.
Secrist, 2,528,793, November 7, 1950.

The board, in its rejection, held claim 19 unpatentable over Schwartz II or Secrist, each in view of Tagliani. The other references were applied against the remaining claims (in addition to the Schwartz II, Secrist and Tagliani references) merely for their showing of the ancillary details included in those claims. Since, as we have stated, it is only necessary to consider claim 19, these other references will not be further discussed. Also, in the view we take of this case, it is not necessary to discuss the teachings of the Schwartz II patent.

The Secrist patent discloses a process for producing a felted cotton fiber textile material. The fibers are first arranged by a carding operation, and then treated with an aqueous solution of caustic soda of from 8% to 30% concentration, at a temperature from just above the freezing point of the solution to +25° C, for a period of from % to 3 minutes. The treated fiber is then washed, neutralized and dried. Secrist states that it is preferred that the fibers be cleaned by boiling and bleaching prior to the caustic treatment. He also sets forth preferred conditions of 10% to 18% for the concentration of the caustic solution and a temperature range of from —10° C to +15° C. He states that the fiber to be treated may not only consist of cotton fibers alone but of mixtures of cotton fibers and other materials, such as regenerated cellulose, with the former serving as the main structure.

The Tagliani patent, insofar as pertinent, discloses a mercerizing process for treating natural and artificial cellulosic fibers with mixtures of caustic soda, a phenol and a hydrogenated aromatic compound. Several examples are set forth, one in which a cotton fabric is treated, another in which a viscose fabric is treated. The examples show the use of a 20°Bé (15%) caustic solution for the latter and a 36°Bé (30%) caustic solution for the former.2

[977]*977The board stated that Secrist discloses a treatment with aqueous alkali under conditions which include those conditions set forth in claim 19. The board conceded that Secrist does not disclose the substitution of regenerated cellulose for a greater part or all of the cotton fibers primarily recommended although it noted that Secrist does disclose the addition of regenerated cellulose to the cotton fibers. It was of the opinion that the disclosure of Tagliani (the two examples heretofore mentioned) is sufficient to suggest moderation of the alkaline treatment of Secrist when employing regenerated cellulose in lieu of cotton fibers. It further took note of a statement in affidavits filed on appellant’s behalf by one Helmut Zahn, a Professor in Chemistry at the Chemical Institute of the University of Heidelberg, to the effect that the greater sensitivity of regenerated cellulose than natural cellu-losic materials, such as cotton, to alkali is a matter of common knowledge in the art. In the light of the Tagliani teachings and the concessions made in the Zahn affidavits the board was of the opinion that no invention would reside in the substitution of regenerated cellulose for the cotton fibers of Secrist.

Appellant takes issue with the board and contends that the ranges of caustic concentration, time of treatment and temperature set forth in claim 19 are critical; that regenerated cellulose is much more sensitive to caustic than the cotton fibers of Secrist and that, therefore, one using the upper ranges of Secrist with respect to time of treatment and temperature of regenerated cellulose fibers would destroy the fibers; that even if the preferred ranges of Secrist are used, his maximum preferred concentration is 3% greater than appellant’s maximum concentration and that regenerated cellulose would be destroyed by such a concentration of caustic soda; that the preliminary cleaning of the fibers by boiling and bleaching preferred by Secrist would as well destroy regenerated cellulose; that Tagliani’s teachings are erroneous in that they do not make any distinction between natural and regenerated cellulose fibers with respect to their treatment with caustic (as the affidavits of Zahn say must be made) and that, therefore, Tagliani is not a valid reference against claim 19; that Tagliani does not subject regenerated cellulose fabric to caustic soda alone but, rather, in the presence of phenols and other organic substances and that his teachings do not therefore demonstrate the effect of caustic soda on regenerated cellulose.

Appellant concludes his argument with a belated contention (it was first made at oral argument) that the teachings of Tagliani may not be combined with those of Secrist since Secrist is concerned with the treatment of fibers whereas Tagliani applies his mercerizing process [978]*978to fabrics 3 and tbat the problems involved with respect to each are vastly different.

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245 F.2d 481, 44 C.C.P.A. 974, 114 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 287, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-eisenhut-ccpa-1957.