In re Ellis

93 F.2d 212, 25 C.C.P.A. 800, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 228
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 1937
DocketNo. 3868
StatusPublished

This text of 93 F.2d 212 (In re Ellis) 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 Ellis, 93 F.2d 212, 25 C.C.P.A. 800, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 228 (ccpa 1937).

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 1, 3, 4, 9 to 12, inclusive, 21 to 24, inclusive, 28, 30, 33, 35, 37, 39, 40, 42, 44 to 48, inclusive, 53, and 54 in appellants’ application for a patent for an alleged invention relating to the “synthetic production of hard, stiff, board-like bodies * * * of high tensile strength, which are highly non-water absorbent, and [801]*801which have a small co-efficient of expansion in the presence of moisture.”

The references are:

Smith et al., 1,809,316, June 9, 1931;
Darrah, 1,856,946, May 3, 1932.

Claims 1, 4, 9, 53, and 54 are-illustrative of the process claims. They read:

1. A process for the purpose described, consisting in emulsifying a raw vegetable drying oil, mixing the emulsion with pulped raw wood stock, precipitating the emulsion, manipulating the mass to form a thick porous sheet, drying the sheet to remove substantially ninety-five per cent of water, and then simultaneously pressing and heating the sheet, in a manner to harden the oil to produce a stiff, hard sheet, in from fifteen to forty minutes.
4. A process for the purpose described consisting in mixing an emulsion of ‘a vegetable drying oil with pulped wood stock, manipulating the mass thus prepared to form- a sheet, drying the sheet and then simultaneously pressing and heating the sheet at pressures toithin the range of from three hundred to sim hundred pounds per square inch, at temperatures ranging from three hundred to five hundred degrees Fahrenheit, for periods ranging from twenty minutes to one hour.
9. A process for the purpose described consisting of emulsifying a mixture of rano vegetable oil and size, using an amount of oil substantially ivithim, the range of five to twenty per cent of the weight of the finished product, emulsifying the oil by using a weight of water substantially equal to the weight of oil, and adding to the water a weight of size substantially ivithin the range of two to five per cent of the weight of the oil, mixing the water-size with the oil, mixing the emulsion with the pulped wood stock, manipulating the mass to form a sheet, drying the sheet and then simultaneously pressing and heating the sheet, in a manner to harden the oil to produce a stiff, hard sheet.
53. The process of making a hard vegetable fiber product having great water resisting properties which comprises mixing raw vegetable fibers with that amount of raw drying oil which will polymerize substantially simultaneously throughout the whole fiber mass when heat is applied, drying the product to remove substantially all the moisture, and simultaneously heating and pressing the product.
54. The process for making a hard board of very high tensile strength and having good water resisting properties which comprises mixing a siccative oil with water-containing pulped vegetable matter, making a sheet, removing moisture from the sheet so that it does not contain a total moisttore substantially more than thirty per cent by weight of the finished product, and then submitfe# this sheet to combined action of heat and pressure. (Except the word “submitted,” italics ours.)

Claim 21, which is illustrative of the product claims, reads:

21. A hard highly water-resistant board-like body consisting of pulped vegetable material mixed with a vegetable oil, the oil constituting only five to ten per cent of the weight of the body.

Appellants’ composition board is made by emulsifying a raw vegetable siccative or drying oil, water, and a size (such as rosin), mixing the emulsion with wood pulp, manipulating the mass so formed into [802]*802a thick porous sheet, drying the sheet to remove substantially 70 per centum of the water, as stated in substance in claim 54, or substantially 95 per centum of the water, as stated in claim 1, then subjecting the sheet to pressure within the range of from 300 to 600 pounds per square inch, and simultaneously heating it from 20 minutes to one hour at temperatures ranging from 300° to 500° F., as stated in claim 4.

In claim 9 it is stated that the emulsion is prepared by emulsifying an amount of oil, “substantially within the range of five to twenty per cent of the weight of the finished product,” with water, substantially equal to the weight of the oil, and size “within the range of two to five per cent of the weight of the oil.”

Claim 53 calls for an amount of oil “which will polymerize substantially simultaneously throughout the whole fiber mass when heat is applied.”

Appellants state in their specification that the oils used in preparing their emulsions are “tung oil [Chinawood oil], perilla oil, soybean oil, corn oil or linseed oil”; that the use of rosin in “greater amount than oil” lessens the tensile strength of the finished product ; that it has been discovered that good proportions are “six of oil — ■ four of rosin; seven of oil — three of rosin”; and that good products are obtained by the use of Chinawood oil or soybean oil in quantities ranging from 5 to 30 percentum by weight and rosin size in quantities’ ranging from 1 to 5 per centum of the weight of the oil.

. The patent to Smith et al. relates to synthetic boards or other articles, and a process for making the same. The reference discloses 'the use of wood pulp, such as pine, spruce, etc., containing a rosin. The chips of wood from which the pulp is. produced are first subjected to a steam distillation process for the extraction of turpentine, .then treated with naphtha or gasoline to dissolve the rosin (about 5 to 6 per centum of rosin remaining in the chips), and then ground or shredded, “preferably with water, to form a pulp,” to which pulp is added a suitable quantity of a siccative or drying oil, such as linseed oil or “china wood oil,” or “semi-drying oils, such as soy bean •oil, fish oil, etc.” (It is stated in the patent that other wood pulp might be used and rosin added to the oils.) The oil is beaten into the pulp, the excess water is removed, and the mixture is manipulated into the form of a board or other desired shape and dried at! temperatures ranging from 180° to 400° F. The patentees state that “During the drying, the'rosin and drying oil interact to form a water resistant film over the surface of the fibers. If a consolidating pressure is applied during the drying, a dense board not pervious to water .may be produced. ■ It is preferred to compress the board during the drying operation to form a board of this character. However, by [803]

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Bluebook (online)
93 F.2d 212, 25 C.C.P.A. 800, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ellis-ccpa-1937.