In re Flett

166 F.2d 822, 35 C.C.P.A. 996, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 105, 1948 CCPA LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1948
DocketNo. 5412
StatusPublished

This text of 166 F.2d 822 (In re Flett) 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 Flett, 166 F.2d 822, 35 C.C.P.A. 996, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 105, 1948 CCPA LEXIS 246 (ccpa 1948).

Opinion

Jackson, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming a decision of the Primary Examiner finally rejecting all of the claims 21 to 27 inclusive, of an application for a patent, serial No. 403,457, filed July 21, 1941, entitled “Process for the Preparation of Alkyl Aryl Sulfonates.”

[997]*997Claims 21, 22, 24, and 26 were rejected as unpatentable over the prior art. Claims 23, 25, and 27 were rejected as not reading on the elected species. All claims are for method.

Claim 21 is deemed representative of the subject matter claimed and reads as follows:

21. In the manufacture of alkyl aryl sulfonates, the alkyl side chains of which are derived from petroleum distillates the lower boiling points of which are not below 80° O. at atmospheric pressure and the upper boiling' points of which are not above 350° O. at 25 mm. pressure, by a process involving halogenating the petroleum distillate, condensing the halogenated petroleum distillate with an aromatic compound selected from the group consisting of benzene, toulene, napthalene, phenol, phenetole and monochlorbenzene to form an alkyl, aryl condensation product, sulfonating the resulting alkyl aryl compound and drying the solution of the sulfonate, the improvements which comprise carrying out the halogenation of the petroleum distillate so that between about 10% and about 50% thereof remains unh¿logenated and drying the alkyl aromatic sulfonate solution subsequently produced, said solution containing an appreciable amount of unhalogenated petroleum hydrocarbons from the partial halogenation of the petroleum distillate, by exposing a large surface area thereof to a relatively high temperature for a relatively short time, whereby a solid product substantially free of unsulfonated organic impurities is obtained.

The cited references are:

Schou (British), 20,916, September 20, 1907.
Van Stone, 1,594,390, August 3, 1926.
Coltman, 1,653,390, December 20, 1927.
Eamont, 1,734,260, November 5, 1929.
Heath, 1,852,303, April 5, 1932.
Liberthson, 1,947,861, February 20, 1934.
Bertsch, 1,968,797, July 31, 1934.
Bertsch, 2,047,612, July 14, 1936.
Guenther et al., 2,220,099, November 5,1940.
Flett 2,196,985, April 16, 1940.
Flett, 2,223,364, December 3,1940.
Flett, 2,233,408, March 4, 1941.
Flett, 2,247,365, July 1, 1941.
Flett, 2,283,199, May 19, 1942.
“Elements of Chemical Engineering,” Badger and McCabe, (1931) pages 277 to 281.

Appellent in his brief states that the process defined by the involved claims is for the production of “a commercially successful and widely used washing, cleansing, foaming, wetting, and emulsifying agent which has many of the attributes of ordinary soaps without their disadvantages.” •

The patents to Liberthson, Lamont, Bertsch, Van Stone, Coltman, Heath, the British patent, and the Badger and McCabe reference all disclose the drying of different substances by drum or spray drying.' The Liberthson patent discloses drum drying of sulpho'nates derived [998]*998from petroleum. The Bertsch patent, No. 2,047,612, discloses a spray drying of alkyl sulphates and shows that by such drying unsulpho-nated materials are eliminated from the final product. The Flett patents (all of which issued to appellant herein) were stated by the Primary Examiner to disclose and claim the preparation of alkyl aryl sulphonates by the same general steps as are set out in the rejected claims. The examiner stated that those patents were not relied upon for thé purpose of anticipation, but to show that the rejected claims are unpatentable over the claims of the patents and if they were allowed it wolild result in extending the monopolies already granted for the reason that the involved claims fail to define invention over the patent claims. In other words the Primary Examiner held that, should the involved claims be allowed, it would result in double patenting.

The examiner further rejected the claims as unpatentable over the patent to Guenther et al. in view of all the other auxiliary references.

It appears that appellant filed an affidavit under Buie 75 of the Buies of Practice in the United States Patent Office for the purpose of antedating the Guenther et al. patent. The examiner held that that patent was hot. antedated, giving his reasons, which are not necessary to repeat, for such holding.

The examiner stated that the only issue was whether or not the steps of (a) partial chlorination and (b) drum-drying or spray drying as set out in the claims involved invention. The examiner pointed out that the Flett patent, No. 2,247,365, claims the exact principle of partial chlorination, as defined in the rejected claims, but in different language so that “the only point of departure to be considered is whether step (b) involves invention over the process already patented.” The examiner held no invention to be involved for the reason that drum drying of alkylaryl sulphonates is obvious and such technique was shown to be collectively used in the various auxiliary references.

The Board of Appeals in its decision affirmed the rejection of the claims as made by the examiner, except for the rejection of claims 21, 22, and 24 as unpatentable over the Guenther et al. reference in view of the auxiliary references.

In its decision it was said by the board that the examiner had affirmed and appellant had not denied that he had prior patents claiming the production of a sulphonate by means of steps corresponding to the steps set out in the appealed claims, excluding the drying step. The board stated that the degree of chlorination is expressed in a different way but has the same meaning. It further stated that appellant alleged that, by subjecting the sulphonate produced from petroleum [999]*999distillate chlorination to drum or spray drying so that between about 10% to 50% remains unchlorinated, a superior product is produced.

The board pointed out that appellant lays great stress upon the correlation of the degree of chlorination with the chosen method of drying, by driving off certain unsulphonated compounds as volatile matter which will produce a dried product with a higher percentage of the sought for sulphonate.

The board agreed with the examiner that it would be obvious to employ any high-temperature drying in the Flett patent, No. 2,247,365, or to follow the procedure claimed in the patent by drum drying. It pointed out that the driving off of unsulphonated compounds would not be unexpected, for the reason that it is taught in the Bertsch patent, No. 2,047,612:

In view of our conclusion, we think that appellant’s patent, No. 2,247,365, is fully representative of those used in the rejection of the claims upon appellant’s own patents and it is unnecessary to analyze the remaining ones.

Appellant’s patent, No. 2,247,365, broadly covers the process of producing alkyl aryl sulphonates.

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Bluebook (online)
166 F.2d 822, 35 C.C.P.A. 996, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 105, 1948 CCPA LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-flett-ccpa-1948.