In re Hyson

453 F.2d 764, 59 C.C.P.A. 782, 172 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 399, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 397
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1972
DocketNo. 8617
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 453 F.2d 764 (In re Hyson) 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 Hyson, 453 F.2d 764, 59 C.C.P.A. 782, 172 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 399, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 397 (ccpa 1972).

Opinion

Rich, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 1-12 in appellant’s applica[783]*783tion serial Ho. 614,817, filed February 9, 1967, for “Liquid Uracil Concentrates.” We affirm.

The Subject Matter Claimed

Appellant claims liquid, water-soluble concentrates composed of tbe lithium salts of certain 3,5,6-substituted uracils dissolved in a mixture of water and specified lower alcohols. The specification teaches that these concentrates are useful as herbicides applicable in diluted form by direct-spray techniques. Claims 1 and 3 are representative. (Position numbering and additional subparagraphing are supplied.)

1. A liquid, water soluble, lierbieidal concentrate composed of

20% to 60% by weight of the lithium salt of a uracil of the following formula:

wherein

Ri is methyl or ethyl;

R2 is hydrogen or methyl;

Rs is allryl of 1 through 6 carbon atoms ; and

R4 is halogen ;

in a solvent system composed of

26% to 100% by weight of an alcoholic media [sic] selected from the group consisting of monohydroxy alkanes of 1 through 3 carbon atoms, dihydroxy alkanes of 2 through 3 carbon atoms and mixtures thereof, and

0 to 75% by weight of water or a water miscible liquid.

3. The concentrate of Claim 1 wherein the uracil is 5-bromo-3-see.-butyl-6-methyluraeil.

The References

The references are:

Shmidl- 2, 510,839 June 6, 1950

Yartiak (Canada)- 707,272 Apr. 6, 1965

Loux - 3, 235, 357 Eeb. 15, 1966

Evans - 3,291, 592 Dee. 13, 1966

Loux teaches how to make a large class of uracil compounds the lithium salts of certain of which are used in the concentrates claimed here. Indeed, appellant’s specification incorporates by reference Loux’s [784]*784teachings in that respect. Furthermore, Loux teaches how to prepare the salts of those compounds, including lithium salts, and states that they “are especially advantageous for use as herbicides because they are soluble in water and can be applied as aqueous solutions.” Examples 33, 43, and 44 show aqueous formulations wherein sodium, potassium, or ammonium uracil salts and sodium lauryl sulfate are dissolved in water, the two salts being in proportions of 20 or 25% and 1 or 2% by weight, respectively.

Evans, assigned to the same company as Loux and the present case, teaches the use as growth modification agents of virtually the same large class of uracil compounds (and their salts, including lithium salts) taught by Loux.

Vartiak, which appellant brought to the attention of the Patent Office, teaches liquid formulations of herbicidal uracils containing, inter alia, isopropyl alcohol, methyl alcohol, and ethylene glycol; however, it does not teach the use of the salts of the uracils in this manner.

Shmidl teaches “a carrying agent suitable for use with various herbicides, fungicides, insecticides, and the like.” This carrying agent includes, inter alia, an “organic oxygen-containing solvent” which “may be preferably one of the lower boiling oxygen-containing compounds such as the aliphatic alcohols including methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, butyl, and amyl alcohols” and may also be a glycol “such as ethylene glycol and propylene glycol.”

The Rejection and Appellant's Rebuttal Evidence

All the appealed claims were rejected by the examiner “under Section 103 of Title 35 as unpatentable over Evans or Loux in view of Shmidl or the Canadian patent * * *.” It was his view that, given knowledge of the herbicidal salts themselves, “the mere addition of solvents or diluents to facilitate application would not amount to invention * * *,” a now obsolete way of expressing obviousness under § 103. He entered appellant’s post-final Rule 132 affidavit comparing the particular uracil herbicides and solvents recited in his claims with other uracil herbicides and other solvents but stated that it did “not obviate this rejection for the reason that it merely points out that different compounds may require different solvents. This is well known to any chemist.”

This affidavit compared a solution of 30% by weight 5-bromo-3-sec.-butyl-6-methyluracil (bromacil, the compound specifically recited in claim 3) dissolved in a solution of lithium hydroxide in methanol with (1) a solution of 30% by weight bromacil dissolved in a solution of lithium hydroxide in water, (2) a solution of 30% by weight of the sodium salt of bromacil dissolved in methanol, and (3) a solution of 30% by weight of bromacil dissolved in methanol. The first solution [785]*785“remained a homogeneous solution with no settling of solids,” even when observed “Several weeks later”; the three solutions with which it was compared “all contained significant amounts of settled solids” when “allowed to sit for a short period of time.”1 The affidavit concluded with the following sentence:

On the basis of the observed results and my experience in this area, I conclude that in order to obtain a stable, practical, herbicidal concentrate containing 25% to 50% by weight of the active uracil, the following requirements must be met:
(a) the lithium salt of the uracil must beused,and
(b) the solvent must contain 25 to 100% of an alcoholic media [sic].

In affirming, the board noted appellant’s admissions that the lithium salts recited in his compositions were previously known and that uracil herbicides had been previously formulated in compositions containing alcohols and said “The only thing not shown by the art is the specific compositions of 25 to 50% of the lithium salt of uracil with 25 to 100% of the solvent being an alcohol medium.” The board saw nothing non-obvious about these specific percentages on their face, and, although it considered appellant’s rebuttal evidence in more detail than the examiner had, it found appellant’s evidence of unexpected results unpersuasive on two grounds. First, “The amount of lithium hydroxide which has been added to the uracil compound is not disclosed in * * * [the first two solutions] ” and “The nature of the settled solids * * * was not determined and this sediment may not in any way be related to the fact that the soluble salt was lithium or some other salt.”

Second,

* * * only metbanol was tbe solvent tested and there is nothing to show and no reason to believe that all of the solvents encompassed by the broad language used in the claims would have similar results. Only 30% of the compound was used, which does not prove that 20 to 50% thereof would give the same results!2

[786]*786 Opinion

I. Prima Facie Obviousness

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453 F.2d 764, 59 C.C.P.A. 782, 172 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 399, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hyson-ccpa-1972.