In re Jewett

247 F.2d 953, 45 C.C.P.A. 714, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 134, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1957
DocketNo. 6268
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 247 F.2d 953 (In re Jewett) 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 Jewett, 247 F.2d 953, 45 C.C.P.A. 714, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 134, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 166 (ccpa 1957).

Opinion

Johnson, Chief Judge,

delievered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office rejecting claims 9, 10, and 11 of the appellants’ application No. 450,149, filed August 16,1954, for “Plano-graphic Printing Plate.”

Claims 7-11, which appellants had substituted for finally rejected claims 1-5, were originally before the board for its consideration. The board’s rejection of claims 7 and 8, on the ground of double patenting over claims allowed in appellants’ prior application No. 199,566, filed December 6, 1950,2 has not been assigned as error and thus is not before this court for review.

Claim 11 is illustrative and reads as follows:

11. A presensitized, dimensionally stable plate suitable for lithographic printing and related uses, and capable of being shipped in light-proof packages, stored and then used weeks or months after manufacture, comprising an aluminum sheet having on at least one surface thereof a permanently hydrophilic scum-preventing and tone-reducing film, said film overlying and being firmly bonded to said surface of said sheet and being substantially free of water-soluble material, said film being further characterized in that it will cause an in situ insolubilized diazo image strongly to adhere to the surface of the sheet, and over and in contact with said film a thin coating'of a light-sensitive diazo resin, said light-sensitive material being characterized in that, upon exposure of the plate to ultra-violet light through a stencil or negative, it will react in the exposed portions, expelling nitrogen from the molecule and forming a water-insoluble hydrophobic and organophilic material which is tightly bonded to said permanently hydrophilic film, providing a printing image, the light-sensitive resin material being readily washed away from the unexposed areas, leaving the permanently hydrophilic film bare in said areas, said hydrophilic film being further characterized in that it will prevent the metal from causing decomposition of the diazo light-sensitive material, thus providing long shelf life for the presensitized plate.

[716]*716The alleged invention relates to presensitized lithographic printing plates, capable of being stored and then used long after their date of manufacture. These plates comprise three essential elements:

(1)A supporting metal base sheet of aluminum or other related metal,

• (2) an intermediate, isolating layer or film which is hydrophilic, scum-preventing and tone-reducing, and

(3) a surface layer composed of a light-sensitive, water-soluble diazo resin.

In use, a desired configuration on the light-sensitive layer is exposed to light, rendering such configuration water insoluble and or-ganophilic. The sensitive layer is developed by washing with water, thus removing the light-sensitive resin from the unexposed area. The water-dampened surface is coated with a greasy ink which adheres only to the exposed (organophilic) portions of the surface layer.

The references relied upon are:

Kalle (French), 904,255, Feb. 19, 1945.
Clerc: “La Technique Des Reproductions Photomechaniques” — Vol. 1, 1947; Publ. by Etablissements Bouzard-Calmels, Paris: Pages 356, 357 and 500-519.

The French patent to Kalle discloses a plate suitable for lithographic printing comprising, in one embodiment, three elements generally corresponding to those in appellants’ plate:

(1) A supporting base sheet of aluminum or zinc,

(2) an intermediate porous layer on said sheet of oxidized, fluorine or phosphorous containing compounds of aluminum, applied by a chemical or electrochemical process, and

(3) a surface layer composed of a water-soluble, light-sensitive diazo compound.

Upon exposure to light of a desired configuration, said configuration is insolubilized. The plate surface is washed with water thus removing the unexposed portions of the diazo compound. The dampened plate is then ready for printing.

The Clerc publication refers to the French patent and also contains descriptions of lithographic “desensitization” techniques to be used in conjunction with-diazo-coated metallic sheets.

The examiner rejected claims 9-11 on two grounds: (1) as failing to properly define the asserted invention, and (2) as unpatentable over the French patent to Kalle or the Clerc publication. The board, in reviewing the examiner’s rejection, was of the opinion that both [717]*717rejections were subject to the same considerations and were related to one another since the examiner was of the opinion that the claims fail properly to define the asserted invention in such a way as to escape the references. The board accordingly considered both rejections together.

Appellants contend that the board’s action in considering the rejections together amounts to an express reversal of the examiner’s first ground of rejection or, at the least, to an implied reversal and that, therefore, this ground of rejection is not properly before this court. The Commissioner, on the other hand, argues that the board did not expressly reverse the examiner as to any ground of rejection and that, therefore, both grounds are before us. In the view we take of this case, it is not necessary to decide this question, as will hereinafter be seen.

The board, conceding that invention resided in the lithographic printing plate disclosed by appellants (as evidenced by allowed claims in appellants’ prior application heretofore mentioned), was of the opinion that the general combination of elements claimed was anticipated by the French patent and that the invention, if any, resided in the intermediate layer of the combination. It concluded that the description of said layer in terms of its obviously desirable characteristics was not sufficient to patentably define over the French patent. In its rejection, the board also relied upon the disclosure of the Clerc article, though appellants contend that it is not clear whether the board was using said disclosure to supplement that of the French patent or by itself as a separate and distinct reference. We are of the opinion that the board considered them independently, each as an individually effective reference against the claims; we, accordingly, will consider them in the same manner.

Claim 11 has been hereinbefore set forth. Appellants do not dispute the board’s finding that the aluminum base and diazo resin recited therein are shown by the French patent. They do contend, however, that the intermediate layer recited in this claim is not shown by said patent. Appellants’ intermediate layer is defined by the following characteristics: (1) permanently hydrophilic; (2) scum-preventing; (3) tone-reducing; (4) it overlies and is firmly bonded to the surface of the aluminum; (5) it is substantially free of water-soluble material; (6) it will cause an in situ insolubilized diazo image strongly to adhere to the surface of the aluminum; (7) it will prevent the metal from causing decomposition of the diazo light-sensitive material. Appellants further contend that claim 11 inherently includes limitations [718]*718to the effect that the intermediate film is non-porous and is an isolating layer.3

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Bluebook (online)
247 F.2d 953, 45 C.C.P.A. 714, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 134, 1957 CCPA LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jewett-ccpa-1957.