In re Kokatnur

135 F.2d 933, 30 C.C.P.A. 1025, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 560, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1943
DocketNo. 4605
StatusPublished

This text of 135 F.2d 933 (In re Kokatnur) 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 Kokatnur, 135 F.2d 933, 30 C.C.P.A. 1025, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 560, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 48 (ccpa 1943).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The application for patent, three claims of which (numbered 2, 4, and 7) are here involved relates to “Lubricant Greases.”

Nine claims for method of making lubricant grease and two product claims in which the grease is defined by appellants’ process of making it are listed in the record as allowed.

The three claims on appeal are product claims. They were rejected by the examiner on prior art. Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals it affirmed the examiner’s decision and the instant appeal to this court was taken.

The appealed claims read:

2. A lubricant grease which is neither substantially alkaline nor acid in reaction characterized by the fact that when distilled with at least an equal volume of kerosene, it congeals to a homogeneous, non-fibrous pasty consistency without 'separation of its constituent phases.
4. An anhydrous grease which is neither substantially alkaline nor acid in reaction for use at high lubricant temperatures and pressure, consisting of mineral lubricating oil, homogeneously mixed with anhydrous soap and characterized by the fact that it is stable when distilled with at least an equal volume of kerosene and congeals to a homogeneous, non-fibrous pasty consistency without separation of its constituent phases.
7. A lubricant grease which is neither substantially alkaline nor acid in reaction and which includes lubricant oils homogeneously combined with an anhydrous soap and which is characterized by the fact that it will liberate no more than Vioth of 1% of water when distilled with at least an equal volume of kerosene and which is stable when so distilled and congeals to a homogeneous, non-fibrous pasty consistency without separation of its constituent phases.

The references relied upon are the following patents:

Kokatnur, 1,753,659, April 8, 1930.
Lauer, 1,912,001, May 30, 1933.
Kaufman, 1,971,750, August 28, 1984.

[1026]*1026It will be observed that the inventor in the first cited patent is one of the joint applicants in the instant case. Two affidavits made by him were introduced during the prosecution of the joint application in the Patent Office to which we shall later allude.

The nature of the product involved in the appealed claims is evident from the claims themselves, but we quote the following from the brief for appellants:

The Board of Appeals lias apparently taken the position that appellants are claiming an anhydrous grease, although claim 4 is the only one which specifies >“an anhydrous grease.” What appellants are claiming is a lubricating grease which upon being distilled with at least an equal volume of kerosene will congeal to an homogeneous, non-fibrous pasty consistency without separation of its constituent phases. The question then is whether the greases produced by Lauer and Kaufmanw will congeal to an homogeneous non-fibrous pasty consistency without separation of their constituent phases when distilled with an. equal volume of kerosene.

In his statement, following the appeal to the board, the examiner described the disclosures of the respective references as follows:

The patent to Kokatnur discloses the preparation of an anhydrous soap gel by distilling a mixture of a soap forming ingredient, an alkali and a hydrocarbon which boils at a temperature above that of water. There is no statement in the patent that the grease has only .1% moisture therein, but since the same process is used it would inherently have this low moisture content.
In lines 8 to 11 inclusive of page 2 of this patent there is a disclosure of using this soap gel in the preparation of a mineral oil grease.
The Kaufman patent discloses the preparation of an anhydrous grease. According to the analyses of the greases set out in examples 1 to 8 inclusive on pages 3 and 4 of this patent there is produced a grease that is anhydrous and free of free alkali.
The Lauer patent discloses the preparation of a sodium, calcium, aluminum grease which would be substantially anhydrous and substantially neutral in reaction. Attention is directed to lines 9 to 25 inclusive of page 3 of this patent for a disclosure of a dehydrated grease.

The accuracy of the foregoing description does not seem to be challenged by appellants, but it is argued, in substance, with respect to the Kokatnur patent, that it is for an anhydrous soap gel, and does not disclose either a lubricating grease or a method by which lubricating grease could be made from such soap gel.

Referring to an example (I) given in the Kokatnur patent, appellants’ brief before us states:

* * * the hydrocarbon diluent, used to remove the water, is “high-flash mineral oil such as high-flash and high-boiling petroleum oils or any motor oil.” Such an oil would be kerosene or gasoline and would not be lubricating. There is no disclosure of adding lubricating oil to take the place of it, and nothing in the patent would indicate that this could be done.

It is pointed' out in the- brief of the- Solicitor for the Patent Office that the Kokatnur patent states: “Such gels are useful as lubricat[1027]*1027ing soap-greases and, due to the absence of water and its hydrolozing action on soap, have no chemical action on metal surfaces.”

The foregoing appears in the text of example I referred to, and it was alluded to, although not quoted, by the examiner, who seeing' to have construed it as disclosing using the soap gel in the preparation of a mineral oil grease.

If the statement of the patent is to be taken at its face value, it seems to us to be more than a teaching of the use of the soap gel as an ingredient in the preparation of some other article. The particular part of the statement to which we allude is “Such gels are useful as lubricating soap-greases.” (Italics supplied.) That statement must have been intended to mean that the soap gels in and of themselves are useful as lubricating greases. It, therefore, seems to us that the rejection based upon the Kokatnur patent alone was proper.

However, we have considered the other references.

We quote from the examiner’s statement the following paragraphs r

Claims 2, 4 and 7 were rejected as being met by the patent to Kaufman. The grease of this reference, according.to the analyses set out in the eight "examples in this patent has no water present. Moreover these same analyses1 of the greases in these eight examples do not have present any substantial amount of alkali in the grease compositions. Example 6 states the grease to be neutral. Owing to the lack of moisture and alkali in the grease composition or. compositions of this patent it is the Examiner’s belief that the grease of this reference inherently possesses the properties of being homogeneous, stable, nonfibrous, and of pasty consistency.

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135 F.2d 933, 30 C.C.P.A. 1025, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 560, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kokatnur-ccpa-1943.