In re Sackett

135 F.2d 227, 30 C.C.P.A. 950, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 318, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1943
DocketNo. 4703
StatusPublished

This text of 135 F.2d 227 (In re Sackett) 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 Sackett, 135 F.2d 227, 30 C.C.P.A. 950, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 318, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 35 (ccpa 1943).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:1

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office. The Primary Examiner rejected all of appellant’s claims, 1 to 15, inclusive, and 17, in what appellant states is a continuation-in-part application for a patent relating to an alleged invention involving the use of a combination material for filling* the space between the inner and outer soles of a shoe and imparting other characteristics to the shoe. The claims on appeal relate to a method of making" the shoe, the shoe when made according to the method, and the shoe filler composition.

[951]*951Claims 11,14,15, and 17 recite elements which involve precipitation. These claims among others had been rejected by the examiner upon the prior art. Appellant in this court moves to dismiss the appeal as to them. Said motion will be granted.

Claim 1 contains the limitation here in controversy, as do all the others, and is therefore illustrative of all the claims on appeal. Claim 1 reads:

1. Method of making shoes, which comprises the step of applying between the inner and outer soles a uniform' composition comprising a gelatinous precipitate as a sleeking agent and a resinous material characterized, 6y being derived from resinous wood and containing 50% or more insoluble in aliphatic hydrocarbon liquids, in a liquid solvent vehicle containing a volatile component, a plasticizer, and a granular body material. [Italics ours.]

The invention is well described by the Primary Examiner in the following language: ,

In the manufacture of shoes, the bottom margins of the upper and the welt, if one is present, are interposed between the marginal portions of the insole and outsole. A cavity is thereby formed between the central portions of these two soles, and this cavity is conventionally filled with a plastic filler. This application relates to a specific composition for use as such a filler. The filler composition described is made by combining a cellulose ester, a resinous material, plasticizer, suitable solvents for these various components, and granular cork. The cellulose ester acts as a sleeking agent and may be cellulose nitrate or cellulose acetate obtained from film scrap. The resinous material is “obtained by the solvent extraction of resinous woods with benzol and contains approximately 50% or more gasoline or aliphatic hydrocarbon-insoluble material.” [sic] The plasticizer for both the cellulose ester and resinous components may be tricresyl phosphate. Alternatively, the plasticizer for the resinous component may be a mixture of free fatty acids and resinous acids which applicant terms “Pine fatty acids,” but which, more accurately, appears to be tall oil. When this mixture is used as the plasticizer for the resinous component, dibutyl phthalate, a plasticizer for the eellulosic ester, at least, is also used. The granular cork may be wetted with water to prevent the solvents from penetrating the cork.

In view of our conclusion it is not necessary to set out the references which were relied upon by the examiner.

The first ground of rejection on the part of the examiner, which upon appeal was affirmed by the Board of Appeals, was to the effect that the specification of the instant application was indefinite and contained new matter, and that the disclosure was inadequate to support the claims. The examiner also rejected the claims upon the prior art. The last ground of rejection was expressly disapproved by the board and is not of concern here.

In order to understand the holding of the examiner and of the board it is important to carefully consider the disclosure in appellant’s original application, of which the instant application is claimed to be a continuation-in-part, and also to note carefully the disclosure of the instant application and the proposed amendments thereto.

[952]*952Appellant’s original application, filed September 27, 1935 (tlie instant application was filed June 17, 1938), disclosed a composition or mixture to be used as a filling or binding agent between the inner and outer soles of shoes. The composition was composed of “powdered rosin B” and distilled rosin residue in certain quantities, to which were added naphtha, film scrap, tricresyl phosphate, ethyl acetate, and granulated cork. When the cork granules were thoroughly coated, the mixture was ready to use in the liquid state.

All of the appellant’s claims in the original application were rejected on the ground, among others, that they were unduly broad.

As we understand it, “rosin B” is the lowest grade of rosin (which is sometimes called resin) and is chiefly characterized by the fact that it is the residue after most of a valuable constituent, abietic acid, has been removed from the resinous materials extracted from pine. Appellant’s instant disclosure relating to the rosin content (which is the ■•critical matter with which we are concerned) is in the following-language :

* *. * binder component * * * produced by combining a certain resinous material (which, is more particularly obtained by the solvent extraction of resinous woods with benzol and contains approximately 50% or more gasoline or aliphatic hydrocarbon-insoluble material) with * ~ * [other materials].

Appellant sought to amend this last above-quoted disclosure of the instant application by adding thereto language explaining that the resinous material “is composed in considerable proportion or completely of a.resin or a resinous material which is characterized by being substantially insoluble in gasoline.”

While appellant seems to argue here that the disclosure of his instant application is sufficient, he contends that his original disclosure should be considered, since he how claims that his instant application merely more fully describes the material, “rosin B,” disclosed in his first application. In his instant application, as originally filed, no mention was made as to the rosin disclosure in his original application. By subsequent amendments, which were held to be new matter, he sought to link up the disclosures of the two applications and to further more specifically limit the invention by adding additional language, which is not a matter of concern here. He urges here most strenuously, as he did before the tribunals below, that his “rosin B” disclosure is of itself sufficient, and that in the instant application he seeks only to set out a well-recognized description of a weU-known product, rosin B.

Before discussing the holdings of the tribunals below, the query is at once presented: if the above-quoted limitation in the claims at bar merely recites details concerning, or a definition of, “rosin B,” why file a continuation-in-part application at all? No other differences between the two applications have been mentioned as being pei’tinent here.

[953]*953Appellant argues that numerous authorities, such as a bulletin of the Hercules Powder Company (ExhibitA), an article by F. P. Veitch entitled “The Federal Naval Stores Act” (published in vol. 16, No. 6 of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry), The Condensed Chemical

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135 F.2d 227, 30 C.C.P.A. 950, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 318, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sackett-ccpa-1943.