In re Sullivan

121 F.2d 486, 28 C.C.P.A. 1273, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 66, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1941
DocketNo. 4476
StatusPublished

This text of 121 F.2d 486 (In re Sullivan) 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 Sullivan, 121 F.2d 486, 28 C.C.P.A. 1273, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 66, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 104 (ccpa 1941).

Opinion

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of tlie court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the Primary Examiner rejecting claims 48 to 66, inclusive, in appellant’s application for a patent for an alleged invention relating to a “grout” for treating the earth’s strata (particularly for use in wells, such as oil wells, for sealing or blocking off crevices, etc.), and a method of using the same.

Appellant states in his application that his grout “consists of com-minuted paper, rag pulp, wood pulp, asbestos, or other fibrous compounds either alone or in combination with emulsified asphalt, liquid rubber or tar or precipitating agents working in connection with Silicate of Soda; such as, Calcium Chloride, Bi-Carbonate of Soda, Aluminum Sulphate, Sodium Chloride, lime or other alkalies either in powder or in solution, and with or Avithout Portland or other hydraulic cement”; that the “comminuted paper, wood pulp, rag pulp, asbestos, or fibrous body is forced into the strata with water or a mixture of emulsified asphalt or Sodium Silicate pumped into the strata and allowed to react with an admixture of comminuted paper already containing alkalies or brine which the paper or strata may contain and react with the Sodium Silicate. If the comminuted paper, pulp, asbestos, or strata does not contaim, sufficient alkalies to react with the Sodiu/m Silicate which cam be shown by test beforehcmd, [1275]*1275then sufficient alkalies, such as Soda, Bi-Carbonate of Soda, Calcium Chloride or Aluminum Sulphate, etc., as already mentioned can be added to the comminuted paper, pulp, or asbestos to accomplish the purpose”; that the action of the comminuted paper “is to cause a precipitation and swell and react with the other chemicals”; and that his material can be forced into the earth with either air or water. [Italics ours.]

Claims 48, 49, 53, and 60 are illustrative of the appealed claims. They read:

48. A grouting for earth’s stratas comprising a mass of comminuted organic fibrous materials and water adapted for application by pressure.
49. In drilling wells through oil sand strata the method of preventing oil or water contained therein from leaking into the well hole which consists in introducing into the well hole a sealing medium comprising an oil vehicle and a pulpy sealing agent, and applying pressure within said hole to force the sealing medium downwardly into said hole and against the side wall thereof and into the crevices of the oil or water bearing sand strata facing on said well hole walls to seal the same against further leaks.
53. In the drilling of well holes, the method of preventing loss of drilling fluid into openings in the well wall which consists in incorporating in the drilling fluid sugar cane fibers that have been substantially desugared, and of graded lengths within the range up to one inch, pumping the resulting composition into the well hole and to the openings in the formation to form a seal therein against the loss of fluid therethrough.
60. In a method of treating an earth formation containing an alkaline earth metal salt brine which formation is penetrated by a well bore, the step which consists in introducing into the well bore and thence into the formation rubber latex whereby the latex is coagulated on contacting the brine, forming a rubber coagulum in the brine-bearing passages of the formation.

The references are:

Clapp, 1,589,512, June 22, 1926.
Clapp, 1,668,760, May 8, 1928.
Kirschbraun et al., 1,708,926, April 9, 1929.

The references were cited against appealed claim 48.

Claims 49 to 66, inclusive, were copied by appellant from issued patents for interference purposes. Claims 49 to 52, inclusive, of which claim 49 is illustrative, were copied from the patent to McQuiston, No. 2,064,936, issued December 22, 1936, on an application filed January 14, 1935; claims 53 to 59, inclusive, of which 53 is illustrative, were copied from the patent to Parsons, No. 2,119,829, issued June 7, 1938, on an application filed May 12, 1936; and claims 60 to 66, inclusive, of which claim 60 is illustrative, were copied from the patent to Irons, No. 2,121,036, issued June 21, 1938, on an application filed October 31, 1936.

The Clapp patent, No. 1,589,512, relates to a cement asphalt composition capable of being molded or formed into sheets. The constituents in the patentee’s composition are fibrous material (such as [1276]*1276asbestos fiber, cotton, fibers, chemical or mechanical wood pulp, fine sawdust or wood flour), water, asphalt, Portland cement, and sodium silicate. The patentee states that his composition may be put to a great variety of uses.

The Clapp patent, No. 1,668,760, relates to a “thermo-plastic pulp.” The patentee’s composition contains several constituents, such as asphalt, rosin, Montan wax, sodium silicate, water, wood flour, or finely divided sawdust, China wood oil, chemical wood pulp, “mixed papers, rags, hair, rope stock, etc.” The patentee’s thermo-plastic material may be used for a variety of purposes, such, for example, as waterproof board.

The patent to Kirschbraun et al. relates to waterproof paper, in which an adhesive binder (such as asphaltic or bituminous material) is incorporated with paper stock, and to a process of making such paper. The patentee’s composition includes “fibrous stock,” emulsified asphalt, silicate of soda, aluminum sulphate, and water.

Appealed claim 48 was rejected by the Primary Examiner, as we understand his decision, on the ground that both the patent to Clapp, No. 1,668,760, and the Kirschbraun et al. patent disclose “a composition comprising comminuted paper or its equivalent, water, silicate of soda and- an agent adapted to react with, the silicate of soda to form a precipitate.''’ [Italics ours.] The examiner further stated in his decision that the “silicate of soda disclosed by Glapp (1,668,760) and Kirschbraun will cause the coagulation of-the comr position disclosed whether placed in the soil or elsewhere. To add Portland cement to the Glapp (1,668,760) or Kirschbraun composition to malte it hard * * * is not, deemed to involve invention in vielo of Glapp (1,589,61%).” [Italics ours.]

In his discussion, the examiner included along with claim 48, claims 45 and 46 which, although rejected by the Board of Appeals in its original decision, were subsequently allowed by the board.

In its original decision rejecting appealed claim 48 along with claims 45, 46, and 47 (hereinafter referred to), the Board of Appeals stated that those claims did not include “silicate of soda or the equivalent”; that they involved “a bituminous dispersion together with other ingredients”; and that, as in the “making of roads it is a common practice to employ bituminous materials and the equivalent of bituminous dispersion,” it would be obvious “to make a grouting for use on roads which involves merely a bituminous dispersion together with fibrous material and Portland cement shown by the references. These ingredients would accomplish nothing more than the usual bituminous material and cement usually employed in making roads.

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121 F.2d 486, 28 C.C.P.A. 1273, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 66, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sullivan-ccpa-1941.