In Re Switzer

166 F.2d 827, 35 C.C.P.A. 1013
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1948
DocketPatent Appeals 5343
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 166 F.2d 827 (In Re Switzer) 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 Switzer, 166 F.2d 827, 35 C.C.P.A. 1013 (ccpa 1948).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the action of the Primary Examiner in rejecting claims 24 and 25 in appellants’ application for a patent for “certain new and useful improvements in Preserving Caustic Soda from Contamination.”

The claims in issue read as follows:

“24. A coating composition adapted to be applied to metal surfaces for service in. the presence of caustic soda which comprises a relatively small proportion of carbon black, a relatively large proportion of polystyrene having a molecular weight ranging from about 50,000 to about 100,000, and a solvent for the polystyrene, the proportion of polystyrene present being several times the proportion of carbon black present, said composition being free from saponifiable material.
“25. A coating composition adapted to-be applied to metal surfaces for service in the presence of caustic soda which consists of several parts of polystyrene having a molecular weight ranging from about 50,-000 to about 200,000, about one part of carbon black a relatively small proportion of a plasticizer selected from the group consisting of diamyl naphthalene and chlorinated diphenyls, and ..a solvent for the polystyrene and the plasticizer.”

The references are: British Patent 402,-877, Dec. 14, 1933; Waldeck 2,111,342, Mar. 15, 1938; Stoesser et al. 2,166,557, July 18, 1939; Hempel-2,198,939, Apr. 30, 1940; Dittmar 2,211,689, Aug. 13, 1940; Allen 2,273,822, Feb. 24, 1942.

The claims hereinbefore recited are directed to a coating composition adapted to-be applied to metal surfaces for service in the presence of caustic soda. Claims 9, 17, 18, and 19, directed to a method of preserving caustic soda in metallic containers-from contamination with the metals of the-containers, have been allowed.

Appellants concede that the limitations as to the molecular weight of the polystyrene that are specified in claims 24 and 25, ranging respectively from about 50,000 to about 100,000, and from about 50,000 to 200,000, are not such as to define a polystyrene that is in any sense a novel product per se.

Appellants further concede that various plastic materials including finely-divided solids have been known and used in the art as the essential film-forming ingredient in coating compositions of the general class here involved, and that such coating compositions when applied to metal containers have protected the metal against chemical attack “to a considerable extent.”

Furthermore, the point, that the use of a chlorinated diphenyl as a plasticizer for the polystyrene is old in the art, is a point which “appellants herein always have freely conceded.”

*829 Appellants contend, however, that prior to the development of the respective coating compositions defined by the claims on appeal, no composition was known which when applied to metal containers would afford protection to the metal against hot concentrated caustic soda for a prolonged period of time.

Appellants allege that the ability of a coating composition to afford prolonged protection to the metal against chemical attack by hot highly concentrated caustic soda was obtained by them as the result of the incorporation of certain finely-divided solid materials in the polystyrene of the coating composition.

Appellants further allege that many of the finely-divided solid materials commonly used as fillers or pigments in the production of coating compositions cannot be used in their compositions, because such fillers or pigments react with caustic soda; and they discoverd that for some reason which they are still unable to explain, carbon black was substantially inert to caustic soda and was greatly superior to any other finely-divided solid material in a coating composition for the purpose of providing prolonged protection to metal containers.

Appellants contend that the incorporation of carbon black in the essential film-forming ingredient of their coating composition has resulted in the patentable subject matter defined by the appealed claims.

Claim 24 defines a composition which comprises (1) a relatively small proportion of carbon black, (2) a relatively large proportion of polystyrene, and (3) a solvent for the polystyrene. The claim includes the additional limitation that the composition be free from saponifiable material.

Claim 25 defines a composition which consists of (1) several parts of polystyrene, (2) one part of carbon black, (3) a plasticizer selected from the group consisting of diamyl naphthalene and chlorinated diphenyls, and (4) a solvent for the polystyrene and the plasticizer.

Appellants have confined their "appeal; herein to a review of the ground upon which product claims 24 and 25 were rejected, but it is necessary to consider also the ground upon which the board rejected certain closely related claims that were not appealed to this court.

In fact, the subject matter of the claims for the composition is so closely related to the subject matter of the claims for the method that the tribunals of the Patent Office in rejecting certain of appellants’" claims for method did not wholly differentiate between the ground upon which those claims were rejected and the ground upon which they rejected appellants’ claims 24 and 25 for the composition.

The subject matter was described generally by the examiner as follows: “The invention relates to a process of coating metallic containers with resinous compositions which are resistant to caustic alkali. The composition comprises a relative large proportion of polystyrene having a molecular weight of at least 50,000 and a relative small proportion of finely divided solid which is normally a pigment. The solid is preferably carbon black or titanium dioxide. Also incorporated in the resinous composition may be a plasticizer such as chlorinated diphenyl.”

In the appeal from the action of the examiner in finally rejecting appellants’ claims 20 to 25, inclusive, the Board of Appeals-recited method claim 20, which was not appealed to this court, as illustrative of the subject matter of all such claims, and stated: “Appellants found that prior art metal coatings would not be effective against hot caustic soda at 210°F. or in excess of 140° F. and their invention is said to remove this defect due to the use in their composition of á small amount of pigment or finely divided solid (titanium dioxide or carbon). Reference is made to the molecular weight of the polymer but in view of the broad terminology employed in the claims in referring to the molecular weight, it seems that. they are intended to cover the usual prior art polymers providing that they contain sufficient pigment.”

Certain of the comments quoted from the decisions of the examiner and the board seemingly were occasioned by the following from the specification:

"* * * A number of such coatings have been proposed, but so far as we are aware none of these coatings is durable *830 under severe conditions of use such as encountered in storage or shipment of very ■strong caustic soda solutions at high temperatures, say in excess of 140°F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 F.2d 827, 35 C.C.P.A. 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-switzer-ccpa-1948.