In re Taylor

92 F.2d 705, 25 C.C.P.A. 709, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1937
DocketNo. 3839
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 F.2d 705 (In re Taylor) 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 Taylor, 92 F.2d 705, 25 C.C.P.A. 709, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 210 (ccpa 1937).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming a decision of the examiner de[710]*710nying the patentability of eleven claims, numbered 36 to 46, inclusive, of an application for patent for a process of oil refining. Claims 36 to 39, inclusive, are generic claims. The examiner classes claims 40 to 42, inclusive, as being “sub-generic to claims 36 to 39 and generic to species of converting the sulphur compounds into’ sulphur compounds having higher boiling point.” Claims 43 to; 46, inclusive, are drawn to the species of treating with sulphuric acid. Five claims, numbered 4† to 51, inclusive, are not directly involved in this appeal, they being held by the tribunals of the Patent Office to be “directed to other species which it is believed would become automatically allowable, if generic claims 36-39 are decided to be allowable.”

We quote claims 36, 40 and 45:

36. A process for refining a sulfur-containing petroleum distillate of gasoline boiling range, comprising: sharply fractionating said distillate into a plurality of not substantially overlapping gasoline fractions, at least one of which fractions contains sulfur compounds, separately chemically treating said fraction containing sulfur compounds to convert sulfur compounds into sulfur compounds boiling within the boiling temperature range of one other of said gasoline fractions, separately redistilling said treated fraction to recover the major portion of said treated fraction and eliminate converted sulfur compounds, and blending the redistilled desulfurized portion with another of said gasoline fractions of the distillate having a boiling temperature range including the boiling temperatures of some of the eliminated sulfur compounds.
40. A process for refining a sulfur-containing petroleum distillate of gasoline boiling range, comprising: sharply fractionating said distillate into a plurality of not substantially overlapping gasoline fractions at least one low boiling fraction of which contains sulfur compounds, separately chemically treating said low boiling gasoline fraction to convert sulfur compounds into compounds having boiling temperatures which fall within the boiling temperature range of a higher boiling gasoline fraction of said distillate, separately redistilling the treated fraction in a manner to recover the major portion of said treated fraction and eliminate converted sulfur compounds, and blending the recovered de-sulfurized portion with at least one other of said gasoline fractions of the distillate having a boiling temperature range including the boiling temperatures of some of the eliminated sulfur compounds.
45. A process for refining a sulfur-containing petroleum distillate of gasoline boiling range, comprising: sharply fractionating said distillate into a plurality not substantially overlapping gasoline fractions, more than one of which contains sulfur compounds, separately treating at least two of said sulfur-containing gasoline fractions with sulfuric acid so as to- cause a change in the constitution of the sulfur compounds accompanied by a rise in the boiling temperatures of said sulfur compounds, the boiling temperatures of said converted sulfur compounds being beyond the original boiling temperature ranges of the major portions of the respective treated fractions and within the boiling temperature range of another of said gasoline fractions, separately redistilling said treated fractions to recover the major portions thereof having substantially the same boiling temperature ranges as those of the original fractions and to eliminate converted sulfur compounds, and blending the redistilled portions.

[711]*711The examiner rejected the claims at issue upon prior art and also “as being drawn to an old and exhausted combination.” The latter ground was not referred to in the decision of the board. The prior art references cited are:

Robinson, 910,584, Jan. 26, 1900;
Coast, 1,400,800, Dec. 20, 1821;
Howard et al„ 1,797,145, Mar. 17, 1961;
Morrell, 1,827,537, Oct. 13, 1931;
Wagner, 1,873,728, Aug. 23!, 1932.

All the claims are method claims and no drawing accompanies the application. The steps comprehended in the process, in the combination of which steps the invention is claimed to reside, are four in number. These we give (supplying the numerals) in the language of the concluding portion of the specification:

[i] producing a number of fractions by distillation, [2] treating some or all fractions to change the volatility of sulfur-bearing components by any of known methods, [3] separating said components from the low-sulfur-containing portions by distillation and [4] thereafter combining the resulting desulfurized portions to produce finished material of low sulfur content.

The brief on behalf of appellants, after a general statement relative to process of distilling petroleum to obtain gasoline, says:

Appellants’ invention is particularly concerned with a method, for eUmmating sulfur-hearing suhstanees which could not he removed hy these old methods of treatment. (Italics quoted).

There was no oral argument before us on behalf of appellants, but an elaborate brief was filed originally, and, by permission of the court, a brief in reply to that of the Solicitor for the Patent Office also was filed.

These briefs we have examined with care, and it must be stated that in neither of them does there appear to be specific and definite answers to the adverse findings of the examiner, approved in all respects, although without detailed discussion as to all of them, by the board.

It is well settled, of course, that this court will not reverse concurring decisions of the tribunals of the Patent Office unless we are convinced that such decisions are manifestly erroneous, and the burden rests upon the party appealing to point out and convince us of the error, or errors, alleged.

The examiner gives detailed statements of the features of the prior art deemed by him to be pertinent to the issue, saying, inter alia:

* * * Morrell teaches the process of separating a distillate of the gasoline range into two or more fractions, treating each fraction separately, and then blending the treated fractions. Attention is particularly directed to lines 17 to 64 and lines 95 to 97, page 2 of Morrell. It is to be noted that Morrell teaches the advisability of redistillation of the chemically treated fractions where [712]*712thought necessary before blending said fractions. The applicability of Morrell to the claim is apparent. It is conceded that Morrell does not specifically describe the chemical treatment of each fraction in order to convert the sulphur compounds into such compounds which would fall within the boiling range of another fraction, nevertheless, Morrell does teach the desirability of redistillation, and since the main object of the Morrell process is desulphurization it would be obvious that the distillation would be carried out in such a way as to obtain the greatest possible removal of the objectionable sulphur compounds.

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Bluebook (online)
92 F.2d 705, 25 C.C.P.A. 709, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-taylor-ccpa-1937.