In re Vetter

96 F.2d 999, 25 C.C.P.A. 1187, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1938
DocketNo. 3977
StatusPublished

This text of 96 F.2d 999 (In re Vetter) 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 Vetter, 96 F.2d 999, 25 C.C.P.A. 1187, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 112 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

GaRrett, Presiding 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 rejecting all claims of appellant’s application for patent entitled “Process of Obtaining Anhydrous Sodium Bichromate and Product Thereof.” The claims are numbered 1 to 19, inclusive. Claims 1 to 15, inclusive, are method claims; the others are for the product. At the hearing before us counsel for appellant moved to dismiss the appeal as to claims 1, 4, 7, 10, and 13. This motion will be allowed.

As illustrative of the fourteen claims remaining in the case, we quote the following:

2. A process which comprises crystallizing anhydrous sodium bichromate from an aqueous solution at a temperature above SS° C. under a sub-atmospheric pressure.
6. A process which comprises crystallizing anhydrous sodium bichromate from an aqueous solution of dissolved impurities at a temperature of about 90° O. under a sub-atmospheric pressure of 24 to 25" of mercury.
11. A process which comprises crystallizing anhydrous sodium bichromate from a saturated aqueous solution down to one quarter the volume of the solution at a temperature about 83 °C. under a sub-atmospheric pressure.
14. A process which comprises crystallizing anhydrous sodium bichromate from an aqueous solution of sodium sulphate and sodium chloride at a temperature above 83° G. under a sub-atmospheric pressure, thereby obtaining G. P. anhydrous sodium bichromate.
1C. A granular body of individual - separate crystals of anhydrous sodium bichromate without the presence of decomposition products of sodium bichro-mate.

[1188]*1188The references cited are:

Caspari, 1,003,875, Sept. 19', 1911.
Harms, 1,976,936, Oet. 16, 1934.
Elmer, 1,944,548, Jan. 23, 1934.
Briscoe, 1,443,616, Jan. 80, 1923.
British, 105,222, Jan. 17, 1918.
Chemical Abstracts, Yol. 25 (1931) page 4091.
Seidell — Solubilities of Inorganic and Organic Compounds, Vol. 1, page '650, Yan Nostrand, 1919, Copy in Division 59.

In the statement of the examiner after the appeal to the board is found the following:

This application is directed to a process of producing anhydrous sodium bichromate. An aqueous solution of sodium bichromate containing dissolved impurities, such as sodium sulphate and chloride, is heated at a temperature above 83° C. and preferably not higher than 90° C. to drive off the water. * * *
The process is operated under reduced pressure, to increase the efficiency of the evaporating step and to obviate the necessity for heating to higher temperatures.

The patent to Caspari is for a process of making granular sodium bichromate. He starts, according to the specification, “from crystallized bichromate of sodium obtained as small crystals by crystallization in motion, or from some similar form of the water containing salt granulated e. g. by grinding and screening.” The substance is dehydrated, by a process described, it being taught that — “The dehydration proceeds without any material change of the form of the crystals or of the granules and without any formation of dust.”

The patents to Briscoe, Ebner, and Harms show processes of evaporation of various salts by use of a vacuum that is under sub-atmospheric pressure. The patent to Tucker relates to a process for the reclamation and saving of the unused excess of sodium or potassium bichromate from waste liquor baths. It points out that a vacuum evaporator may be used in carrying out the process. Also, it teaches that when the bichromates have been recovered in crystal form, they “may then be further purified by resolution in boiling water and recooling, when very pure crystals are obtained.”

The publication of Seidell discloses the temperatures, concentrates, and solid phase for two forms of sodium dichromate (which is the same as sodium bichromate). One of these forms contains water of crystallization; the other is the anhydrous form.

The Chemical Abstracts publication contains a paragraph on the purification of technical sodium dichromate in which pure sodium dichromate is obtained in hydrated form by a process of crystallization.

We first consider the product claims.

[1189]*1189In the statement of the examiner it is said:

Claims 1 to 19, all the claims, stand rejected on Caspari in view of Seidell for the temperature of crystallization and the other references for the reduced pressure feature.

The product claims, 16 to 19, were also rejected on the Chemical Abstracts publication in view of Seidell, it being said:

Chem. Abstracts discloses a method for obtaining pure dihydrate of Na2 Cr2 Or. To dehydrate this product-by heating is not patentable, nor by recrystallization at 90° from aqueous solutions in view of Seidell.

The broad statement in the first ground of rejection by the examiner, quoted supra, to the effect that all the claims stand rejected upon Caspari in view of Seidell for the temperature feature, and in view of the other art for the reduced pressure feature might, without an analysis of the remainder of the examiner’s decision, leave the impression that the Caspari patent entered into his rejection of both the method and product claims. Such, however, does not seem to be the case, and this view is confirmed by the statement in the brief of the Solicitor for the Patent Office that “reference to Caspari has not been relied upon as disclosing any features of the process claimed.” [Italics ours.]

The board approved the rejection of the product claims on the Chemical Abstracts publication in view of the Seidell publication, adding the opinion that Seidell alone is sufficient to anticipate them. It also approved the rejection of them upon the Caspari patent.

Appellant’s brief, discussing the product claims, insists that the Seidell publication “says nothing whatsoever about any crystals of nor anything about crystallizing the anhydrous form,” and that nowhere “in the prior art * * * has there been any mention previously of the crystals of this [anhydrous sodium bichromate] compound.” As to the Caspari patent, it is argued, in effect, that the anhydrous sodium bichromate produced is not crystalline but amorphous. As to the Chemical Abstracts reference, the brief simply asserts that it “does not show the anhydrous sodium bichromate.” It is also. argued that the Caspari patent does not disclose a product “without the presence of decomposition products.”

It will perhaps aid in understanding the issues respecting all the claims to quote pertinent definitions of certain terms used in some of them and in the foregoing argument. The quotations are from Webster’s New International Dictionary:

Crystal 4.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F.2d 999, 25 C.C.P.A. 1187, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-vetter-ccpa-1938.