In re Waite

168 F.2d 104, 35 C.C.P.A. 1117
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1948
DocketNo. 5427
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 F.2d 104 (In re Waite) 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 Waite, 168 F.2d 104, 35 C.C.P.A. 1117 (ccpa 1948).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Appellants seek review and reversal of tbe decision of the Board of Appeals of tbe United States Patent Office affirming that of the Primary Examiner rejecting the twenty-eight claims of their application relating to alleged new and useful improvements in vitreoüs •enamel opacifiers, “more particularly to compositions suitable for use as mill addition opaquing or opacifying agents, in conjunction with pre-smelted enamel frit and other constituents of an enamel mix, for production of white vitreous or porcelain enamels especially.” No •claims were allowed.'

All the claims were rejected for lack of invention over prior art cited and claims 7,15 to 18, inclusive, and 24 to 27, inclusive, were additionally rejected as being indefinite.

The appealed claims are numbered 1 to 7, inclusive, and 9 to 29, inclusive.

Claims 1 to 7, inclusive, and 15 to 29, inclusive, are process claims. It is noted that all the process claims after claim 1, except claims 28 and 29, refer to that claim. Each begins with the phrase “The process •defined by claim 1.”

Claims 9 to 14, inclusive, cover the product and each of those claims .after 9 refers to it in the opening phrase, “A mill addition opacifier as defined in claim 9.”

The following descriptive matter appears in the decision of the board:

The application relates to the manufacture of opacifiers for use in making •vitreous enamel. The opacifier is used as “a mill addition” product and, as [1119]*1119stated by appellants, is to be usually manufactured and supplied to enamelers for tlie purpose of being added to tbe mix that is smelted in producing the-glass, wbicb subsequently constitutes tbe bulk of the vitreous enamel coating. The opacifier, as covered in the numerous process and product claims, includes a mix capable when calcined of yielding a product consisting of three essential components, namely, calcium oxide, antimony pentoxide and titanium oxide. In some instances, as recited in many of tbe claims on appeal, calcium fluoride-is added for the purpose of avoiding an undesirable yellow tinge in the finished, vitreous enameled product.. Some of tbe claims are drawn to tbe process of manufacturing the mill addition opacifiers and some to the opacifiers as a product. Many of them include the additional feature of washing the calcined product with water and dilute acid and all of them except 28 and 29 are limited to various different proportions of the oxides recited in the claims.

It is noted tbat claims 28 and 29 specify oxides of calcium, antimony and titanium, but do not designate the proportions as is done in the-other claims. According to the statement of the Primary Examiner,, the opacifier material, which is used for rendering the enamel opaque, is mill added in the grinding of the enamel frit.

As illustrative of the claims on appeal the board quoted 1, 9, and 29' which read as follows:

1. The process of manufacturing compositions useful as mill addition opacifying agents in the production of vitreous or porcelain enamels, which comprises calcining material consisting essentially of intimately commingled oxides of calcium, antimony and titanium in finely divided condition, said oxides being so proportoned in tbe mix as to give a calcined product having a composition characterized by a predetermined correlation between the numerical values of
(TiCh+ShiOs)
the basicity ratio -
CaO
and the titanium-antimony ratio
(TiO*)
Sb20o
re-
spectively, said numerical values lying within the total area represented by Area A plus Area D on the accompanying graph hereinbefore described, and by a molar proportion of antimony pentoxide within the range 0.10 and 0.90 when the-molar proportion of calcium oxide is taken as 1.0.
9. A mill addition opacifier useful in preparing vitreous or porcelain enamels, consisting of the product of calcining an intimate mixture of oxides, of calcium, antimony and titanium at reacting temperatures insufficiently high to smelt the mixture, the mixture being so proportioned tbat, in the calcined product, the
basicity ratio
(Ti02+Sb205)
CaO
and the titanium-antimony ratio
(TiOa) v
v -- have
SbaOs
numerical values which lie within the total area represented by Area A plus-Area D on the accompanying graph hereinbefore described, and which bear a predetermined relation to one another, and the molar proportion of antimony pentoxide is not less than 0.10 nor more than 0.90 when the molar proportion of calcium oxide is taken as 1.0; enamel produced with such opacifier under standard test conditions having a reflectance value not more than 3 percent lower (R-diff) than an enamel produced under the same conditions except for the use of tin oxide as opacifier.
29. In a process of manufacturing mill addition opacifiers which includes calcining a mix capable of yielding a calcined product consisting mainly of [1120]*1120three essential components, calcium oxide, antimony pentoxide and titanium ■oxide, in intimate association, the further steps of washing said calcined product, first with dilute acid and then with water, to remove soluble base or alkaline material therefrom, followed by drying and pulverizing.

There were cited as references page 270 of a 1935 publication by Andrews (no other name given), relating to enamels, and the following patents:

Harshaw et al., 2,033,707, March 10,1936.
Harshaw et al., 2,199,794, May 7,1940.
Harshaw et al., 2,200,170, May 7, 1940.
McIntyre et al., 2,189,148, February 6, 1940.

Claims 28 and 29 require consideration apart from the other ■claims.

We do not understand appellants to contend that any one of the process claims 2 to 7, inclusive, and 15 to 27, inclusive, is allowable unless claim 1 be found to be so, nor do we understand it to be contended that any one of the product claims 10 to 14, inclusive, is allowable unless product claim 9 be found to be so. On the other hand, if process claim 1 be found allowable, process claims 2 to 7, inclusive, and 15 to 27, inclusive, should also be allowed, and if product claim 9 be found allowable, product claims 10 to 14, inclusive, should' also be allowed.

In view of this situation we do not deem it necessary to discuss in ■detail appellants’ grouping arrangement of the claims in which they place claims 1 and 9 in a first group; claim 3 in a second group; claims 4 and 12 in a third group; claims 5 and 13 in a fourth group; claims 6 .and 14 in a fifth group; claims 2,10,20-29 in a sixth group; and claims 7,16-19 and 2F-27 in a seventh group.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 F.2d 104, 35 C.C.P.A. 1117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-waite-ccpa-1948.