In re Wilding

535 F.2d 631, 190 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 59, 1976 CCPA LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1976
DocketPatent Appeal No. 76-544
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 535 F.2d 631 (In re Wilding) 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 Wilding, 535 F.2d 631, 190 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 59, 1976 CCPA LEXIS 160 (ccpa 1976).

Opinion

LANE, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent and Trademark Office Board of Appeals (board) affirming the rejection of claims 1, 2, 5, 6, 8-15, 19, and 23-25 in application serial number 642,208, filed May 29, 1967, entitled “Soybean Granules.” We reverse.

The Invention

Appellant’s invention is a method for producing a protein food product having an expanded, elongated cellular structure similar to that of lean meat. Claim 1 adequately describes the method.

1. A method for preparing an improved protein food product comprising: forming a dough containing from about 15% to about 45% by weight, of water and defatted, undenatured, solvent-extracted oil seed protein material; heating said dough for a period of time less than about 5 minutes under pressure to a temperature of about 260 ° F. to about 380 0 F., sufficient to rapidly denature the protein of said dough, said dough having sufficient plasticity to be extruded in a self-binding form; and extruding said heated dough into an area of reduced pressure under conditions causing the dough to expand by the flashing of moisture therefrom, and causing sufficient denaturation to occur prior to said heated dough reaching said area so as to cause the product to retain an elongated cellular structure created by said flashing of moisture upon reaching said area.

Background

Appellant’s application is a continuation-in-part of parent application serial number 436,358, filed March 1, 1965, which was involved in Interference No. 96,355 with Flier application serial number 600,471, filed December 9, 1966, and Atkinson application serial number 587,939, filed August 17, 1966. The count in issue in that interference read as follows:

The process of preparing an expanded food product which comprises mechanically working a protein mix of a solvent-extracted oil seed proteinaceous material having protein concentrations of at least 30 per cent and water in a concentration of 15 to 60 per cent, at a temperature above 200 ° F. and under elevated pressure sufficient to convert said mix into a flowable substance, and extruding said flowable substance through an orifice into a medium of lower pressure.

Appellant was junior party in the interference by virtue of the fact that each of the other parties was accorded the benefit of an earlier filed application.1 The Board of Patent Interferences awarded priority of invention of the subject matter involved to Flier. During the motion period in that interference appellant moved to dissolve the interference with respect to the count in issue and to add as an interference count the following:

The process of preparing an expanded food product which comprises mechanically working a protein mix of a solvent-extracted oil seed proteinaceous material having protein concentrations of at least 30 percent and water in a concentration of at least 15 but not in excess of 60 [633]*633percent, at a temperature above 200 0 F. and under elevated pressure sufficient to convert said mix into a flowable substance, and extruding said flowable substance through an orifice into a medium of lower pressure, in a manner to vaporize the moisture and expand the mixture to provide an expanded elongated fibrous cellular structure.

Appellant’s motion was denied.

The Rejections

The examiner rejected all claims here on appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as unpatentable over the count of the interference “and the entire disclosure of Flier.” 2

The Board

The board noted the extensive differences between the claims on appeal and the lost count and concluded that the claimed method is neither anticipated by, nor obvious in view of, the process recited in the count. It therefore refused to sustain the rejection to the extent that it was based only on the interference count.3 The board did, however, recognize that under some circumstances portions of the disclosure of a winning party to an interference could be used as a basis for rejecting claims in the application of the losing party. The board then noted disclosures which were common to both appellant and Flier regarding materials used and process conditions employed. In particular the board noted the use of identical or overlapping ranges in the respective applications for the oil content, moisture content, pH value, and protein content of the soybean meal, and for the temperatures and pressures employed in the process. The board also found that the descriptions of the end products were the same in both applications.

In reviewing the two disclosures, however, the board noted some distinctions:

The most notable distinction between the Flier disclosure and that of appellant is the absence of any description [in Flier] of the starting soybean meal as being undenatured, and that a denaturing occurs in the extruder prior to the extrusion of the material into the reduced pressure area (the ambient atmosphere). However, we do not believe that there is any substantive distinction between the process of Flier and that of the appellant. Nowhere in the body of the Flier application is there any indication that the soybean starting material has received any treatment other than grinding and a solvent extraction of the oil. Denaturing requires a chemical-physical treatment of the soybean in order to achieve denaturing. No such treatment is described, and the soybean meal is not disclosed as having undergone such a treatment. There is therefore no reasonable basis from the Flier disclosure for presuming that the soybean meal is not undenatured.
* * * * * *
In our view, a fair reading of the Flier application, as noted above, leads to the conclusion that undenatured soybean meal is employed as the material in the process there described. We are also of the view that the treatment which the [634]*634soybean meal is subjected to in the Flier extruder under the conditions disclosed would necessarily result in a denaturing of the soybean meal prior to extrusion.

The board then concluded:

In view of the above discussion, we find that the claims on appeal read directly on the subject matter which is common to both the appellant’s applications and the Flier application, and under such circumstances, the Examiner here properly rejected the claims as unpatentable over the Flier application. The appellant’s motion during the interference proposed a count which differs from the present claim in substantially the same manner as did the original count. The appellant therefore cannot be considered to be in the position of a party who attempted to put into issue during the interference the subject matter now claimed, but was refused. The subject matter which is now claimed and common with that of Flier was never attempted to be put into the interference by the appellant.

OPINION

The first order of business is to note the confusion surrounding the rejection before us.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 F.2d 631, 190 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 59, 1976 CCPA LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wilding-ccpa-1976.