Muskat v. Schmelkes

140 F.2d 984, 31 C.C.P.A. 837, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 520, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1944
DocketNo. 4806
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 140 F.2d 984 (Muskat v. Schmelkes) 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
Muskat v. Schmelkes, 140 F.2d 984, 31 C.C.P.A. 837, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 520, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 16 (ccpa 1944).

Opinion

BlaNd, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

From a decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the United States Patent Office awarding to Schmelkes priority in four [839]*839counts corresponding to claims taken from three Muskat and Chenicek patents, Muskat and Chenicek have here appealed. The counts all define a product, and since we ai’e not concerned here with the differences in the breadth of the counts, count 1 is illustrative and reads:

1. Chlorinated melamine characterized in that a substantial amount of the chlorine in said chlorinated melamine is present as active chlorine.

The invention relates to chlorinated melamine, which is a nitrogen compound ordinarily obtained in the form of a powder, the melamine forming the carrying agent for the chlorine, which is capable of being liberated for the purpose of oxidizing, bleaching, sterilizing, or for bactericidal reactions. The most important utility of the compound in controversy is for the purpose of destroying bacteria in liquids, such as.milk and drinking water.

In the chemical art it is not new to chlorinate a product in varying amounts to accomplish the purposes sought by the appellants and the appellee in their Patent Office activities. Many different chemicals may be chlorinated to some extent. Appellee, in describing the invention of his application, has the following to say:

This invention relates to halogen derivatives of amides and iinides of cyanurie acid and the method.of making such derivatives. The invention relates, particularly, to N-chloro tierivaties [sic] of melamine.

Schmelkes describes the compound as a germicidal or detoxifying agent, while Muskat and Chenicek refer to it as a sterilizing agent and also a bleaching agent.

It is shown in the record that there are numerous amines which are susceptible of being chlorinated and that some of them, by reason of their capability of carrying large amounts of chlorine and other characteristics, have found utility in the arts in which, the involved compound is designed to be used. Melamine belongs to a smaller class of amines concerning which chemists had considerable knowledge with respect to the possibility of their utilization in- the art involved here.

The counts, as before stated, correspond to claims from three of appellants’ patents, the application for the first of which was filed in December of 1931. Appellants’ patents issued in December of 1939. Appellants took no testimony and are confined to December 1931 for conception and reduction to practice. Appellee filed his application in August of 1940, a little more than 8 months after appellants’ patents issued, and he was therefore under the burden of proving his priority beyond a reasonable doubt. This he undertook to do by evidence of certain experiments which he alleges resulted in two reductions to practice — one in-1932 and another in 1933.

The Board of Interference Examiners held that appellee had satisfactorily proved that the experiments made at Schmelkes’ request by two chemists of whom he-was in charge amounted to a complete redue[840]*840tion to practice. It accordingly awarded priority to appellee upon this holding.

Appellants argued before the board and argue here that the said experiments in 1932 and 1933 did not amount to a reduction to practice and that the fact that eight years passed before appellee, after being advised of appellants’ patents, finally filed an application in which appellants’ claims were copied as aforesaid creates a strong presumption that the early activities were unsuccessful. They also argue that all the circumstances show that appellee did not complete his invention and that whatever was accomplished amounted to nothing-more than an unsuccessful and abandoned experiment.

The rule relating to the question of abandoned experiments is well settled in patent law and has many times been stated by this court. In Bennett v. Fitzgerald, 18 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 1201, 48 F. (2d) 917, 9 USPQ 211, this court, in holding that the proof was insufficient to show a reduction to practice where there had been delay in filing the application for patent, cited and quoted from the case of Paul v. Hess, 24 App. D. C. 462, in which the following was said:

Long- delay in making rise of an invention claimed to have been reduced to practice or in applying for a patent, have always been regarded as potent circumstances tending to show that the alleged reduction t,o practice ¡was nothing more than an unsatisfactory or abandoned experiment. * * * And this is specially the case 'where, in the meantime, the inventor has been engaged in the prosecution of similar inventions * * *, or others, without reasonable explanation, have been adopted for manufacture and commercial use.

It seems that the complete rule applicable to this case is stated in the 'Hess case, and there is no necessity for citing many similar holdings by this court. In order that we may determine whether the above-quoted principle applies to the instant case and controls decision thereof, we feel required to state the facts somewhat in detail, although there are so many facts and circumstances, some of which have only a minor bearing upon the question involved, that we would not be justified in lengthening the opinion by stating them all.

Schmelkes was the Assistant Director of Research at Wallace & Tiernan Products Company, the assignee of his application. In 1931 he started out oh an extensive program involving the preparation and study of a great many N-chloro compounds in order to find which of them were most capable of serving as carriers for as much chlorine as possible. He stated in his testimony:

We have prepared, in this laboratory, a long series of chlorinated amines of which chlorinated melamine is only one, whenever it was possible for us to prepare a chlorinated amine that was a stable, solid material. [Italics ours.]

At that time he knew that melamine was difficult of procurement and prohibitive in price for most practical purposes. Nevertheless, he secured 100 grams of melamine from Eastman Kodak Company in [841]*8411932 at a cost of $8.50. That was at a time when be, stated by his assistant, Dr. Glass, was chlorinating “every organic nitrogen compound we could get our hands on.” This sample of melamine was turned over to Glass, a research chemist, for experimentation chlorination, and in the month of March 1932 Glass conducted four experiments wherein he subjected melamine to a chlorinating agent. He made reports on these tests as follows:

CHLORINATION OF MELAMINE
Melamine (6.3g) was treated with 111 cc neutral NaOCl (3 molecules) at room temperature. There was no gas evolution or odor of nitrogen chloride. Solution was not complete after % hour stirring.
Treatment of the same quantity of melamine with twice the amount of NaOCl resulted in solution at once to a clear red solution and no gas formation. This solution was divided into two parts ; the first evaporated in vacuum and the second made slightly acid with dilute HOI,' — a yellow precipitate forming. This was filtered, washed with cold water and dried. Analysis: 26.45% Cl. This was designated as Cl No. 12.

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140 F.2d 984, 31 C.C.P.A. 837, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 520, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muskat-v-schmelkes-ccpa-1944.