Theodore A. Te Grotenhuis v. Luther L. Yaeger

290 F.2d 951, 48 C.C.P.A. 1058
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1961
DocketPatent Appeal 6636
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 290 F.2d 951 (Theodore A. Te Grotenhuis v. Luther L. Yaeger) 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
Theodore A. Te Grotenhuis v. Luther L. Yaeger, 290 F.2d 951, 48 C.C.P.A. 1058 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal by TeGrotenhuis from a decision of the Board of Patent Interferences of the United States Patent Oifice awarding priority of invention of the subject matter in eight of the ten counts in interference No. 88,771 to Yaeger, the senior party. Priority as to the other two counts, 8 and 9, was awarded to TeGrotenhuis. No cross appeal has been taken by Yaeger as to the latter two counts.

U. S. Patent No. 2,742,378 was issued to TeGrotenhuis on April 17, 1956 on application serial No. 302,415, filed August 2, 1952. This application was a continuation-in-part of two applications, serial No. 243,737, filed August 25, 1951, now abandoned, and serial No. 585,824, filed March 30, 1945, now Patent No. 2,-751,369.

On April 9, 1956, Yaeger filed application serial No. 576,816 as a continuation of application serial No. 273,770, filed February 27,1952. The latter application was a continuation-in-part of *952 Yaeger’s application serial No. 170,465, filed June 26, 1950.

On August 20, 1956, Yaeger added by amendment to his application serial No. 576,816 ten claims of the TeGrotenhuis patent No. 2,742,378. An interference was declared between Yaeger and TeGro-tenhuis with these ten claims as the counts. Yaeger is the senior party on the basis of his February 27, 1952 application date.

The invention defined in the counts relates to certain solid “composite articles” comprising textile fibers and a polymeric resin, and to a method of making the articles. The articles are said to possess superior cohesive properties because an organosilicon compound is used as a sort of “molecular cement” between fibers and resin. In other words, each silicon compound molecule is attached by chemical bonds both to a fiber and to the resin which surrounds it. In making the articles, it is recognized that a plurality of hydroxyl groups is normally present on the surface of a textile fiber. Certain “hydroxyl-reactive” organosilióon compounds with one or more carbon-to-carbon double bonds, for example, vinyl silicon trichloride, are allowed to react with the fibers whereby the fiber hydroxyl groups, fibei'-OH, are transformed to fiber siloxane groups, fiber-O-^i- , in which at least one free bond to each silicon atom is connected to an organic group with carbon-to-carbon unsaturation These modified fibers are then contacted with an olefinically unsaturated liquid, for example, styrene, and the liquid is polymerized to the solid state. The unsaturated groups attached to the modified fibers interpolymerize with the liquid. Thus a plurality of chains comprising a silicon atom and two or more carbon atoms bind fibers and surrounding resin together in the finished composite article.

The following counts are representative:

“1. A method of preparing composite articles which comprises bonding vinyl-silicon-oxide groups (CH2=CH-$i-0-) directly to the surface of textile fibres having hydroxyl groups on the surface by contacting said fibres with a hydroxyl-reactive vinyl silicon compound having a vinyl group attached directly to silicon, thereafter contacting the said fibres with a liquid polymerizable to the solid state and comprising a styrene and polymerizing said liquid to the solid state in contact with the surface of said fibres, whereby said vinyl groups are subject to inter-polymerization with polymerizable constituents of said liquid to chemically bond the in situ formed solid polymer to the surface of said textile fibres through the silicon-oxide linkage of said vinyl silicon oxide groups.
“2. A method of making fibre reinforced articles which comprises wetting, with a polymerizable ole-finically-unsaturated liquid capable of being solidified to the rigid state by polymerization, textile fibres, which normally have hydroxyl groups on their surface but which are modified by having bonded to the surface thereof a vinyl siloxane coupling compound having a carbon of an olefinic group thereof attached' directly to a silicon atom, said surface of said fibres having said coupling compound thereon being different from the body of said fibres, and forming an interface for inter-polymerization with unsaturated' groups of an olefinically-unsaturated monomeric liquid polymerizable to the solid state by means of said olefinically-unsaturated groups, and' maintaining said olefinically-un-saturated liquid in contact with said' fibres until it has solidified to the solid nonflowable state, the vinyl group of said vinyl siloxane coupling compound being attached through a siloxane group to said' fibres, whereby said olefinic groups. on the surface of said fibres are available for interaction with the: *953 monomer when it is polymerized to the solid state.”
“7. A composite article comprising an in situ polymerized solid polymer of a liquid comprising a polymerizable olefinic compound selected from the group consisting of ■diolefinic compounds having a chain •of less than 7 aliphatic carbon atoms ■and polymerizable mono-olefinic compounds, textile fibres in said polymer for reinforcing the same and an in-"terfacial coupling compound bonded to said textile fibres and chemically ■combined with said solid polymer, said interfacial compound being different both from the body of said ■fibres and the mass of said solid polymer, said interfacial compound •comprising the interpolymerization product from the interpolymerization of vinyl siloxane groups on the ■surfaces of said fibres and of said ■olefinic compound, said vinyl groups being attached directly to silicon and being bonded to said fibres through silicon-oxygen linkages.”
“10. A liquid-permeable mass of substantially dry flexible textile fibres suitable for soaking up a polymerizable liquid, said fibres being of a material which normally •carries hydroxyl groups on the surface thereof, the surfaces of said fibres being modified by having .groups of a vinyl siloxane attached ■thereto for subsequent reaction with ■said polymerizable liquid during the polymerization thereof, the said vinyl groups being attached through .said siloxane groups to said surface, the fibres having said vinyl groups attached thereto being wettable by :said polymerizable liquid, whereby said mass is capable of soaking up polymerization liquid to bond said fibres together upon the polymerization thereof and whereby a molecular bond between the surface of the ■fibres and the resultant polymer may be had by interaction of said vinyl groups and said polymerizable liquid ■during said polymerization.”

No testimony was taken by either party. Yaeger alleged in his preliminary statement a reduction to practice of the invention on March 24, 1950. TeGroten-huis has stipulated that this allegation is true and that Yaeger’s application serial No. 170,465, now abandoned, discloses the invention of the counts. Te-Grotenhuis has alleged a constructive reduction to practice on March 30, 1945, the filing date of his parent application serial No. 585,824.

The sole issue before this court is whether TeGrotenhuis is entitled to the benefit of the March 30, 1945 filing date of his parent application serial No. 585,-824 for the purpose of priority judgment as to each count in issue. The same issue as to all the counts was before the board and it decided that TeGrotenhuis was not entitled to the benefit of that date except as to counts 8 and 9.

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290 F.2d 951, 48 C.C.P.A. 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theodore-a-te-grotenhuis-v-luther-l-yaeger-ccpa-1961.