Ufer v. Williams

79 F.2d 892, 23 C.C.P.A. 797
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1935
DocketPatent Appeal 3512
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 F.2d 892 (Ufer v. Williams) 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
Ufer v. Williams, 79 F.2d 892, 23 C.C.P.A. 797 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

LENROOT, Associate' Judge.

This appeal brings before us for review a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office in an interference proceeding. Said decision affirmed a decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention to appellee upon the two counts in issue, which counts read as follows:

“1. The process of manufacturing hydrogen from steam and a hydrocarbon which comprises passing a gaseous mixture of steam and a hydrocarbon at reacting temperature over a heated nickel catalyst including as a promoter a compound of a metal, the oxide of which is difficult to reduce, from the group consisting of chromium, vanadium, potassium and aluminum.
“2. The process for the manufacture and production of hydrogen from hydrocarbons which comprises passing a gaseous mixture of steam and a hydrocarbon over a catalytic body comprising nickel activated by the addition of aluminum ox *893 ide at a reacting temperature below 650° C”

The invention involved is sufficiently described in said counts.

Appellants’ application was filed March 10, 1927. Appellee’s application was filed June 25, 1926. However, appellants rely for reduction to practice of the counts in issue upon an application filed by them in Germany on March 10, 1926, not more than twelve months prior to the filing date of their United States application, and prior to the date of appellee’s application. On the basis of this German application, the Examiner of Interferences, upon motion of appellants, shifted the burden of proof from appellants to appellee, and appellee became the junior party. The burden was therefore upon .appellee to establish priority of invention by a preponderance of evidence.

The interference originally declared was upon three counts, and, upon the motion of appellants, the interference was dissolved as to said three counts on the ground that they were not patentable. At the same time, appellee proposed to amend the interference by adding four counts. The Examiner of Interferences allowed the amendment as to two of the proposed counts, which are the counts here involved, and denied the motion as to the other two proposed counts. The interference was thereupon redeclared upon the two counts here involved.

So far as appears from the record, the only ground upon which appellants opposed the amendment adding to the interference the counts here involved was that they were not patentable, and appellants’ brief states that the ground of opposition to the admission of said counts was “that they were not patentable over the prior art.”

Both sides took testimony. Upon behalf of appellants only one witness testified, and his testimony was principally directed to the question of whether the counts in issue were patentable over the prior art. Upon motion of appellee, such testimony was suppressed to the extent that it related to the patentability of the counts in issue.

In this court appellants submitted their case upon their brief, without oral argument. Throughout their brief, counsel for appellants argue that the counts are not patentable to either party. This contention, under the well-established rule, we may not consider in this proceeding. The only question before us is that of priority and questions ancillary thereto. Inasmuch as the only ground of appellants’ opposition to the amendment adding the involved counts to the interference was that they were unpatentable, there arc no ancillary questions to be considered, and the only issue before us is priority of invention between the parties hereto.

Upon this question appellants make two contentions:

(1) That the record does not establish a reduction to practice of the invention involved in the counts by appellee prior to March 10, 1926, the date of the German application, inasmuch as he has not shown that in his claimed reduction to practice the compounds of metal enumerated in count 1 acted as promoters of the nickel catalyst, or that, as to count 2, the nickel was activated by the addition of aluminum oxide; that therefore we should hold that priority cannot be determined, and remand the case for further proceedings, or priority should be awarded to appellants upon their constructive reduction to practice in the filing of their German application, March 10, 1926.

(2) That, if said last-named contention be not sustained, the record establishes that priority on the use of the four substances named in count 1 as promoters is divided between the parties and, as to that count, the cause should be remanded to the Patent Office for further proceedings, to the end that the count be “split up” to award the parties their respective discoveries.

We will first consider the contention enumerated above as No. 1. It appears from the record that nickel had long been recognized as a catalyst in a process for the production of hydrogen from steam and methane. Both of the parties hereto, in their respective applications, claim to have found a new catalyst for this process by the use of nickel with a compound of a metal the oxide of which it is difficult to reduce, such as aluminum, chromium, vanadium, and potassium. Before the Patent Office tribunals appellants urged the unpatentability of the counts upon the ground that they were anticipated by a patent to Mond & Langer, No. 417,068, which disclosed the use of nickel as a catalyst in conjunction with pumice; it being appellants’ claim that pumice is a sub *894 stance which is largely composed of a compound of aluminum and contains a compound of potassium. Appellants contend that the Patent Office tribunals held that the counts in issue were not anticipated by said patent only because said patent did not disclose that pumice was a promoter or activator of the nickel, as called for by the counts here in issue, and therefore argue that it was necessary for appellee to establish that the substances named as promoters or activators in the counts did actually promote or activate the nickel. It is apparently appellants’ contention now that it is impossible to ascertain that the substances named in the counts as promoters or activators do actually promote or activate the nickel catalyst, in that the said substances may enhance the activity of the nickel or the nickel may enhance the activity of the substances named in the counts as promoters or activators of the nickel. Appellants rely upon the testimony of appellee to the effect that 'it is impossible to ascertain whether the nickel is a promoter of the aluminum, chromium, vanadium, and potassium, or whether said substances are promoters of the nickel.

We regard this question raised by appellants as purely academic and not material to the issues here involved. In the specification of appellee we find the following: “Nickel alone even with the exclusion of chlorine and other catalyst poisons is not very active for the production of hydrogen by a reaction between steam and hydrocarbons at temperatures below 700° C. I have discovered, however, that by the addition of- suitable substances referred to hereinafter as promoters the catalytic behavior of nickel in this reaction can be improved to the extent that the conversion of hydrocarbons into hydrogen becomes practicable at temperatures materially below 700° C.

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Related

In Re Ayres
83 F.2d 297 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
79 F.2d 892, 23 C.C.P.A. 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ufer-v-williams-ccpa-1935.