Union Oil Co. of California v. American Bitumuls Co.

109 F.2d 140, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 223, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3865
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1940
DocketNo. 9152
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 109 F.2d 140 (Union Oil Co. of California v. American Bitumuls Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Oil Co. of California v. American Bitumuls Co., 109 F.2d 140, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 223, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3865 (9th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree holding valid and infringed the two claims of patent No. 1,643,675 issued September 27, 1927, to John Alexander Mont-gomerie and ordering an accounting.

This patent covers a process for manufacturing a stable emulsion of asphalt. As the patent states, a process was known for preparing an aqueous bituminous emulsion. This old process required the addition of a small proportion of fatty acid or resin oil and then adding with agitation a dilute solution of caustic soda, or caustic potash, or sodium or potassium carbonate, at a temperature of about 215° or 225° F. The same result could be obtained by the addition of soap with agitation to the melted asphalt and water. The patentee claims to have discovered that such an emulsion could be prepared without the addition of fatty acid or resin oil if the melted bitumen was poured into a hot dilute, aqueous, alkaline solution, or vice versa.

At the time the patentee made his discovery, he was experimenting with Mexican asphalt, a refinery product consisting of the residuum left after removing by distillation all the more volatile parts of the Mexican crude petroleum oil, including the lubricating oils. It was known that some of the more volatile constituents of crude oil in-[142]*142eluding the lubricating oils would react with alkalies to produce a soap. It was not known that when these substances had been removed from crude oil by distillation that the remaining product, called asphalt, contained any material capable of reacting with an alkaline solution to produce what is chemically known as soap. What the patentee discovered was the existence in asphalt of material capable of reacting with alkali by a process called saponification which produced a soap capable of stabilizing the water and asphalt emulsion. Having discovered this saponifiable material in solid asphalt, not by isolating it nor by analyzing it, but by the fact that melted asphalt did emulsify with water and alkali without the addition of any fatty acid, the patentee outlined the process by which he proposed to utilize the discovery in the making of a suitable emulsion of asphalt to be used for roadmaking and other purposes.

The process involved the mixing with agitation of melted asphalt and a hot aqueous alkaline solution. The example given in the patent calls for the mixing of 800 parts, by weight, of Mexican asphalt, 4 parts of caustic potash and 560 parts of water in which the caustic potash is dissolved. The temperatures involved in the process will be stated and considered more in detail later in the opinion because of the fact that the appellant denies infringement upon the ground that its process is carried on at temperatures much lower than those mentioned in the specifications and claims of the patent.

The appellant also claims that the patent disclosures are too uncertain and vague to justify the issuance of the patent because the word “asphalt” is not sufficiently clear to disclose the type of asphalt which may be successfully emulsified by the process. The evidence shows that some asphalts cannot be emulsified by the patentee’s process because they do not Contain sufficient sapo-nifiable material. Mexican, Texas, Oklahoma and California asphalts cán be successfully emulsified by the patented process but asphalt resulting from the distillation of crude petroleum oil in the midwestern states, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana, will not emulsify by the- process. Moreover, natural asphalts will emulsify by the patented process because in addition to the saponifiable material such as is contained in the residuum after distillation of Mexican, California and other petroleum oils, they also contain more volatile elements which can also be saponified by the use of an alkali only but which would have been eliminated by artificial distillation. The patent excludes in its specifications and claims the emulsification of such material as natural asphalt, containing oils, tars, or other material which will saponify with alkali at a temperature of 110° F. This exclusion is by way of definition of the sort of “asphalt” or “bitumen” to which the patent process applies.

The patent uses the word “bitumen” as-synonymous with “asphalt” which it defines, as follows: “By the term ‘bitumen’ is meant mineral pitch or asphalt to the exclusion of fluids, such as tars, oil, etc., which it has previously been proposed to mix or saponify with dilute aqueous caustic alkaline solution when heated, up to 110°' F.”

That is to say, the term “bitumen” as used in the patent does not contain those-constituents of petroleum such as tars, oils, etc., which had been theretofore saponified in the art by the use of a dilute aqueous caustic alkaline solution heated to 110° F, nor asphalt containing them.

In claim No. 2 the asphalt to be emulsified is described as “the Mexican asphalt which is solid at normal temperature.” In claim No. 1 the corresponding phrase is “asphalt containing in its natural state a saponifiable material solid at normal temperature.” That is to say, the saponifiable material in the asphalt is solid at normal temperatures.

In the original patent application-nothing is said about the proposition that the asphalt or a portion of it was saponified in the process of producing a stable aqueous emulsion of asphalt. The discovery claimed and the process described purported to cover a method of producing an aqueous bituminous emulsion by mixing and stirring hot asphalt and a hot dilute aqueous alkaline solution. The claimant did not attempt to determine or describe the chemical reactions involved in the process other than to characterize the product desired as-a bituminous emulsion. In response to the suggestion of the patent office that the asphalt itself did not saponify -and that it must be some ingredient in the asphalt which did saponify, and the request that the claimant indicate his opinion as to the character of the portion of the asphalt which saponified, the claimant added the following paragraph to the proposed specifications: “It is believed that the ingredi[143]*143ent of Mexican asphalt saponified by the treatment with alkali is one or other of the carboxylic acid derivatives or hydroxy derivatives of the naphthenes or a mixture of these. The properties of these substances have not yet been fully investigated by chemists.”

The appellant claims that the only real discovery involved in this patent is that made by the patent office and disclosed by it when it suggested to the claimant that the asphalt itself did not saponify but that some substance therein was saponified. Subsequent research has justified the conclusion that the emulsification of asphalt, by the patented process, results from the saponifi-cation of some materials contained therein. But the whole question involved in appellant’s contention is a mere matter of terminology. If it was necessary, as is now admitted, that in order to produce an aqueous emulsion of bitumen soap must in some way be introduced into the mixture, then it necessarily follows that the successful process discovered by the patentee involves the production of soap. If soap is produced in the process by the addition of alkali to asphalt it follows that the soap is produced by the action of the alkali upon some portion of the asphalt which for lack of more definite terminology may be characterized as a saponifiable ingredient.

The communication of the patent office above referred to called upon the patentee to indicate his judgment as to the chemical characteristics of this saponifiable material.

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109 F.2d 140, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 223, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-oil-co-of-california-v-american-bitumuls-co-ca9-1940.