Vietti v. Dow

120 F.2d 360, 28 C.C.P.A. 1156, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 716, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1941
DocketNo. 4466
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 F.2d 360 (Vietti v. Dow) 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
Vietti v. Dow, 120 F.2d 360, 28 C.C.P.A. 1156, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 716, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 80 (ccpa 1941).

Opinion

BlaNd, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants have here appealed from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office which reversed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention in the three counts involved to appellants, the junior party. The senior party, appellees, copied the three claims corresponding to the counts here involved from the inadvertently issued patent of appellants. No question of seniority is involved, and the only ques[1157]*1157tion presented is the right of the senior party, appellees, to make the claims corresponding to the counts at bar, all other issues of priority being dependent upon the decision on the right to make the claims.

The counts read as follows:

1. The method of treating an oil well to increase the proportion of oil and decrease the proportion of water produced therefrom, which comprises depositing in a water wet sand adjacent the well a chemical precipitate which acts to render the sand less permeable to water without substantially retarding the flow of oil to the well.
2. The method of treating an oil well, which comprises forcing into the well and into a water wet sand adjacent the well a solution of a precipitable chemical compound, and reacting the chemical compound in situ within the sand to effect a precipitation of the reaction product within the sand to render the latter less permeable to water without substantially retarding the flow of oil to the well.
3. The method of treating an oil well to increase the proportion of oil and decrease the proportion of water produced thereform, which comprises forcing into the well and into a water wet sand adjacent the well a solution of a chemical compound which reacts upon contact with the water and metal salts present in the sand to cause a precipitation of a reaction product within the sand to render the latter less permeable to water without substantially retarding the flow of oil to the well.

Ill appellants’ brief the following is stated:

The invention of the Yietti and Garrison patent * * * is directed to “the treatment of an oil well, and more particularly to the chemical treatment of the sand adjacent a producing well in order to render the sand more permeable to oil and less permeable to water” * * *.
The particular treatment disclosed in the patent consists in depositing on the surface of the sand grains a precipitate or coating to change the physical characteristics of the surface of the sand grains so that they become preferentially wet by oil rather than by water. * * *

It is well understood that in the production of oil it is a common occurrence to find brine produced along with the oil and that sometimes the amount of brine far exceeds the amount of oil. The object of the invention here involved is to decrease the amount of water and to increase the amount of the oil. It has long been known that oil wells might be treated with acid with beneficial results, the acid eating away the rocky structure in the oil-bearing stratum, thus furnishing more opportunity for the escape of the oil. By the same token, additional water is frequently thereby released. Moreover, it sometimes occurs that the veins of water coming into the well are separate and apart from the stratum from which the oil flows. It was an old expedient to cement or block off the separate veins of water, but this did not solve the problem of retarding the flow of water and increasing the flow of oil where both came from the same stratum.

[1158]*1158The appellees treat oil-bearing wells by first inserting a chemical which precipitates or reacts with the brine in such a way as to have a tendency to lessen the amount of water while not decreasing the flow of oil. As a subsequent step, appellees treat the well with acid, which acid treatment is old in the art.

Both parties teach that various ingredients may be used to form a precipitate. An illustration of such is common soap.

Appellants have stressed the fact that their treatment is to use-a precipitate to stop the flow of water at any point where it interferes with the oil; that their invention is broad enough to cover inserting the precipitate-forming material in the oil-bearing vein where water is troublesome; and that the precipitate makes the sand less permeable to water and more permeable to oil.

The briefs and arguments of both parties are filled with much theory and speculation concerning what happens in the bottom of a well, and appellants’ chief argument is based upon the purpose for which they use the same material as that used by appellees.

The Primary Examiner, in response to • the action of appellees-in copying the three claims involved and requesting an interference, held that unless the claims were given a narrow construction they would read upon the prior art patent to Mills, No. 1,421,706, which taught the use of a material similar to that used by appellees to lessen the water in levels above the oil stratum. Construing the claims narrowly, he held that appellees could not make them. Ap-pellees took an ex forte appeal to the Board of Appeals, which reversed the decision of the examiner and held that appellees could make the claims.

The interference was thereupon declared, and within the motion period apx>ellants< moved to dissolve on the ground that appellees had no right to make the claims corresponding to the counts. This motion was denied by the Primary Examiner, in view of the aforesaid decision of the board. Considerable evidence was then introduced by both parties relating to the effect of precipitation in wells and various other-theories regarding the production of oil. The Examiner of Interferences, in view of the new matter presented subsequent to- the aforesaid decision of the board, held that appellees had no right to make the claims corresponding to the counts. Appellees appealed to the Board of Appeals from the decision of the Examiner of Interferences so holding, and the board reversed his decision, held that appellees could make the counts, and awarded them priority of invention therein. The board discussed and quoted from the said Mills patent and the patent of appellants, discussed the specification of appellees, and held, in effect, that the claims were broad and should be broadly construed,. [1159]*1159and that when broadly construed they would not be regarded as invalid in view of the said Mills patent.

In this court, appellants argue at great length that the appellees had no conception of the eifect of the inserted chemical upon the production of oil from an oil stratum which also contained brine.

It seems clear that appellants base their contention chiefly upon what the parties were attempting to accomplish or understood they were accomplishing rather than what was actually accomplished. It seems obvious that if both parties used the same material in an oil well that produced both oil and brine, both would obtain the same result regardless of what they thought they were obtaining or how it was obtained. Appellants argue in this court that the board erred in holding that the counts when broadly interpreted distinguished from the disclosure of the said Mills patent.

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Bluebook (online)
120 F.2d 360, 28 C.C.P.A. 1156, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 716, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vietti-v-dow-ccpa-1941.