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                     COMMISSIONER'S DECISION

 

OBVIOUSNESS: Container closure

 

 The object here was to provide a container closure having a liner material

 which is suitable for venting gases while blocking liquids. This was

 considered to be a patentable advance in the art.

 

 Final Action: Reversed.

 

                       *****************

 

 This decision deals with a request for review by the Commissioner of

 Patents of the Examiner's Final Action dated September 22, 1976, on appli-

 cation 182,884 (Class 206-22). The application was filed on October 9,

 1973, in the name of William R. Wheeler, and is entitled "Container

 Closure And Method."

 

 This application relates to a liner for a container closure. The specific

 object is to provide a container closure having a liner material which is

 suitable for venting gases while blocking liquids.

   In the Final Action the examiner refused claim 1 (the sole claim) for fail- 

ing to define patentable subject matter over the following patents:

 

 United States

 

 3,071,276                     Jan. 1, 1963            Pellett

 3,326,401                    June 20, 1967            De Long

 

 Both patents relate to container closures comprised of a gas-impermeable

 shell and a liner that has a porous or microporous structure. Figure 1,

 shown below, is illustrative of Pellett's invention:

 

                      (See Figure 1)

 The following figure is illustrative of the De Long invention:

 

                              (See Figure 1)

 

 In the Final Action the examiner stated his position (in part) as follows:

 

  ...

 

 The terminology chosen by applicants to describe polyvinyl

 chloride foam differs from that of Pellet by specifying that

 the liner is a polyvinyl chloride foam having a density in

 the range of 0.67 to 0.72 grams per cubic centimeter, whereas

 at column 4, Pellet establishes that he has "provided a controlled

 venting of a container without leakage of the liquid (or solid)

 therein by employing a closure liner which is microporous. This

 in turn depends upon the well known phenomenon that whether or not

 a liquid will pass through a given micro opening will depend upon

 the size of the opening, the interfacial tension between the

 liquid and the solid in which the micro opening occurs and the

 pressure difference tending to force the liquid through the micro

 opening. By employing the microporous plastic described above

 applicants have succeeded in allowing the gaseous decomposition

 by-produce to pass through but in checking the passage of the

 liquid, for example, bleaching solution (hypochlorite) without the

 development of any substantial pressure within the container".

 

 Whether an author choses to define polyvinyl chloride foam in terms

 of its density or in terms of the pore size is patentably immaterial

 since each refers to the same physical and functional characteristics,

 i.e. permeability.

 

 In other words, Pellet's closure/liner combination does precisely

 what applicants closure/liner combination does, by using essentially

 the same structure. Furthermore, Pellett has established that he

 is aware of the parameters governing the prevention of passage of

 liquid through the liner while permitting gases to pass through

 the liner, including pore size in the liner.

 

 Applicants specified density range does nothing more than govern

 pore size.

 

 Hence, applicant's claim does distinguish over Pellett, but does

 not essentially or patentably distinguish over Pellett.

 

 ...

 

Applicants emphatic reiterations of his discovery that the Pellett

 closure is unavailable on the market does not alter the fact

 that Section 28 of the Patent Act prohibits issue to patent of an

invention that was (a) known or used by any other person before

he invented it, or was (b) described in any patent or in any

publication printed in Canada or in any other country more than

two years before presentation of the petition by the applicant.

 

Applicants invention was both known before he invented it, and

described in patents more than two years prior to applicants

petition, in view of Delong and Pellett.

 

Therefore, applicants sole claim on file is rejected, since

it makes no patentable distinction over the prior art cited.

 

In his response to the Final Action the applicant had this to say (in part)

as follows:

 

The applicant's contribution has satisfied a long-felt want

which would, it is respectfully submitted, have been satisfied

many years earlier if, as the Examiner contends, the applicant's

invention was in fact described by Pellett et al in 1963 or

De Long in his 1967 patent. Considering De Long in greater

detail it is important to note that De Long was not concerned with

blocking the escape of liquid while permitting the escape

gases but was instead concerned with allowing gases to escape

while maintaining sterile conditions within the interior of a

container by preventing the entrance of a contaminating bacteria.

Furthermore, there is no suggestion that the plastic material

which was employed should be polyvinyl chloride, much less any

suggestion that the density should be within the very specific

range claimed by the applicant and considered to be an essential

feature of the instant invention.

 

Pellett et al was admittedly working toward a solution of the

problem solved by the applicant and he does suggest the use of

polyvinyl chloride in the liner. He does not however suggest the

use of a foam polyvinyl chloride, much less a foam polyvinyl

chloride having the particular density specified by the applicant.

In addition to suggesting the use of polyvinyl chloride

Pellett et al suggests the use of 8 other plastics plus derivatives

and polymeric mixtures of the suggested plastics. Pellett et al simply

tell us to use a microporous plastic material which will give the

desired result, namely controlled venting without leaking of the

liquid in the container. It is respectfully submitted that

this vague description of a desideratum should not prevent the

applicant, who has found a specific successful solution to a long-

felt want, from protecting his specific solution to the problem

as defined in the solitary claim now before the Patent Office.

 

It is respectfully submitted that the invention defined in the

applicant's claim which is directed to a foam polyvinyl chloride

liner having a specified density was (a) not known or used by any

other person before it was invented by W.R. Wheeler, the inventor named in

 the present case and was (b) not described in any patent printed in

Canada or any other country more than two years before the filing

of the instant application and more particularly was not described

in either the U.S. patent to Pellett et al nor the U.S. patent to

De Long.

 

The issue to be considered is whether or not the applicant has made a

patentable advance in the art. Claim 1 reads as follows:

 

A container closure comprising a gas-impermeable shell

and a polyvinyl chloride foam liner having a density

in a range of 0.67 to 0.72 grams per cubic centimeter in the

shell, said liner having an open pore structure.

 

On a complete reading of the disclosure we find that the applicant is con-

cerned with "a method for producing a foamed product suitable as liner

material for container closures...," and the product thereof. There are

no method claims, however, presently in the application. Original claim 5

related to "a polyvinyl chloride foam closure liner...." The specific

issue then will he to consider the alleged invention in so far as the liner

for use in a container closure is concerned. This issue in the present

circumstances is not without its difficulties, because the cited art is

indeed pertinent and especially the Pellett Patent which was concerned with

the same problem.

 

The applicant was concerned with "... having a liner with a combination of

properties ideally suited for permitting gases to pass therethrough while

blocking liquids." He also stated that "The prior art is lacking in a

method or providing foamed plastics material having the right combination

of liquid blocking and gas permeable properties" (see page 1 of the present

disclosure).

 

It is clear from the Pellett patent, and the applicant agrees, that polyvinyl

chloride has been used before, in different forms, in lining material

for container closures. It is also clear that a problem existed in this area

especially as it relates to a closure liner "for permitting the escape of

gases while blocking liquids." The applicant is, in our view, concerned with

a selection range for best results in his foamed liner.

 

In the Pellett patent we find that he uses a liner of microporous plastic;

such plastics may include, among others, polyvinyl chloride. Pellett states

that his preferred range of micopores in the plastic layer range from 1 to

15 microns. This we find to be an extremely fine porous liner. By contrast

the present applicant is concerned with a polyvinyl chloride foamed

(porous) liner having a very specific density range. Pellett also does

not suggest the use of a polyvinyl chloride foamed liner.

 

The DeLong patent is not directed to a closure described as being useful for

blocking liquid under pressure while permitting the escape of gases. He

was concerned with a container closure for preventing the passage of micro-

organic contaminants while permitting free exchange of oxygen to the outside.

His advance in the art was for the replacement of "cotton wads" which were

previously used for this purpose. He discusses the general use of an open

cell porous foam plastics. He does not however, teach nor suggest the

solution to the problem of the present applicant.

 

There is no doubt but that Pellett (1963) was admittedly working toward a

solution of the instant problem, and no doubt had some success. On the. other

hand we have no reason to disagree with the applicant when he states that he

has found a specific successful solution to a long-felt want, and that "this

very specifically described polyvinyl chloride foam liner is a very

significant contribution to the art...." He goes on to say that the specific

liner is "highly successful." In discussing the importance of the specific

density of his liner the applicant had this to say in solving his particular

problem. The present disclosure, page 6 lines 30 ff., reads as follows:

 

It has been discovered that liquid begins to be permitted

to escape through the liner material of the present invention

if the material has a density less than the lower preferred

density limit of 0.67 grams per cubic centimeter. Exceeding

of the upper density value of 0.72 grams per cubic centimeter

leads to an inadequate venting of gases, ...

 

In view of the above consideration we are satisfied that the applicant has

made a patentable advance in the art with his specific density selection

of a polyvinyl chloride foamed liner. He has, in our view, secured a sub-

stantial advantage by the use of the selected density in his foam liner.

 

We will now consider the claim on file. For convenience it will be repro-

duced as follows:

 

A container closure comprising a gas-impermeable shell and

a polyvinyl chloride foam liner having a density in a range

of 0.67 to 0.72 grams per cubic centimeter in the shell, said

liner having an open pore structure.

 

It is clear that this claim is directed to the essence of what, in our view,

is a patentable advance in the art. By stating that it is a container closure

he is merely delimiting the monopoly of the invention to the intended use.

It does not indicate that there is an inventive step in making the container

closure. This claim appears in allowed form.

 

In summary we are satisfied, but not without some hesitation, that the applicant

has made a patentable advance in the art. We recommend that the decision in

the Final Action to refuse the claim be withdrawn.

 

 J.F. Hughes

 Acting Chairman

 Patent Appeal Board, Canada

 

Having studied the prosecution of this application and considered the re-

commendation of the Patent Appeal Board I have decided to withdraw the

Final Action. The application is returned to the examiner for resumption

of prosecution.

 

J.H.A. Gariepy

Commissioner of Patents

 

Dated at Hull, Quebec

 

this 16th. day of June, 1977

Agent for Applicant

Smart & Biggar

Box 2999, Station D

Ottawa, Ontario

 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.