Patent No. 1,135,351, issued April 13, 1915, to Procter &
Gamble Company, as assignee of John J. Burchenal, is void for lack
of invention as to Claims 1 and 2, claiming, respectively, a
homogeneous lard-like food product consisting of incompletely
hydrogenized vegetable oil, and a like product consisting of
incompletely hydrogenized cottonseed oil. Pp.
254 U. S. 161,
254 U. S.
164.
The process of changing vegetable oil into a homogeneous,
semi-solid, edible substance by acting upon it with hydrogen in the
presence of nickel, was known and open to general use, and its
application to the manufacture of the food products here in
question was such a step as would occur to persons skilled in the
art without the exercise of invention. P.
254 U. S.
165.
256 F. 23 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the Procter & Gamble Company
against the Berlin Mills Company for the infringement
Page 254 U. S. 157
of the patent of John J. Burchenal for a food product, issued on
April 13, 1915, No. 1,135,351, to the Procter & Gamble Company,
assignee. The district court held the patent void for lack of
invention, and also that the claims in suit were not infringed. The
circuit court of appeals, one judge dissenting, held the patent
valid and infringed. 256 F. 23.
The patent in controversy relates to a lard-like food product,
consisting of a vegetable oil partially hydrogenized to a
homogeneous, whitish, yellowish product. The record discloses that
the making of lard substitutes has been accomplished by mixing
melted fat with vegetable oils.
These oils contain glycerids -- olein, linolin, and stearin. The
hydrogenation, or hardening process, has the effect to increase the
proportion of the solid glycerids of high saturation. Stearin is
called a saturated glycerid for the reason "that there are present
in the molecule as many hydrogen atoms as possibly can be joined to
the carbon atoms." Linolin and olein are called unsaturated
glycerids, and can be converted by the addition of hydrogen into
hardened glycerids.
The patentee, in the specifications of his patent, states the
object of his alleged invention, and what he intended to
accomplish, as follows:
"The special object of the invention is to provide a new food
product for a shortening in cooking, in which the liability to
become rancid is minimized, and in which the components of such
vegetable oils which are inferior and detrimental to use as such a
food product have been to a large extent converted into a higher
and more wholesome form. All such vegetable oils contain glycerids
of unsaturated fatty acids, and among these notable quantities of
fatty glycerids of lower saturation than olein. It is the presence
of these glycerids of lower saturation that seriously affects the
rancidity of the material. Oxidation is
Page 254 U. S. 158
largely the cause of rancidity, which oxidation weakens the fat
at the point of absorption at the double bonds, and these glycerids
of lesser saturation readily absorb oxygen from the air at ordinary
temperatures, while the more highly saturated glycerids, as olein,
only absorb oxygen at elevated temperatures. It is evident,
therefore, that oils or fats containing notable quantities of
glycerids of linolic acid, or of lesser saturation, are distinctly
inferior as an edible product to those containing a minimum of
these glycerids with a larger percent of olein. On the other hand,
while it is important to get rid of the readily oxidizable
glycerids of lower saturation, it is also important not to supply
too large a percent of fully saturated glycerids. . . . Oil, liquid
at the ordinary temperatures, does not make the best shortening,
because the oil remains liquid, keeping the food in a soggy
condition, and the oil will even settle to the under part of the
cooked product and soil the cloth, paper, or whatever it may come
in contact with. Moreover, fats of a melting point above the
temperature of the human body, 98� F., are not so digestible
as fats which are liquid at this point, or which have a melting
point below 98� F. It is therefore my object in the
preparation of my new lard-like composition and food product, and
in preparing same from cottonseed oil, to change the chemical
composition of the oil to obtain a product with a high percentage
of olein, a low percentage of linolin and the lesser saturated
fats, and with only sufficient stearin to make the product congeal
at ordinary temperatures."
"In manufacturing this product, cottonseed or other vegetable
oil is caused to chemically absorb a limited amount of hydrogen by
reacting on the oil with hydrogen in the presence of a catalytic
agent and at an elevated temperature. The oil is preferably
agitated in a closed vessel in the presence of an atmosphere of
compressed hydrogen, a catalyzer of finely divided nickel carried
by
Page 254 U. S. 159
kieselguhr being maintained in suspension in the oil and its
temperature being raised to about 155� C."
"According to the present invention, the amount of hydrogen
absorbed is carefully regulated and limited. In practice, the
operation is stopped when the oil has been converted into a product
which cools to a white or yellowish semi-solid more closely
resembling lard than do the commercial mixtures of cottonseed oil
and animal oleo-stearin, while in many respects the product is
superior to the best leaf lard as a shortening. It is not so liable
to become rancid, and the product can be heated to a considerably
higher temperature than lard without smoking or burning. . . . The
high temperature to which my product can be raised without smoking
or burning makes the product ideal for frying, inasmuch as a crust
forms almost instantly on the food fried, which prevents any
absorption of the shortening. A lard-like product thus prepared
from cottonseed oil has a saponification value of about 195, and an
iodin value ranging from about 55 to about 80. The product having
an iodin value of 55 has a titer of about 42� and a melting
point of about 40� C.; that having an iodin value of 55 of
80 has a titer of about 35� and a melting point of about
33� C. While but partially hydrogenized, containing from
about 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent of additional hydrogen more than
in the nonhydrogenized material, it shows no free cottonseed oil
when subjected to the Halphen test, thereby differing from all
commercial lard substitutes containing this oil. It contains from
20 to 25 percent of fully saturated glycerids, from 5 to 10 percent
linolin, and from 65 to 75 percent olein, and an average of a
number of samples gives 23 percent of saturated fats, 7.5 percent
linolin, and 69.5 percent olein, while the cottonseed oil before
treatment contained 17 percent saturated fats, 37 percent linolin,
and 46 percent olein. It will thus be seen
Page 254 U. S. 160
that I have produced an ideal food product, which is high in
olein, low in linolin and lesser saturated fats, and with only
enough stearin to make the product congeal at ordinary
temperatures."
The patent has seven claims -- two broad claims, which are the
ones here involved:
1. "A homogeneous lard-like food product, consisting of an
incompletely hydrogenized vegetable oil."
2. "A homogeneous lard-like food product, consisting of
incompletely hydrogenized cottonseed oil."
The five additional claims, more specific and limited, are not
involved in this suit. Two of the four judges who considered this
patent and the validity of the claims in suit reached the
conclusion that they were void for want of invention; two judges of
the circuit court of appeals held the patent valid and
infringed.
In deciding between these conflicting views, we must consider
the genesis of the alleged invention, and what was theretofore
known and disclosed in the art. Burchenal, the patentee, was not a
chemist, and was the general manager of the Procter & Gamble
Company, whose principal business had been the manufacture of soap.
One Edwin C. Kayser, who had been in the employ of Crossfield &
Son, an English firm, and familiar with the Normann process, to be
hereinafter considered, came to this country in 1907, and saw Mr.
Burchenal at the Procter & Gamble factory. A contract was made
with Kayser, and an experimental plant was erected at the Procter
& Gamble works for hydrogenating oil.
It is the contention of the respondent that the merit of
Burchenal's alleged invention arises from the fact that he was the
first to originate and develop the process involved, so as to make
a food product of the character described.
The district court found that Burchenal in fact invented
nothing, and that all that was real invention, as established by
the testimony, came from Kayser. But
Page 254 U. S. 161
considering, for the purposes of this discussion, that the
thought occurred to Burchenal, which he developed in the production
of a food product, the subject matter of this patent, the primary
question is presented whether what Burchenal accomplished amounted
to invention within the meaning and protection of the patent
law.
In considering the patentability of this alleged invention, it
is to be remembered that this is not claimed to be a process
patent. While the process is described in the specifications,
Burchenal makes no claim that it is his invention -- indeed, he
concedes in the testimony that the process is not his, and counsel
frankly say that the patent must stand or fall upon its validity as
a product patent of a new and useful thing within the meaning of
the patent law. If this product were the result of mechanical
improvement only, when viewed in the light of that which was
previously disclosed and open to public use, the step in advance
being only that which one skilled in the art might well make,
without the exercise of the originating or inventing faculty, then
the achievement is not within the protection of the patent law.
The English patent to Normann of October, 1903, disclosed to the
world the process of converting unsaturated fatty acids, or their
glycerids, into saturated compounds. After referring to other
discoveries he says:
"By causing acetylene, ethylene, or benzene vapour in mixture
with hydrogen gas to pass over one of the said metals, the said
investigators obtained from the unsaturated hydrocarbons saturated
hydrocarbons, partly with simultaneous condensation."
"I have found that it is easy to convert by this catalytic
method unsaturated fatty acids into saturated acids. This may be
effected by causing vapours of fatty acid together with hydrogen to
pass over the catalytic metal, which is preferably distributed over
a suitable support, such as pumice stone. It is sufficient,
however, to expose
Page 254 U. S. 162
the fat or the fatty acid in a liquid condition to the action of
hydrogen and the catalytic substance."
"For instance, if fine nickel powder, obtained by reduction in a
current of hydrogen, is added to chemically pure oleic acid, then
the latter heated over an oil bath, and a strong current of
hydrogen is caused to pass through it for a sufficient length of
time, the oleic acid may be completely converted into stearic
acid."
"The quantity of the nickel thus added and the temperature are
immaterial, and will only affect the duration of the process. Apart
from the formation of small quantities of nickel soap, which may be
easily decomposed by dilute mineral acids, the reaction passes off
without any secondary reaction taking place. The same nickel may be
used repeatedly. Instead of pure oleic acid, commercial fatty acids
may be treated in the same manner. The yellowish fatty acids of
tallow, which melt between 44 and 48� C. and whose iodine
number is 35.1, will, after hydrogenation, melt between 56.5 and
59� C., while their iodine number will be 9.8, and their
colour slightly lighter than before, and they will be very
hard."
"The same method is applicable not only to free fatty acids, but
also to their glycerids occurring in nature -- that is to say, to
fats and oils. Olive oil will yield a hard tallow-like mass;
linseed oil and fish oil will give similar results."
"By the new method, all kinds of unsaturated fatty acids and
their glycerids may be easily hydrogenized."
An expert witness, called by petitioner, gives in his testimony
certain views of this process which commend themselves to our
judgment as entirely reasonable and accurate, and so well stated
that we quote them in part:
"Dr. Normann discovered, and sets forth in the patent, that
unsaturated acids or unsaturated oils by the action of hydrogen in
the presence of finely divided nickel may be converted into
corresponding saturated compounds. He
Page 254 U. S. 163
defines the reaction rather carefully in some regards. He says,
for instance, if fine nickel powder obtained by reduction in a
current of hydrogen is added to chemically pure oleic acid, then
the latter heated over an oil bath, and a strong current of
hydrogen is caused to pass through it for a sufficient length of
time, the oleic acid may be completely converted into stearic
acid."
"Further on he says:"
" Apart from the formation of small quantities of nickel soap,
which may be easily decomposed by dilute mineral acids, the
reaction passes off without any secondary reaction's taking
place."
"I think that those two sentences which I have read very well
define the product which is obtained by such reduction, especially
the second sentence, where he says that the reaction goes on in a
quantitative way, we will say -- that is, he says that there is no
side reaction takes place. A chemist would know from this first
paragraph, where he says that oleic acid goes to stearic acid, and
from the second one, where he says that no side reaction takes,
place, the chemist would know exactly what the product is which is
formed by this reaction. . . ."
"I would call attention particularly to the fact that he
hardened olive oil to a hard, tallow-like mass. Tallow is a
substance that is obtained from the fat of either cattle or of
sheep, and is a substance of somewhat semisolid character -- that
is, its lower limit of melting point is within a lard range, and
its upper limit is just slightly beyond the lard range, so that, if
Normann hardened olive oil to a tallow-like mass, that means that
he hardened it to a product of a semisolid character."
"Q. 63. Does Normann specify anywhere in his patent any of the
purposes for which his patents are intended?"
"A. He does not. He says nothing in the patent as to what these
products should be used for. The presumption is that they might be
used for any purpose for which fats of that general character could
be utilized. They might be
Page 254 U. S. 164
used for making candles; they might be used for soaps; they
might be used for edible purposes."
"By the passages I have read. he has very carefully specified
what the product is, so that any chemist would know for what
particular purposes it might be useful."
"Q. 64. In the process of hydrogenation as described in the
Normann patent from which you made citations -- that is, the
British patent, No. 1,515 of 1903 -- what would your conclusion be
as to the edibility of the resultant product when the material
hydrogenated was among those suggested by him, olive oil?"
"A. If an edible olive oil was started with, one would certainly
obtain an edible hydrogenated product."
It is in evidence that this method, shown by Normann, is a
practicable one, and may be used for the making of edible food
products of the kind here involved.
With the knowledge disclosed in the Normann patent conclusively
presumed to be known by the patentee, was it invention to apply the
known process to vegetable oils? In this connection, the history of
the application for the patent in suit in the Patent Office is
interesting and instructive. It is true that Claims 1 and 2 were
finally allowed, and the patentee is entitled to the presumption
which arises from the granting of them. But it appears in the
history of the application for the Burchenal patent, found in the
record, that, as originally presented, it contained two claims not
so broad as the ones now in suit, and a third claim, for "a
semisolid hydrogenized oil," was added by amendment. All of the
claims were rejected, the examiner saying:
"The composition of lard and of cottonseed oil, as to the
glycerids olein and stearin that they contain, is well known. To
make a product from cottonseed oil that shall simulate lard, the
content of stearin should be increased [referring to patents]. It
is thought, therefore, that if the problem of simulating lard from
cottonseed oil were
Page 254 U. S. 165
presented to an oil chemist, an incomplete hydrogenization of
the cottonseed oil would at once suggest itself to him as a
solution of the problem. All the claims are accordingly rejected on
the above ground of lack of invention. Claim 3 is further rejected
on the product formed by the above-cited patents."
Replying to the communication of the examiner, amendment was
made cancelling Claim 3. Further consideration was requested on
Claims 1 and 2, upon arguments which were presented. The claims
were afterwards rejected upon reference to patents to Kayser of
September 26, 1911, and November 14, 1911, the examiner stating
that these patents were adapted to hydrogenize glycerids, the
latter one specifically mentioning its adaptability for cottonseed
oil, and that the process could be arrested at any time during its
progress, and thus an incompletely hydrogenized article be
produced.
Subsequently the specifications were amended, giving more
definitely the percentages of olein, linolin and stearin. The
patentee concludes the amended specifications, stating:
"It will thus be seen that I have produced an ideal food
product, which is high in olein, low in linolin, and lesser
saturated fats, and with only enough stearin to make the product
congeal at ordinary temperatures;"
additional and more limited claims were added, but ultimately
the patent, containing the broad claims here involved, was
granted.
It is true, as the circuit court of appeals states in its
opinion, that the applicant never did acquiesce in the examiner's
action rejecting his claims, and finally obtained what he had in
the first place asked for.
This record establishes that it was known before Burchenal took
up the subject that a vegetable oil could be changed into a
semi-solid homogeneous substance by a process of hydrogenation
arrested before completion, and that it might be edible. This much
of the art was public
Page 254 U. S. 166
property, and open to general use. The product of this process
was known, and open to public use. To supply such products as the
patentee has described in the broad claims in suit may have been
new and useful, but does not in our opinion rise to the dignity of
invention, and is an advance step which would occur to one skilled
in the art, when investigating and considering the subject. It
follows that the decree of the circuit court of appeals must be
reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court with
directions to dismiss the bill on the ground that Claims 1 and 2
are void for the reasons stated in this opinion.
Reversed.