
    59 CCPA
    Application of Oldrich K. SEBEK.
    Patent Appeal No. 8631.
    United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.
    Aug. 31, 1972.
    Roman Saliwanchik, Kalamazoo, Mich., attorney of record, for appellant; John Kekich, Kalamazoo, Mich., of counsel.
    S. Wm. Cochran, Washington, D. C., for the Commissioner of Patents; Jack E. Armore, Washington, D. G., of counsel.
    Before WORLEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, ALMOND, BALDWIN, and LANE, Judges.
   LANE, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Appeals sustaining the examiner’s rejection of claims 1-3 of appellant’s application on the ground of obviousness (35 U.S.C. § 103) over certain prior art. We reverse.

The invention is in the field of chemical synthesis of beta-carotene, a precursor of vitamin A. It had previously been known that beta-carotene could be produced by certain microorganisms using an aqueous fermentation medium containing citrus molasses, a product obtained from whole citrus peel. Appellant contends that in the prior art processes, the level of citrus molasses was kept at or below 5% by weight of the fermentation medium in the belief that there was no benefit to be gained fbom the addition of greater quantities. It is asserted that the present invention is based on the discovery that at citrus molasses levels of at least 7% %, the yield of beta-carotene is greatly and unexpectedly increased. In his specification, appellant reports the following data:

Citrus Molasses Added Yield of Beta-Carotene (% by Weight) _(mg./l.)_
none 10
0.1 10
1 13
5 68
7 118
8 126
12 172
14 245
16 255

Appellant does not argue claims 1-3 individually, and claim 1, therefore, adequately defines the subject matter involved in this appeal. Claim 1 reads as follows:

In a method for microbiologically producing [3-carotene in a submerged aerobic fermentation using [the microorganism] Blakeslea trispora, the improvement which comprises incorporating at least about 7%% per cent of citrus molasses in a |3-carotene fermentation medium.

The examiner rejected claims 1-3. under 35 U.S.C. 103 as unpatentable (1) Ciegler et al. (hereinafter the Ciegler patent) in view of Hoffmann et al. (Hoffmann) and (2) Fulde alone or in view of the Ciegler patent. The Ciegler patent discloses the use of both citrus meal and citrus molasses in the fermentation medium, which is the same medium as that utilized by appellant, to increase the yield of beta-carotene. Tables I and II of the patent report the beta-carotene yields using citrus meal and citrus molasses respectively.

Table I
Citrus Meal Extract Added (ml./100 ml. Beta-Carotene Yield of fermentation (gg./l00 ml. of fer-medlum) mentation medium)
none 22,000
5 79.400
10 89.400
Table II
Citrus Molasses Added (per cent by Beta-Carotene Yield weight) (gg./lOO ml.)
none ........................ 54,800
2.5 ....................... 113,700
5.0 ....................... 101,100

The Ciegler patent does not disclose the use of any level of citrus molasses greater than 5% by weight, although there is no express disclosure to the effect that such greater proportions could not be used.

Hoffman is drawn to the production of vitamin Bi2 using a microorganism and fermentation process different from those disclosed in both the Ciegler patent and appellant’s application. The examiner observed that in Hoffmann’s examples, it appears that:

[W] ithin an optimum range their [sic] exists areas where a greater amount of precursor will produce smaller yields of the vitamin than a lesser amount of precursor while at other subsequent ranges a greater amount will produce larger yields of the vitamin.

The board stated that the examiner cited Hoffmann “purely for the purpose of argument to show the existence of anomaly in fermentation processes,’’ and indeed, the examiner did use Hoffman in that manner, concluding that from the knowledge of “this erratic behavior of microorganisms, it would be obvious to try the claimed amounts of citrus molasses in the Ciegler et al process.”

The board sustained the rejection based on the Ciegler patent and Hoffmann agreeing with the examiner that the determination of optimum amounts of citrus molasses would have been obvious even though outside the range taught by the Ciegler patent.

Like the Ciegler patent, the Fulde patent is directed to the synthesis of beta-carotene through the fermentation of Blakeslea trispora, and the use of a variety of citrus peel materials, including citrus meal and citrus molasses, in the fermentation medium is disclosed. Although no suitable citrus molasses concentration is specified, the examples in Fulde utilize citrus meal levels of 4%, 18% and 25%. The examiner reasoned, and the board agreed, that in view of Fulde’s teaching of equivalence between citrus molasses and citrus meal, the substitution of citrus molasses for citrus meal at the citrus meal concentrations utilized in the examples, would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art. The Ciegler patent, in both the examiner’s and board’s view, reinforced the conclusion of obviousness.

It was appellant’s position during prosecution of his application in the Patent Office, and in his position before this court, that the use of citrus molasses at levels of 7%% and above is not suggested by the prior art and unexpectedly leads to higher yields of beta-carotene. Appellant contends that one of ordinary skill in the art would have been turned away from the use of greater than 5% citrus molasses. In support of that contention, appellant submitted a publication of Ciegler, Nelson and Hall (hereinafter the Ciegler publication), the three patentees of the Ciegler patent, which reports experimentation with various citrus materials. Based on data presented in the publication, the authors concluded that:

Citrus molasses enhanced carotenogene-sis at concentrations from 0.1% to 1.0%; at higher concentrations there was no further yield increase * * *.

Appellant additionally provided the affidavits of Joseph Grady, a bacteriologist, and Harold Koepsell, a biochemist. The Grady affidavit states that the data presented in Table II of the Ciegler patent, reproduced supra, suggests to af-fiant that the optimum citrus molasses level falls somewhere below 5% and that affiant would be discouraged from investigating concentrations higher than 5 %. Moreover, Grady averred that Fulde teaches nothing with respect to citrus molasses concentration and that the Cieg-ler patent, rather than Fulde, would be the guiding prior art disclosure for one of ordinary skill in the relevant art. The Koepsell affidavit states that Ciegler, Nelson and Hall are highly respected in the fermentation arts, that their indication that at levels of citrus molasses higher than 5% no further beta-carotene yield increase could be expected would dissuade those skilled in the art from experimenting with such higher levels, and that with respect to the alleged equivalency between citrus meal and citrus molasses taught, in the examiner’s view, in Fulde, “citrus meal has never been equated with citrus molasses in terms of concentration and (S-carotene yield.”

OPINION

We do not think that the use of citrus molasses at concentrations higher than 5% would have been obvious from the Ciegler patent. While not expressly contrary, the Ciegler patent tends to teach away from such concentrations in its disclosure of a lower yield of beta-carotene at 5 % than at 2.5 %. That trend is underscored when the citrus meal results are considered. There, the increase in concentration of the additive increases product yield as shown in the table reproduced supra. The Ciegler publication and the Grady and Koepsell affidavits provide additional evidence that the impression to be drawn from the Ciegler patent is that citrus molasses values greater than 5% would not be expected to be advantageous. Ciegler, Nelson and Hall flatly state this in their publication, and we regard the opinions of experts in the field as entitled to consideration. In re Fay, 347 F.2d 597, 603, 52 CCPA 1483, 1489-1490 (1965).

The board was convinced that one of ordinary skill in the art would experiment to determine optimum levels of citrus molasses concentration, especially where a commercial process rather than a laboratory-scale operation would be sought. However, while it may ordinarily be the case that the determination of optimum values for the parameters of a prior art process would be at least prima facie obvious, that conclusion depends upon what the prior art discloses with respect to those parameters. Where, as here, the prior art disclosure suggests the outer limits of the range of suitable values, and that the optimum resides within that range, and where there are indications elsewhere that in fact the optimum should be sought within that range, the determination of optimum values outside that range may not be obvious. We think it is not on the facts of this case.

The board also relied on the fact that in the Ciegler patent only two values, other than the control, are reported and concluded that one would not consider such a limited amount of testing to be adequate. Whatever may be said of the statistical significance of two points, the fact remains that this is all that the Ciegler patent reports, and if there is evidence tending to weaken the inference to be drawn from that data, we cannot find it in the record. The examiner supplied Hoffmann to establish the unpredictability of optimum values of process parameters in the fermentation arts, and the board apparently felt that, to some extent, the existence of anomaly would suggest further experimentation to determine optimum values. However, we think that logic and reason compel the conclusion that in an area of technology shown to be highly unpredictable in process values, the discovery of optimum values not in any way suggested by the prior art is more likely to be unobvious than obvious within the meaning of § 103. In establishing the unpredictability of the art relevant to the subject matter on appeal, the record strengthens appellant’s claim that the realization that use of citrus molasses concentrations outside of anything taught or suggested by the Ciegler patent to increase beta-carotene yields is indeed unexpected.

The rejection of claims 1-3 under 35 U.S.C. § 103 over the Ciegler patent in view of Hoffmann is accordingly reversed. We likewise reverse the rejection of those claims under § 103 over Fulde alone or in view of the Ciegler patent. As noted above, the examiner reasoned that Fulde renders obvious the use of citrus molasses at citrus meal concentrations which are disclosed to be higher than 71/2%- However, there is no suggestion in Fulde of using the molasses at the same concentration levels as the meal, and as is evident from the tables in the Ciegler patent, citrus meal and citrus molasses behave differently in terms of beta-carotene production. At most, Fulde teaches nothing with respect to suitable citrus molasses levels, and when we view the Fulde and Ciegler patents in conjunction with the Ciegler publication, we are convinced that the substitution of citrus molasses for citrus meal in the Fulde process at the citrus meal concentrations would not have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art.

Having weighed the strength of the evidence of obviousness against the evidence of nonobviousness provided by appellant, we conclude that none of the examiner’s rejections are sustainable in this case and that the claimed subject matter on appeal would not have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 103. The decision of the board is therefore reversed.

Reversed. 
      
      . Serial No. 339,331 filed January 22, 1964.
     
      
      . U. S. Patent No. 3,079,380 issued February 26, 1963.
     
      
      . U. S. Patent No. 3,013,948 issued December 19, 1961.
     
      
      . U. S. Patent No. 3,291,701 issued December 13, 1966, on an application filed July 6, 1962.
     
      
      . Ciegler et al., Enhancement of |3-Carotene Synthesis hy Citrus Products, 11 Applied Microbiology 128-31 (1963).
     