Application of Carl D. LUNSFORD
Patent Appeal No. 7478
United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
March 17, 1966
359 F.2d 917 | 53 CCPA 1011
Gordon W. Hueschen, Kalamazoo, Mich., for appellant. Clarence W. Moore, Washington, D. C. (Fred W. Sherling, Washington, D. C., of counsel), for Commissioner of Patents. Before WORLEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, MARTIN, SMITH and ALMOND, Judges.
When the duress has been exerted by one clothed with official authority, or exercising a public employment, less evidence of compulsion or pressure is required; as where an officer exacts illegal fees, or a common carrier excessive charges. But the principle is applicable in all cases according to the nature and exigency of each.
Plaintiff did not file a cross motion for summary judgment, but its counsel at oral argument requested that plaintiff‘s response to defendant‘s motion be treated as a cross motion for summary judgment. In order to expedite the disposition of this litigation, we shall grant that request as we have in other instances. Greenway v. United States, 163 Ct.Cl. 72 (1963). On that basis, we hold that plaintiff is entitled to recover on the cause of action alleged in Count Three of its petition for the value of parts removed from the aircraft from the date the invitation for bids was issued to September 16, 1958. Since the ASBCA failed to make any findings on the amount due on the claim, the case is remanded to the trial commissioner for a determination of the amount of the recovery, pursuant to Rule 47 (c). Stein Bros. Mfg. Co. v. United States, 162 Ct.Cl. 802, 337 F.2d 861 (1963).
Plaintiff has admitted it has no defense to defendant‘s counterclaim and that there is due thereon the sum of $324,136.90. Defendant is entitled to judgment in that amount, but the entry of judgment on the counterclaim, plus the question of the allowance of interest thereon, is deferred pending a decision on the amount of plaintiff‘s recovery. When the trial commissioner‘s report on that issue is returned to the court, both parties will be granted an opportunity to submit additional briefs and argument on the interest question.
53 CCPA
Application of Carl D. LUNSFORD.
Patent Appeal No. 7478.
United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.
March 17, 1966.
Gordon W. Hueschen, Kalamazoo, Mich., for appellant.
Clarence W. Moore, Washington, D. C. (Fred W. Sherling, Washington, D. C., of counsel), for Commissioner of Patents.
Before WORLEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, MARTIN, SMITH and ALMOND, Judges.
This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner‘s rejection of claims 4 and 5 in application serial No. 821,358, filed June 19, 1959, for “Halo-Substituted Phenoxymethyl Oxazolidones.” No claim is allowed.
The sole issue is obviousness under
Beasley et al., Chem. Abstracts, Vol. 51, col. 8725 (1957)1
Karrer, “Organic Chemistry” (Elsevier), pp. 434, 445 (1950)
Noller, “Chem. of Organic Compounds,” 2nd Ed., (Saunders), pp. 440-1 (1957)
Fieser et al., “Organic Chemistry,” (Reinhold), pp. 624-6 (1956)
The subject matter on appeal and its relation to this art can best be understood by referring to the following formula:
Claim 4 defines the compound shown, namely, 5-(p-chlorophenoxymethyl)-2-oxazolidone.
Claim 5 defines the compound having the same structure except that the chloro atom is in the meta or 3 position rather than the 4 position as shown.
Beasley, the principal reference, discloses the compound having the same structure except that the chloro atom is in the ortho or 2 position.
As to the remaining references, we agree with the board that they “pertain to a fact so well known in organic chemistry, namely the existence of ortho, meta and para isomers of disubstituted benzene compounds, that it is hardly necessary to refer to them further.”
The board also said:
* * * we have come to the conclusion that, under the facts of this particular case, the appealed claims are not patentable over the cited Beasley et al. publication.
This issue therefore is: are appellant‘s m- and p-chloro compounds patentable over the o-chloro isomer, and other disclosure, of Beasley?
Appellant admits “that, as pure chemical compounds,” his compounds “have a relationship sufficiently close to the compound of the prior art so that they would be held obvious under
The examiner‘s basic position was that Beasley discloses not only the o-chloro isomer of appellant‘s compounds but other “related” compounds as well. One of these shows “a para-chloro positioning” and “mephenesin is mentioned“, this latter compound being 3-o-toloxy-1,2-propanediol. The examiner also stated that 5-(o-methoxyphenoxymethyl)-2-ox-
From this the examiner argued that the “prior art has found closely related compounds to have potent pharmacological properties” and contended that “When an important medicine is discovered it is customary practice to produce various molecular variants of it seeking the optimum as well as seeking other medicines which may derive from the fortunate association of atoms.” In a compound, according to the examiner, “there is a fundamental association which gives the ‘personality’ of the compound and, usually, minor substituents then merely shade the properties in matter of degree.” That being so, the examiner found the so-called “Second Ward Affidavit,” showing a number of quite startling changes in pharmacological properties resulting from seemingly minor structural changes in compounds appellant believed to be “related,” unpersuasive of patentability saying:
* * * the exceptions sometimes prove the rule and that there are exceptions does not negative the fact that generally changes as in isomers or homologues only affect properties in degree only. This does not make the compounds any the less obvious2 as such.
The board, in an opinion dated February 28, 1964, took somewhat the same approach. While stating that “properties of the compounds must be considered together with the chemical structures and, in a proper case, a patent may be granted by virtue of the unobvious properties,” it found affidavits submitted by appellant showing the compound of claim 4 to be 4.4 times and the compound of claim 5 to be 7.0 times as potent as the Beasley compound not convincing that the claimed compounds are “possessed of properties not possessed by the ortho compound of the prior art,” and affirmed the examiner on the ground that “A mere improvement in the same property does not establish unobviousness * * *.”
Our principal difficulty, at this point, in accepting the examiner‘s and board‘s positions is that their reasoning is predicated on the premise, to use the board‘s own words, that “the prior art compound has significant potency as an anti-convulsant against electroshock-induced convulsions * * *.” While that is the fact, as shown by some of the above-mentioned affidavits, we are unable to find a disclosure of it in the art of record. Clearly, appellant‘s discoveries in this regard cannot be relied upon to show the obviousness of his invention. Those discoveries are not prior art within the purview of
The solicitor‘s brief gives signs of his having struggled with the same problem. There, and at oral argument in an effort to show that the examiner and board “must have had some basis in mind” for their statement, the solicitor contended that appellant “should not make such an argument [that anti-convulsant activity in the prior art compound is taught only by him] because he should know that the reference compound would be expected to be active as an anticonvulsant.” (Our emphasis.) This follows, according to the solicitor, because (1) appellant has suggested no other activity for the reference compound and his specification states that compounds of similar structure to his were “known, and previously most active,” (2) the original Beasley article appeared in the Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, which fact is
Without implying our acceptance of the arguments above summarized, we defer for the moment further comment on them except to point out that Knapp-Monarch involved the issue of likelihood of confusion under section 2(d) of The Trademark Act of 1946 (
The solicitor‘s brief, like the examiner and the board, makes a point about enhanced potency in the same kind of property, saying:
Appellant also urges throughout his brief that the increased potency of 440% and 700% of his compounds is necessarily an unexpected result which makes his compounds patentable, and he finally poses the question as to what greater degree of activity would have to be shown to make the compounds patentable * * *. It is clear from the decisions of this Court that a showing of up to nine times greater activity does not necessarily make a compound patentable, In re Carabateas [345 F.2d 1013], 52 CCPA [1386], 145 USPQ 549; In re Rosselet et al., [347 F.2d 847] 52 CCPA —, 146 USPQ 183.
While the statement in the last sentence above quoted is true, it becomes so merely by reason of the word “necessarily.” To dispel any misunderstanding, we wish to point out that what Carabateas held was that the two substituted-piperidines there claimed, differing from the primary reference by a so-called “reverse ester” configuration in the 4-position, and which were shown to be six and nine times more potent as analgesics than the primary reference compound, constituted “obvious” subject matter within the meaning of
In Rosselet, we affirmed because of a lack of proof, saying “that the Spero compounds [against which no comparisons had been made] are * * * sufficiently close to the claimed compounds to make the claimed invention prima facie obvious and * * * a showing of some unexpected effectiveness or property relative to those compounds is required to support a finding of patentability.” We expressly said that we were not holding “that a showing of activity 4.7 and 1.6 times that of the prior art is insufficient as a matter of law to establish patentability * * *.”
We have neither of those situations here. Unlike Rosselet, appellant has presented evidence of enhanced potency compared with the only prior art compound. That evidence is “clear and convincing evidence of substantially greater” effectiveness, as required by this court in In re Lohr, 317 F.2d 388, 50 CCPA 1274. Unlike Carabateas, we find nothing in the art of record to suggest to one of ordinary skill that appellant‘s m-chloro and p-chloro isomers would have anti-convulsant activity substantially greater than the prior art o-chloro compound in an amount approximating that discovered by appellant. We therefore find Carabateas and Rosselet are not controlling or persuasive precedents in this appeal.
Inventions of this type cannot, we think, be passed off as “mere improvement in the same property” or as mere shades “in matter of degree” which compel, ipso facto, a finding of unpatentability.
In the first place, the discovered activities or properties are part of the things claimed, the compounds. Whereas the inventor may or may not know what part of the compound is responsible for the enhanced activity, the important point, under the law, is that there be proof that the compound in fact possesses that activity. Once that has been done, we, like the Patent Office, are required by the clear wording of
Second, we find no authority in
Third, we are inclined to agree with appellant that inventions of the type here involved are frequently made only after the expenditure of vast amounts of research time and effort; in short, they represent the very kind of invention some industries, most notably the drug industry, seek in order to obtain, or maintain, the kind of competitive advantage which promotes progress in the “useful arts.”
Fourth, we agree “that new compounds are nothing more than a novel combination of elements, all of which elements are per se old,” to quote appellant, “a fundamental association [of atoms],” to quote the examiner, and we see no basis in logic or in law for distinguishing mechanical and chemical inventions on an issue such as that before us. Certainly a novel combination of old mechanical elements which so cooperate as to produce a new and useful result, or merely a substantial increase in efficiency, can be patentable. In re Wright, 268 F.2d 757, 46 CCPA 955, and cases there cited. Furthermore, like the Patent Office, we have frequently found novel chemical processes producing the same product, but in unexpectedly higher yields, to be patentable by reason of that yield, a “matter of degree.” Should not chemical products, also displaying an unexpectedly higher degree of effectiveness, be treated in like manner?
In the final analysis, as in all
In the pre-1952 Act case of Schering Corp. v. Gilbert, 153 F.2d 428, 430 (2d
* * * it is necessary to understand what the inventors did as well as what they sought to accomplish and give recognition to their end result as a novel and useful improvement, not in the art of organic chemistry but in that of cholecystography. [Our emphasis.]
We followed that rationale, applying the present statute, in In re Papesch, supra footnote 2, and have continued to follow it since.
In Papesch we reversed the board‘s affirmance of a rejection of claims to a triethyl compound on a reference disclosing the corresponding trimethyl compound because the invention possessed unexpectedly potent anti-inflammatory activity. While Papesch did not involve the “so many times greater” situation we have here, that case and the ensuing cases cannot be distinguished from the instant case on that ground. Appellant has here proved his compounds to possess anti-convulsant activity substantially greater than the prior art compound. We find this to have been unpredictable from the prior art, even upon considering the solicitor‘s arguments about suggestions of some activity allegedly derivable from knowledge about “related” compounds mentioned in the reference. Therefore, as in Papesch, there exists a significant, advantageous, unexpected difference between appellant‘s invention and the prior art, which renders the invention patentable.
The decision of the board is reversed.
Reversed.
WORLEY, C. J., concurs in the result.
ALMOND, Judge (concurring), with whom MARTIN, Judge, joins.
The prior art does not suggest the property, in qualitative sense, exhibited by the claimed compounds. It follows, of course, that the relative activity, i. e., the quantitative aspect, of the property is not suggested either. Thus, I do not find a consideration of the quantitative aspect of the property to be necessary to a conclusion in this case. On the basis of unexpectedness of property alone, I agree with the reversal here.
The factors which compel me to that view are: Nowhere in the Beasley abstract is it mentioned that any of the compounds therein disclosed have pharmacological activity of any sort, let alone anticonvulsant activity. The fact that the Beasley article is reported in the Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology certainly does not warrant the conclusion that the compounds therein disclosed have pharmacological activity. Nor, in my view, does the fact that mephenesin is an anticonvulsant provide any basis for a finding that the ortho-chloro compound of Beasley has anti-convulsant activity. As for the Lunsford patent, which discloses 5-o-methoxyphenoxymethyl-2-oxazolidone as having anticonvulsant properties, there is nothing in the patent or any reference of record to indicate that substitution of a chlorine atom for the methoxy group would provide a compound having anticonvulsant properties.
53 CCPA
Application of Carl Dalton LUNSFORD.
Patent Appeal No. 7512.
United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.
March 17, 1966.
