Application of Wilhelm E. WALLES, William F. Tousignant and Thomas Houtman, Jr.
Patent Appeal No. 7400
United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
Oct. 6, 1966
366 F.2d 786 | 54 CCPA 1316
The decision of the board is affirmed.
Affirmed.
SMITH, J., dissents.
54 CCPA
John A. Blair, Detroit, Mich., for appellants.
Clarence W. Moore, Washington, D. C. (Joseph Schimmel, Washington, D. C., of counsel), for the Commissioner of Patents.
Before WORLEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, MARTIN, SMITH, and ALMOND, Judges.
SMITH, Judge.
Appealed claims 1-7 were rejected as “unpatentable over” the claims of a patent to Tousignant et al. This rejection was affirmed by the Board of Appeals. We find the rejection to be improper and therefore reverse the decision of the board.
After an extensive prosecution, the appealed claims stood rejected in view of
The Applications
The facts are relatively simple and not in dispute. Appellants are the inventors of record in the appealed application1 and the patent.2 The appealed application results from a division of a parent case. The patent relied upon for the rejection issued on a continuation-in-part application based on the parent case. The parent case is not involved here. No requirement for restriction
The Inventions
The subject matter defined in the patent claims and the appealed claims may be described as follows. All of the appealed claims define a resin per se.3 All of the patent claims relied on in the rejection define a hair setting composition.4 The patent claims define a hair
The Rejection
The examiner rejected the appealed claims as “unpatentable over” the patent claims. The examiner‘s answer before the board states:
The Examiner‘s position, succinctly stated, is that a polymer is not patentable over the same polymer dispersed in water. * * *
* * *
Applicant firmly maintains that [the patent] * * * is not prior art because the application on appeal takes priority to the filing date of [the patent] * * *. That such a position is untenable is clearly shown by In re Ockert, [44 CCPA 1024, 245 F.2d 467, 114 USPQ 330] * * *:
That if only one inventive concept is present, two patents cannot be granted regardless of the order in which the applications were filed. (Italics added)
* * *
In summary the Examiner submits that a clear unequivocal case of double patenting has been made out. * * *
The board in its opinion expressly declined to indicate whether the basis of the rejection was “double patenting” or whether its rejection was based on the patent as prior art. The board found instead that the appealed claims and the patent claims claimed the “same invention,” citing
* * * We do not consider such solutions of a soluble polymer to constitute patentably separate and distinct subject matter. * * *
* * * aqueous solutions of the [resin per se] * * * such as those claimed in appellants’ patent, would be apparent to the polymer chemist of no more than ordinary knowledge and skill. * * *
A terminal disclaimer as to the appealed claims was filed but was given no legal effect in overcoming the rejection.
The solicitor in his brief, apparently recognizing the contradiction between the board‘s positions—that the appealed claims and the patent claims claimed the “same invention” but also claimed different inventions which were “patentably indistinct“—argues primarily the broader ground that the patent claims and the appealed claims are “patentably indistinct.” However, concerning the terminal disclaimer, the solicitor argues that our decisions in In re Robeson, 331 F.2d 610, 51 CCPA 1271; and In re Kaye, 332 F.2d 816, 51 CCPA 1465, are not controlling because of a difference in “facts.” It is reasoned that in Kaye and Robeson there were “separate inventions” and the claims defined “mutually exclusive subject matter” whereas here the appealed claims and the patent claims differ only in “scope” based upon “the same subject matter.” The solicitor‘s brief6 concludes:
* * * the fact that the appeal claims will dominate the patent claims is a sufficiently important difference to make those decisions [Kaye and Robeson] inapplicable.
Our disposition of this appeal does not require us to resolve this dispute.
“Same Invention”
Do the appealed claims and the patent claims define the “same invention?” We would comment at this point that the patent bar was cautioned some 33 years previously by Stringham, in his book entitled Double Patenting, 22, 24 (1933), as follows:
* * * The term “same invention” is too broad a term to fit in with the law of double patenting, because of the diversity of meanings of “invention.”
* * *
The undue breadth of the term “same invention” has occasioned, at least in part, the difficulty which inventors have had in getting proper protection on more than one related achievement. It is not even approximately true to say that the law does not permit more than one patent on the “same invention.” * * *
We think the 1952 Patent Act recognized this warning. The term “invention” as used in the 1952 Patent Act means an “invention or discovery” (
Whatever meaning the term “invention” may have possessed prior to the 1952 Patent Act, it is clear that the term “invention” now means the subject matter which the applicant claims and regards as his “invention.”
The failure to conform to the terminology of the 1952 Patent Act has created unnecessary problems in communication and resulted in confusion. Nowhere is this confusion more evident than in the maze of law included in the term “double patenting.” We need look no further than the record here for confirmation of that fact.
Do the appealed claims and the patent claims define the same subject matter, that is, the same invention? We think the proper way to determine whether claims in two applications or in an application and a patent define the same subject matter is to determine independently precisely what subject matter is defined in the two sets of claims. Where it may be concluded after comparing these independent determinations that the subject matter is in fact the same, the appealed claims are properly rejected in view of the patent claims.
Turning to the merits of this appeal, considering the patent claims, the subject matter defined therein is a hair setting composition comprising a resin dispersed in a solvent. Considering the appealed claims, the subject matter defined therein is a resin per se. Comparing the respective subject matter, we must conclude that the subject matter is not the same and therefore the respective claims do not define the “same invention.” Numerous decisions of this court support this conclusion.7
There is evidence of record that the Patent Office considered that the appealed claims and the patent claims did in fact claim the “same invention” meaning the “same subject matter.” The reasoning in support thereof is that both sets of claims include the resin. This method of comparing the inventions defined by the claims is improper as it com-
“Patentably Indistinct Invention”
Considering all of the arguments of the Patent Office and the opinions of the board, we think that claims 1-7 were primarily rejected on the ground that they claim subject matter which is not patentably distinguishable from subject matter claimed in a patent previously issued to appellants. While the board stated at one point the basis for the rejection was that the respective claims defined the “same invention,” we think the real objection is that though there are in fact two inventions, only one of them is considered to be entitled to a patent.
The Arguments
The solicitor argues primarily that the appealed claims are “patentably indistinct” from the patent claims. Appellants traverse this argument and also argue that the Patent Office has, in effect, utilized the patent as prior art in rejecting the appealed claims. We will first consider the solicitor‘s position.
The solicitor in his brief explains how the patent claims and the appealed claims define subject matter which is “patentably indistinct.” The explanation involves an interpretation of the patent claims. First, in interpreting the patent claims, we are asked to ignore that portion of the patent claims which states that the composition therein defined is “for setting hair.” It is reasoned that portion indicates “only an intended use” which “is of no patentable significance” citing In re Sinex, 309 F.2d 488, 50 CCPA 1004; Kropa v. Robie, 187 F.2d 150, 38 CCPA 858. Second, it is argued that the portion of the patent claims which recites that the polymer is dispersed in “a solvent,” as an element of the “composition for setting hair,” “that is selected from the group consisting of water, lower alkyl alcohols containing
* * * Common sense and common experience indicate that it is common practice to dissolve resinous materials in various solvents to produce coating compositions for various uses, and that the lower alkyl alcohols, such as methyl or ethyl alcohol, are common solvents for that purpose. * * *
Interpreting the patent claims in the above manner, the solicitor concludes:
* * * Therefore, it is manifest that the claims of the patent and the instant claims depend upon the same essential element for patentability, namely the specific polymeric material. * * *
We do not agree that the patent claims before us can be interpreted in the above manner nor is such a method of analysis proper in determining whether two sets of claims are “patentably indistinct.” First, we do not agree that the portion of the patent claims which recite “a composition for setting hair,” may be ignored in determining what invention is defined by the patent claims. An examination of the patent specification, including the objects of the invention, the discussion of the prior art, and the examples set forth, reveals that it is directed solely to compositions for setting hair. The only interpretation of the patent claims consistent with the disclosure is that the invention, the subject matter claimed therein, is a hair setting composition. “In our judgment those introductory words give life and meaning” to the claims. Kropa v. Robie, supra, 187 F.2d 150, 38 CCPA 858; In re Sinex, supra, 309 F.2d 488, 50 CCPA 1004.
We also find it improper to ignore the introductory portions of the patent claims for another reason. The record shows that during prosecution in the Patent Office the claims were rejected as being obvious in view of hair setting compositions disclosed in prior art patents. The Patent Office then considered that the patent claims did in fact define a hair setting composition and not a poly-
Second, we think the solicitor‘s method of analysis whereby the appealed claims are found to be “patentably indistinct” is incorrect and contrary to well established principles of law. It appears that the analysis is based on a principle of subtraction wherein all that is old (water and lower alcohols) and all that is allegedly obvious (dissolving resins in solvents) may be deleted from the claim. That which remains is the subject matter upon which “patentability” is predicated.
We know of no authority, and the solicitor cites none, where, in a rejection based on double patenting, it is permissible to dissect and discard portions of claims in a search for or an attempt to isolate “the essential element for patentability,” whatever that means, common to two sets of claims. Following the solicitor‘s reasoning, no other patent may issue which includes, as part of the subject matter sought to be patented, the resin per se. Also, we note that this reasoning process looks to what elements in the claims are the same and casts out the differences. We believe this is also improper.
The solicitor infers, however, on the facts of this case, that all appellants did was to disperse the resin in a solvent. And, apparently for emphasis, the solicitor points out that the patent claims include dispersing the resin in water. The solicitor‘s position apparently endorses the examiner‘s question:
* * * where resides patentability when claiming a polymeric product, whose dispersion has been earlier claimed. [?]
As we view the proceedings below, we think the objections and reasoning of the Patent Office are improper. The inquiry below is consistently cast in terms of
Perhaps the real basis for the position here taken by the solicitor is that a patent on the hair setting composition never should have issued. Concerning that invention and patent, the solicitor states in his brief:
* * * While method claims, such as claims 12 and 13 of the patent might be patentable as a new use under
35 U.S.C. 100(b) , the composition itself would be unpatentable. Consequently, it is submitted that only a single patentable concept exists, and that under the established principles two patents cannot be granted.
The patent is presumed valid,
In summary, the invention defined by the appealed claims is a resin per se and the invention defined by the patent claims is a hair setting composition. There are no other references before us. As we view the record, appellants discovered a resin which is novel and unobvious. They also discovered that this resin was a useful element in a hair setting composition. The hair setting composition now protected by a patent is not a bar per se to the appealed claims. Based on the facts of record, we know no theory of law concerning “dou-
Our analysis of the rejection before us is in no way dependent upon the fact that appellants have filed a terminal disclaimer in this case. In view of our disposition of the rejection, the terminal disclaimer is not necessary to overcome the rejection.
The decision of the board is reversed.
Reversed.
WORLEY, C. J., concurs in the result.
MARTIN, Judge (concurring).
As I review the record here, this case is one falling within the principles of In re Robeson, 331 F.2d 610, 51 CCPA 1271, and In re Kaye, 332 F.2d 816, 51 CCPA 1465. I concur in the result reached here solely on the ground that the terminal disclaimers should be given effect, and that they obviate any rejection for double patenting of the obviousness type. I agree with the portion of the majority opinion that holds the inventions here involved are not the same. Compare In re Siu, 222 F.2d 267, 42 CCPA 864.
Notes
1. A composition of matter comprising an addition polymer having, as an essential constituent of its polymeric structure, a characterizing plurality of units of:
wherein each X is independently selected from the group consisting of hydrogen and alkyl radicals of from 1 to about 4 carbon atoms with the limitation that at least one of said X substituents must be an alkyl group, the chain of said polymer terminating with a valance-satisfying unit selected from the group consisting of hydrogen and copolymerized units of another ethylenically unsaturated monomeric material that is copolymerizable by addition polymerization with an N-vinyl-2-oxazolidinone monomer.
Claim 7 covers a copolymer of the same basis monomer with another ethylenically unsaturated monomeric material.
1. A composition for setting hair comprising a ring substituted N-vinyl-2-oxazolidinone polymer of the structural formula:
wherein each X is independently selected from the group consisting of hydrogen and alkyl radicals containing from 1 to about 4 carbon atoms with the limitation that at least one of said substituents is an alkyl radical, and n is a whole number of average value from
