90 F.2d 113 | C.C.P.A. | 1937
delivered the opinion of the court:
This case was argued in this court on March 10, 1937, and an opinion was handed down on May 3, 1937. On May 19, 1937, ap
1. The method of producing 'zinc oxide from hy-product zinc residues containing an alkali metal salt and a substantial amount of zinc carbonate, which includes treating the residue with water to dissolve the alkali metal salt content, removing the alkali metal salt solution and then calcining the residue. [Italics ours.]
■ The stipulation recites that it is a reiteration of an oral stipulation to the same effect made at the hearing here on appeal. There being no written stipulation on file and the claim not appearing in the record, this court, without having in mind the oral stipulation, concluded that it must assume that the tribunals below correctly found that the cancelled claim contained the elements which the tribunals said it did and upon that assumption the court affirmed the decision of the tribunals without further reference to the claim.
(1) There is a well-established practice in this court for obtaining from the Patent Office omitted subject matter necessary and proper to be in records upon appeal. In some instances written stipulations entered into between the parties and filed with the court have been regarded as sufficient to supply the needs. The situation now at bar illustrates the inadvisability of accepting oral stipulations between counsel. If a stipulation was to be entered into and filed subsequent to the oral stipulation it was the clear duty of counsel to see that it was promptly filed. The practice of suggesting or relying upon such oral stipulations as is here involved is not one to be commended.
However, under the particular circumstances of this case, we feel that appellant is entitled to a consideration of his reason of appeal upon which is based his contention that the tribunals of the Patent Office erroneously rejected some of appellant’s appealed claims upon the ground of no inadvertence, accident or mistake necessary to support their allowance in a reissue application. We, therefore, grant appellant’s petition for rehearing, but find it unnecessary to have argument or additional briefs.
(2) The ground of rejection of the examiner and the board which involves a consideration of said cancelled, amended claim 1 is that since the appealed claims contain the limitation relating to treating the residue with water to render the alkali metal salt soluble, and
We think that cancelled, amended claim 1 is for the same invention as is defined by appealed claims 6 to 10, inclusive, and that under the circumstances there was no inadvertence shown by appellant such as is required by the statute and that the board reached the light conclusion.
Since the other questions raised in appellant’s appeal have been fully decided and discussed in the original opinion of May 3rd, and since our views as to them have not changed, we will not again repeat that discussion here. Nothing else in appellant’s petition for rehearing nor in his original brief calls for further consideration By us here.
In view of our conclusion in the matter raised in the petition for-rehearing with respect to said cancelled, amended claim 1, as well as-on the other questions raised, we are of the opinion that the Board of Appeals, for the reasons stated in the decision appealed from, properly affirmed the decision of the examiner rejecting appellant’s: appealed claims, and its decision is afirmed.