John D. Scott and Rachel A. Steven (together “Scott”) appeal the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, awarding priority of invention to the senior party Satoshi Koya-ma, Yukio Homoto, and Naoki Esaka (to *1245 gether “Koyama”). 1 Scott established conception of the process of the count, and presented evidence of reasonable diligence to reduction to practice from a time preceding the effective filing date of the Ko-yama patent application (on which Koya-ma relied) to the effective filing date of the Scott patent application. The Board erred in holding that only chemical process laboratory activity can serve as evidence of diligence. The decision of the Board is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to award priority to Scott.
BACKGROUND
The invention is a process for producing 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane, a replacement for chlorofluorocarbons in refrigeration systems. The sole interference count follows:
In a method for producing 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane in two reaction stages involving (1) the reaction of trichloroe-thylene and hydrogen fluoride to produce 1,1,1-trifluorochloroethane and (2) the reaction of 1,1,1-trifluorochloroe-thane with hydrogen fluoride to produce 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane:
carrying out the reaction (2) between 1.1.1-trifluorochloroethane and hydrogen fluoride at a temperature in the range of 300C to 400C,
carrying out the reaction (1) between 1.1.1-trichloroethylene and hydrogen fluoride at a temperature in the range of 180C to 300C and
recycling unconverted 1,1,1-trifluoroe-thane [sic: 1,1,1-trifluorochloroethane] with hydrogen fluoride for further reaction in the presence of trichloroethylene,
or
In a method for producing 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane in two reaction stages involving (1) the reaction of trichloroe-thylene and hydrogen fluoride to produce l,l,l-trifluoro-2-chloroethane and (2) the reaction of l,l,l-trifluoro-2-chlo-roethane with hydrogen fluoride to produce 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane, the improvement which comprises carrying out the reaction (2) between 1,1,1-trifluoro-2-ehloroethane and hydrogen fluoride at a temperature in the range of 280:1450C, carrying out the reaction (1) between trichloroethylene and hydrogen fluoride at a temperature in the range of 200-400C, and below that used in reaction (2), and recycling unconverted 1,1,1 — trifluoro-2-chloroethane with hydrogen fluoride for further reaction in the presence of trichloroethylene.
Koyama was the senior party based on a patent application filed in Japan on March 13, 1990 and assigned to Daikin Industries, Ltd. Scott was the junior party based on a patent application filed in the United Kingdom on March 29, 1990 and assigned to Imperial Chemical Industries PLC.
DISCUSSION
Under the law applicable to this interference, activity outside the United States is not relevant to priority beyond establishing an effective filing date under 35 U.S.C. § 119.
2
Koyama, the senior party, relied on his Japanese filing date.
*1246
Scott bore the burden of showing conception in the United States before Koyama’s Japanese filing date, plus either actual reduction to practice in the United States before Koyama’s Japanese filing date, or diligence in the United States to Scott’s United Kingdom filing date as constructive reduction to practice.
See Hitzeman v. Rutter,
Scott, as the junior party, must establish that it actually reduced to practice the invention of the count before March 13, 1990, Koyama’s priority date, or that it first conceived the invention prior to that date and proceeded with reasonable diligence from a time just prior to the opponent entering the field toward a reduction to practice, either actual or constructive. 35 U.S.C. § 102(g).
Board op. at 6.
Priority of invention is a question of law, based on findings of evidentiary fact directed to conception, reduction to practice, and diligence.
See Price v. Symsek,
Effective Filing Dates Under 35 U.S.C. § 119
An interference proceeding begins with determination of the effective filing dates of the parties. The party with the earlier effective filing date is deemed the “senior party,” and will prevail unless the junior party establishes entitlement to an earlier date. See 37 C.F.R. § 1.657(a) (establishing a rebuttable presumption that competing inventions were made in the order of their effective filing dates).
Koyama, the senior party, relied on his Japanese filing date of March 13, 1990, and proffered no evidence of earlier activity in the United States. See 35 U.S.C. § 119(a) (foreign application “shall have the same effect as the same application would have if filed in this country on the date” of the foreign filing). Thus a date of constructive reduction to practice for interference purposes may be established by a properly invoked foreign filing date. Scott, as the junior party, undertook to establish a priority date in the United States by showing that he was in possession of the invention of the count, in the United States, before Koyama’s Japanese fihng date. See 37 C.F.R. § 1.657(b) (for copending interfering applications, junior party has burden of establishing priority by a preponderance of the evidence).
Conception
A conception date by Scott in the United States before March 13, 1990, was *1247 conceded, based on Scott’s evidence that a full description of the process of the count was contained in written materials disclosed to persons at ICI Americas, ICI’s subsidiary in Wilmington, Delaware. In Thomas v. Reese, 1880 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 196, the Commissioner of Patents established this rule:
If [an inventor], having conceived [the invention] and reduced it to practice in a foreign country, he communicates it to an agent in the United States for the purpose of obtaining letters patent or of introducing it to public use in the United States, he may, in an interference, carry the date of his invention back to the day in which it was fully disclosed to such agent in the United States.
Id.
at 198.
See Mortsell v. Laurila,
Reduction to Practice
The record also shows communication to persons at ICI Americas of data obtained in England and described as verifying the efficacy of the process. The Board held that this activity in England and its communication to persons in the United States did not establish an actual reduction to practice in the United States. We agree. Reduction to practice in the United States requires that the invention be embodied in tangible form in the United States, not simply reported.
See Shu-rie v. Richmond,
Although Scott argues that all of the chemistry had already been done in the U.K. and that it would have been highly inefficient as well as unnecessary to repeat it, an actual reduction to practice of a chemical process generally requires performance of the process.
See Corona Cord Tire Co. v. Dovan Chemical Corp.,
Diligence
Scott’s date of constructive reduction to practice, based on 35 U.S.C. § 119, is March 29, 1990. The Board held that the “critical period” dining which Scott must show diligence is the period from just prior to Koyama’s effective filing date of March 13, 1990, to Scott’s effective filing date of March 29, 1990. Scott presented evidence of daily activity during this seventeen-day period, all activity for the purpose of building a manufacturing plant to practice the process of the count. During this period Scott’s activities were focused on the selection of the construction company. The Board ruled that Scott’s activities in constructing a manufacturing plant were directed to commercializing the invention, *1248 not to reducing it to practice, and thus that these activities can not serve as evidence of diligence. Thus the Board ruled that Scott had not established a date in the United States earlier than Koyama’s priority date.
Although we agree with the Board that these preparations for manufacture were not of themselves an actual reduction to practice of the claimed process, the preparations were all directly aimed at achieving actual practice of the process on a large scale in the United States. Thus the preparations in the United States, directly aimed at commercial practice in the United States, were improperly excluded as evidence of diligence to reduction to practice.
The Board did not disagree that Scott was diligently working toward large-scale commercial practice of the process; instead the Board ruled that only practice of the chemical process itself could serve as evidence of diligence. The Board explained: “Not one activity was directed to the physical practice of the process. By March 29, 1990, no equipment or materials were purchased and no experiments were conducted. Rather, each and every activity during that period, manifested by oral or written communications, was a step in a plan for realizing the process on a commercial scale.” That is an incorrect view of the law.
The activities that may be considered in a showing of diligence can take a diversity of forms. Precedent illustrates the continuum between, on the one hand, ongoing laboratory experimentation, and on the other hand, pure money-raising activity that is entirely unrelated to practice of the process. The cases cited by the Board illustrate these principles. In
Hurd v. Smith,
Scott, however, was proceeding diligently to manufacture by building a plant designed to practice the process of the count, whereas the cases where diligence was not found show inventors either discontinuing development or failing to complete the invention while pursuing financing or other commercial activity.
See Petersen,
Scott’s activities were directed to building the facility needed for the large-scale practice of the process of the count. The scale of the intended practice does not disqualify the activity that was taken in order to achieve it. As the Board recognized, efforts toward actual reduction to practice are relevant to diligence until constructive reduction to practice.
See Rey-
*1249
Bellet v. Engelhardt,
The Board’s decision is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to award priority to Scott.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Scott v. Koyama, Patent Interference No. 103,635, (Bd. Pat.App. & Interf. Aug. 30, 2000).
. Effective January 1, 1996, applicants within the scope of 35 U.S.C. § 104(a)(1) may support priority with evidence of work done outside of the United States. However, this interference is governed by the prior rules, whereby only activity within the United States can serve to establish priority. 35 U.S.C. § 104 (1994) ("an applicant for a patent, or patentee, may not establish a date of invention by reference to knowledge or use thereof, or any other activity with respect thereto, in a foreign country, except as provided in section 119 and 365 of this title.”) In accordance *1246 with 35 U.S.C. § 119 the parties to this interference rely on their foreign filing dates to establish constructive reduction to practice.
