601 F.2d 551 | C.C.P.A. | 1979
This appeal by Weil
Background
The single count in interference is as follows:
1. A method for the inhibition of plant growth which comprises applying thereto an effective amount of 2-chloroe-thylphosphonic aeid.[3 ]
As we outlined in the prior Weil v. Fritz, the chronology of applications is thus:
Party Fritz Party Weil
Application Serial No. 617,860 (hereinafter Fritz I) filed February 23, 1967; abandoned December 1, 1969 applicants: Fritz and Evans
*553 Party Fritz Party Weil
Application Serial No. 693,698 (hereinafter Fritz II) filed December 27, 1967; abandoned April 2, 1970 continuation-in-part of Fritz I
applicants: Fritz and Evans (amendment approved March 27, 1970 adding Cooke as joint inventor)
Application Serial No. 826,653 filed May 21, 1969
Application Serial No. 869,386 (hereafter Fritz III) filed October 24, 1969 continuation-in-part of Fritz II applicants: Fritz, Evans, and Cooke
Application Serial No. 221,803 (Fritz IV) filed January 28, 1972 division of Fritz III applicants: Fritz, Evans, and Cooke
When the case was last here, we disposed of a number of preliminary questions and remanded to the board so that it could specifically consider whether the Fritz II application set forth a disclosure of the best mode contemplated by the inventor at the filing date of that application. Additionally, the board was to consider, for completeness, the sufficiency of various proofs regarding reduction to practice by Fritz et al.
Since we affirm the holding of the board on the best mode issue, we do not find it necessary to discuss or reach the latter questions.
Board
Weil argued before the board that Fritz II fails the “best mode” test of § 112 because of Fritz’ failure to refer to the pH sensitivity of 2-CEPA. It appears to be necessary that 2-CEPA remain in solution if it is to perform the function recited in the count. The compound will prematurely decompose, with production of ethylene gas, if the solution is not maintained in a sufficiently acidic condition.
The board considered the record to be clear in establishing that the Fritz parties in interest knew of the pH sensitivity of 2-CEPA prior to the filing of Fritz II. One of the Fritz coinventors, Dr. Cooke, testified:
RXQ2. When did you first observe that 2-chloroethyl phosphonic acid tends to decompose in solutions which have a pH of about 4.5 or above? A. First observations of this were within two months.
RXQ3. Within two months of what? A. I can give you the date, but it would be within two months. It would have been around November of 1965, December of 1965. I can’t give you an exact date.
Similarly, Mr. Bishop, Director of the Agricultural Chemicals Laboratory of Am-chem, testified:
ZQ12. Again with reference to Exhibit 20, do you know if Mr. Hart tried any basic or alkaline solution? A. We were aware of stability problems if the pH got above 3V2 to 4, so we avoided any alkaline solutions.
XQ13. You were aware of this in the time period of ’66 and ’67 when Mr. Hart was doing his formulation work? A. Yes. We were aware of that pretty early in the game.
Fritz argued before the board that Examples 35 and 42 of Fritz II
The board considered it proper to read the application rates of those examples in light of the preferred range of concentration found in the specification
Weil argued that the use of alkaline water
Q. For instance, did you run a pH test using 2-chloroethylphosphonic acid at 250 per million? A. 250?
Q. 250. A. I think so; 250, yes.
Q. What was the pH of the resulting solution of 250 parts per million 2-chloro-ethylphosphonic acid in water? A. About 3.5, or something.
Q. Did you run a pH evaluation involving 500 parts per million 2-chloro-ethylphosphonic acid in water? A. I personally did not, the chlor acid itself.
Q. Acid? A. No sir.
Q. Did you run a pH evaluation where 2-chloroethylphosphonic acid was present in an amount greater than 250 parts per million water? A. I did not. I don’t believe I measured larger than 250 parts per million.
Q. You just testified that when you ran a pH evaluation of 250 parts per million 2-chloroethylphosphonic acid in the water that the pH of that solution was 3.1. I believe that is your testimony. A. About 3.5. I don’t exactly remember the number.
Q. What was the pH of the water that you used in that experiment? A. The pH of the water was approximately 8.4, something like that.
Q. Where there is a solution of 500 parts per million of 2-chloroethylphos-phonic acid in water, isn’t it correct that the pH would be less than 3.5? A. I think so.
Q. And where there is a solution of a thousand parts per million of 2-chloro-ethylphosphonic acid in water, wouldn’t that solution be, the pH of that even less than the pH of the 500 parts per million solution? A. I think so.
The board indicated that, in its view, the party Weil had the burden of proof in showing that Fritz et al. had concealed (intentionally or otherwise) the best mode for carrying out the invention. Since Weil did not sustain his burden pursuant to 37 CFR 1.257(a),
OPINION
The statute, 35 U.S.C. § 112, paragraph one, requires that “[t]he specification * * * shall set forth the best mode contemplated by the inventor of carrying out his invention.” This court has steadfastly followed the general rule that any party making the assertion that a U.S. patent specification or claims fails, for one reason or another, to comply with § 112 bears the burden of persuasion in showing said lack of compliance. See In re Morehouse, 545 F.2d 162, 192 USPQ 29 (Cust. & Pat.App. 1976); In re Ghiron, 442 F.2d 985, 58 CCPA 1207, 169 USPQ 723 (1971); In re Marzocchi, 439 F.2d 220, 58 CCPA 1069, 169 USPQ 387 (1971); In re Cook, 439 F.2d 730, 58 CCPA 1049, 169 USPQ 298 (1971); In re Moore, 439 F.2d 1232, 58 CCPA 1043, 169 USPQ 236 (1971). We see no reason to vary from this general rule when the subject is “best mode.”
Weil argues, in essence, that Fritz’ prior appreciation of the pH sensitivity of 2-CEPA solutions and the potential adverse impact of that sensitivity on the successful practice of the method in the count coupled with complete silence regarding pH constitutes a substantial showing that Fritz II does not disclose the “best mode” contemplated by the inventors.
We do not agree. We have, on various occasions, observed that an applicant, in drafting an application, may choose any method he deems desirable in portraying essential information so long as that method fulfills the description
Taxation of Cost
Appellants ask that the cost of printing 431 out of the total 609 pages of the printed transcript be assessed to the appellees under Rule 5.6(c) of this court.
Our rules deal adequately with this situation and, accordingly, recourse to the FRAP is not proper.
We agree with appellant that the noted addition to the record was not necessary for the purposes of his appeal. Appellees are rearguing the issue of reduction to practice which they lost below. The addition to the record was useful only in support of appellees’ position and appellees should therefore pay for the addition to the record. Meitzner v. Mindick, 549 F.2d 775, 785, 193 USPQ 17, 24-25 (Cust. & Pat.App.), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 854, 98 S.Ct. 171, 54 L.Ed.2d 124, 195 USPQ 465 (1977); Myers v. Feigelman, 455 F.2d 596, 59 CCPA 834, 172 USPQ 580 (1972); Gortatowsky v. Anwar, 442 F.2d 979, 58 CCPA 1266, 170 USPQ 41 (1971).
AFFIRMED.
. Application serial No. 826,653, filed May 21, 1969, assigned to Stauffer Chemical Company.
. Application serial No. 221,803 filed January 28, 1972 (hereafter Fritz IV) assigned to Am-chem Products, Inc., a division of Union Carbide Corporation.
. 2-chloro-ethylphosphonic acid will hereafter be referred to as “2-CEPA.”
. These examples are:
EXAMPLE 35
Young kidney beans plants (phaseolus vul-garis) were sprayed at the first trifoliate stage using aqueous solutions of 2-chloroe-thylphosphonic acid. Spraying was effected so as to apply an equivalent of 1 lb. of the phosphonic acid compound per acre of soil surface. Sixty days following treatment an inspection of the plants showed increased fruiting and increased total plant weight as compared with untreated plants.
*554 Observations 60 Days After Treatment
Treatment No. Bean Pods/Plant Plant Weight (Above Ground Parts), grams
Control 20 83
Phosphonate compound 25 134
Visual comparison of the check and treated plants showed the latter were shorter in height with heavier stems and appreciably more lateral shoots.
EXAMPLE 42
Cotton plants (Gossypium hirsutum) were sprayed at the stage when squares were just forming with aqueous solutions of the compound 2-chloroethylphosphonic acid so as to apply thereto from 1 to 4 lbs. of the phos-phonic acid compound per acre of soil surface. Observations of the treated plants, as well as of untreated controls, were made ten (10) weeks after spray application, and are reported below:
Lbs./Acre of Phosphonic Acid Compound Average No. of Balls/Piant Average Plant Height, inches
Control 19.1 30.1
1 29.3 30.5
2 24.7 26.5
4 26.0 26.4
Increased yields of cotton as a result of treatment with a phosphonate compound used in the process of this invention are clearly apparent from the foregoing results.
. Fritz II indicates:
It is preferred that the compounds used in the process of the present invention be applied at rates of 'h to 4 lbs./acre in aqueous solution and that the application rate in terms of total volume varies from about 1 to 100 Gallons per acre.
. Water having a pH of 8.4 is common in the Western United States.
. This section provides:
§ 1.257 Burden of proof.
(a) The parties to an interference will be presumed to have made their inventions in the chronological order of the filing dates of their applications for patents involved in the interference or the effective filing dates which such burden of proof will rest upon the party who shall seek to establish a different state of facts.
. See In re Wertheim, 541 F.2d 257, 262, 191 USPQ 90, 96 (Cust. & Pat.App. 1976); In re Smith, 481 F.2d 910, 914, 178 USPQ 620, 624 (Cust. & Pat.App. 1973).
. See In re Marzocchi, supra 439 F.2d at 223, 58 CCPA at 1073, 169 USPQ at 369.
. The word “preferred,” while not always dis-positive of a question regarding the delineation of a "best mode,” certainly must be said to be of considerable evidentiary value in discerning what the inventor subjectively “contemplated” to be his “best.”
. Appellant additionally makes great weight of the fact that certain of the examples use concentrations of 2-CEPA far below the minimum concentration limit of the preferred
. As was noted in In re Bosy, 360 F.2d 972, 975, 53 CCPA 1231, 1236, 149 USPQ 789, 792 (1966):
[T]here is no statutory basis for reading into the best mode portion a requirement “that the mode disclosed be in fact the optimum mode of carrying out the invention” In re Gay * * *, [309 F.2d 769, 775, 50 CCPA 725, 731-32, 135 USPQ 311, 315 (1962). Emphasis in original.]
. Compare Dale Electronics, Inc. v. R. C. L. Electronics, 488 F.2d 382, 180 USPQ 225 (1st Cir. 1973), in which the inventor had testified that the patent specification did not even disclose the best material known for carrying out the invention and that materials within generic “recommended” classes would not work. Similarly, see In re Sichert, 566 F.2d 1154, 196 USPQ 209 (Cust. & Pat.App.1977); Union Carbide Corp. v. Borg-Warner Corp., 550 F.2d 355, 193 USPQ 1 (6th Cir. 1977).
. Rule 5.6(c) states:
(c) Cost of Printing. The cost of producing the transcript shall be paid by the appellant. If appellee shall cause matter to be included in the transcript which appellant considers unnecessary, appellant may move to impose on appellee the cost of printing such matter. Said motion shall be filed prior to the oral argument or concurrently with the submission of the case on brief. A statement of costs for such matter shall be submitted to the clerk. The court will act on the motion concurrently with the final decision. In cases where two or more parties appeal and the parties cannot agree on the apportionment of printing costs, the court will apportion them.
. Rule 1.4(a) states:
(a) Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. The Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure shall govern any practice or procedure not specifically covered by these rules.
. FRAP Rule 39(a) provides:
(a) To Whom Allowed. Except as otherwise provided by law, if an appeal is dismissed, costs shall be taxed against the appellant unless otherwise agreed by the parties or ordered by the court; if a judgment is affirmed, costs shall be taxed against the appellant unless otherwise ordered; if a judgment is reversed, costs shall be taxed against the appellee unless otherwise ordered; if a judgment is affirmed or reversed in part, or is vacated, costs shall be allowed only as ordered by the court.