Application of Chester John Cavallito and Allan Poe Gray

282 F.2d 357, 48 C.C.P.A. 711
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1960
DocketPatent Appeal 6502
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 282 F.2d 357 (Application of Chester John Cavallito and Allan Poe Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Chester John Cavallito and Allan Poe Gray, 282 F.2d 357, 48 C.C.P.A. 711 (ccpa 1960).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the rejection by the Primary Examiner of claims 1 and 2 of appellants’ application for a patent on Bis-Quaternary Ammonium Substituted Alkanes. No prior art was cited, the rejection being based on the ground of undue breadth. Since the portions of the two appealed claims on which that rejection is based are identical, it will be sufficient to reproduce claim 1 which is as follows:

“1. An a u) -bis-(quaternary-ammonium) -substituted alkane salt, wherein the alkane portion of the molecule contains from three to twelve carbon atoms, inclusive, wherein one quaternary-ammonium group contains up to 10 carbon atoms inclusive, and up to one N-heteromonocyclic group, wherein the other quaternary-ammonium group in-dudes a benzopyridine nucleus containing up to three fused rings and up to six hydrogen atoms on the pyridine portion of said nucleus, and wherein the anions are non-toxic acid residues.”

As stated by the board, appellants’ application lists at least thirty compounds within the scope of the appealed claims, “coupled with an intention to cover the nucleus presently claimed.” It is also stated in the application that “The compounds have utility as hypotensive agents.” The sufficiency of that statement as a disclosure of utility has not been questioned. No other express disclosure of utility is made in the application.

The statement which has been held to make the claims unduly broad is that the compound “includes a benzopyridine nucleus containing up to three fused rings and up to six hydrogen atoms on the pyridine portion of said nucleus.”

The basic features of the claimed compounds, so far as pertinent to this appeal, are well illustrated graphically in appellants’ brief as follows:

As indicated, the two rings constitute the benzopyridine nucleus and the left-hand ring, which includes the “N” is the pyridine portion of the nucleus. The appealed claims embrace not only compounds including the two ring nucleus as shown, but also compounds in which the nucleus includes a third ring. The claims also cover not only the structure as shown in which three hydrogen atoms are joined to the pyridine portion of the nucleus, but others in which up to six hydrogen atoms are so joined. While the examiner seems to have regarded the claims as covering compounds having as many as five rings in the benzopyridine nucleus, we agree with appellant that the reference to that nucleus as “containing *360 up to three fused rings” limits the claims to compounds in which there is not more than one additional ring fused to the two which are necessary to form such a nucleus.

The record shows that in his final rejection of the claims as unduly broad the examiner made no reference to the possibility that they might embrace inoperative species, and that when appellant thereafter requested him to “state specifically and support any inoperativeness believed present” he stated that “the breadth rejection stands by itself independent of any allegation of inoperativeness.” However, in his answer to the appeal, the examiner not only asserted that the rejection was proper “without any allegation of inoperative compounds being included within the scope of the claims,” but also stated that certain specified compounds falling within the scope of the claims contained radicals which would be expected to be antagonistic to “the hypotensive effect that all the compounds are said to exert.”

In affirming the examiner the board stated that “a very large group of compounds running into the hundreds of thousands is covered by the appealed claims” and that “In our opinion the examples given are not by any means representative of the vast group covered by the claims. * * * To aggravate the matter appellants’ compounds are in a field in which prediction is very limited, i. e. in the field of therapeutics. In such cases we believe an applicant’s claims should conform rather closely to the scope of his tangible disclosure.” The board also appears to have relied, to some extent at least, on the examiner’s statement that certain specified classes of compounds apparently would not have hypotensive properties.

Appellants filed a petition for reconsideration in which the board was requested to indicate that its reliance on inoperative species constituted a new ground of rejection so that appellants could make a further showing before the examiner as to that matter, or, alternatively, to delete the portion of its opinion relating to inoperativeness. The board declined to follow either course, pointing out that appellants did not file a brief in reply to the examiner’s answer, and stating that the examiner’s assertions as to inoperativeness did not constitute a new ground of rejection but merely an additional reason in support of the original ground of undue breadth.

Appellants’ reasons of appeal here, in addition to questioning the merits of the rejection, assert that the board erred in giving weight to the examiner’s assertions.

Section 1208.01 of the Patent Office Manual of Procedure provides that when a new ground of rejection is included in the examiner’s answer to an appeal, the appellant may, within sixty days file a reply containing “any amendment or material appropriate to the new ground” and that the board may, in its discretion remand the ease to the examiner “to consider such amendment or material.” Since appellants did not elect to file such an amendment or reply we are of the opinion that the board properly considered the examiner’s statements as to possible inoperative compounds, even if such statements are considered as constituting a new ground of rejection. Moreover, we agree with the board that the possible existence of compounds falling within the scope of the claims, but not having the utility set forth in appellant’s specification, may properly be considered in connection with a rejection on undue breadth.

The question whether a broad claim to an invention in the field of chemistry is sufficiently supported by the compounds named and examples given in an application has been frequently considered by this court. As was said in In re Shokai et al., 242 F.2d 771, 773, 44 CCPA 854:

“The decisions do not however fix any definite number of species which will establish completion of a gener *361 ic invention and it seems evident therefrom that such number will vary, depending on the circumstances of particular cases.”

The mere fact that a claim covers a large, or even an unlimited number of products, does not necessarily establish that it is too broad. Claims are commonly allowed for alloys or mixtures which permit substantial variations in the proportions of two or more ingredients. Theoretically an infinite number of products may be produced falling within the scope of such a claim. In the case of alloys or mixtures, however, it is generally apparent how a product of any desired proportions may be produced, and, since the properties of the aggregate ordinarily vary in accordance with the proportions of the ingredients, the characteristics of any aggregate covered by the claim can generally be predicted with reasonable certainty if the properties of typical aggregates are known.

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282 F.2d 357, 48 C.C.P.A. 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-chester-john-cavallito-and-allan-poe-gray-ccpa-1960.