Application of Coleman

189 F.2d 976, 38 C.C.P.A. 1156
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1951
Docket5804
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 189 F.2d 976 (Application of Coleman) 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 Coleman, 189 F.2d 976, 38 C.C.P.A. 1156 (ccpa 1951).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the action of the Primary Examiner in finally rejecting claims 1,- 4, and S of appellants’ application, serial No. 721,880, for a patent on a fungistatic wrapper.

Appellants discovered that by bringing dehydroacetic acid into close association with various foods an increased resistance to microorganisms could be imparted to the foods and the growth of such organisms thus prevented or retarded.

On January 13, 1947, appellants filed three separate applications for letters patent. Two of these applications, serial Nos. 721,877 and 721,878, contained claims directed to methods of protecting the specified foods, and among the methods disclosed and claimed was the method of enclosing the food in a wrapper containing dehydroacetic acid. These two applications were classified in Class 99 (Foods and Beverages) and were examined in Division 63 of the Patent Office. These applications were allowed on October 7, 1948, and issued as patents on June 28, 1949.

The third application, serial No. 721,880, whence come the claims before us, was directed to a cellulosic wrapper carrying de-hydroacetic acid and was classified in Class 117 (Coating: Processes and Miscellaneous Products) and examined in Division 38 of the Patent Office.

All of the appealed claims were rejected by the examiner as unpatentable over *978 prior art and also as unpatentable over certain claims in appellants’ foregoing two patents. The rejection on prior art was reversed by the board while the rejection on appellants’ own claims was affirmed. This latter rejection is the sole issue before us and appellants’ patents are the only art now used in rejection of the claims. Since these patents were copending with the appealed application they do not constitute technical prior art references but are to be looked to only for what they claim. In re Mason, 62 F.2d 185, 20 C.C.P.A., Patents, 782; In re Thompson, 62 F.2d 90, 20 C.C.P.A., Patents, 725.

Claim 8 of each patent is substantially the same in terminology except that each is directed to the treatment of a different type of food. Since the board adopted appealed claim 1 and claim 8 of Patent No. 2,474,228 as illustrative of the problem be-, fore it, those two claims are reproduced side by side for direct comparison:

Appealed Claim 1
A cellulosic wrapping sheet
carrying an effective fungistatic amount, at least 0.3 per cent of the weight of the article, of dehydroacetic acid integral therewith.
Claim 8 of Pat. 2,474,228
The method of imparting to foods rich in at least one of the class consisting of proteins and fats an increased resistance to attack by microorganisms, which comprises
enclosing the food in a wrapper
containing an effective amount of dehy-droacetic acid.
For reasons presently to appear we also list his rejection of the appealed claims: the references cited by the examiner in
Martin 2,127,879 Aug. 23, 1938.
Dow Chemical Co. Technical Bulletin No. 45 July 15, 1941.
Colman, W., Journal Textile Institute, p. A115 March 1944.
Coleman et al. 2,474,228 June 28, 1949.

The method claims in the patents were allowed without the limitations in the appealed wrapper claims to “cellulosic” wrappers containing a specified amount of de-hydroacetic acid. The wrapper claims as originally filed called merely for an “effective fungistatic amount” of dehydroacetic acid, the same language as used in the patent claims. The examiner objected to such expression as rendering the claims functional and indefinite and the appellant responded by amending the claims to limit them to the specific amounts shown in claim 1.

The application before us originally contained claims to two species of wrappers designated by the examiner as “regenerated cellulose base,” and “paper base.” The application also contained claims generic to the two types. The generic expressions “wrapping sheet” and “fiber,” which appellants had used, were held to be too broad by the examiner on the ground that some of the materials included might be attacked or adversely affected by the fungicide, which, he stated, contained a free acid group. Appellant controverted this, showing that dehydroacetic acid has no free acid group and the examiner impliedly withdrew the rejection by failing to repeat it. All of the claims, however, were repeatedly rejected on the art and it was in an attempt to limit the generic claims so as to avoid the references that appellant inserted the limitation “cellulosic wrapping.” The patent to Martin was the reference upon which most reliance was placed (the Journal article seems cumulative) and that reference disclosed the impregnation of wool cloth with dehydroacetic acid to control moths and other insects. The board agreed with *979 appellant that the record in the case did not justify a holding of unpatentability over the prior art and on this point the examiner was reversed.

The examiner who had been in charge of the applications which resulted in appellants’ two patents orally advised appellants that he had considered the Martin patent but deemed it nonpertinent to the claims before him. Appellants cited the Martin patent in those two companion cases to insure that it would be of record therein.

The board considered that “whether the invention be defined as the act of wrapping or the employment of a wrapper, the invention is the same” and held the appealed claims to be unpatentable over claim 8 of each of appellants’ patents. The doctrine relied upon was that of double patenting which precludes issuance of a second patent on the invention covered by issued claims. In re Thompson, supra. As is usual in such cases, the issue reduces- itself to a determination of whether or not the appealed claims and those in the patents are directed to one and the same invention.

It is rudimentary that an inventor may not sustain a subsequent patent for an invention actually claimed and secured in a former patent, Miller v. Eagle Manufacturing Co., 151 U.S. 186, 14 S.Ct. 310, 38 L.Ed. 121, and the duty to prevent double patenting rests primarily with the Patent Office and with those courts which review its decisions. In re Muskat, 187 F.2d 626, 38 C.C.P.A.,Patents, -.

One of the most frequent double patenting situations involves claims related as combination and element of the combination, or more broadly, where the subject matter of the subsequent patent forms an element of the original invention as claimed. Such is the relationship in the case before us.

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Bluebook (online)
189 F.2d 976, 38 C.C.P.A. 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-coleman-ccpa-1951.