Application of Edwin H. Land and Howard G. Rogers

368 F.2d 866, 54 C.C.P.A. 806
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7488
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 368 F.2d 866 (Application of Edwin H. Land and Howard G. Rogers) 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 Edwin H. Land and Howard G. Rogers, 368 F.2d 866, 54 C.C.P.A. 806 (ccpa 1966).

Opinions

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of thirty claims of application serial No. 565,135, filed February 13, 1956, entitled “Photographic Color Processes.” The claims on appeal define both processes and products and are numbered 52-55, 58-61, 63, 64, 66-71, 73-76, 78-86, and 90. The product claims are 69-71 and 82-86. The others are process claims.

The Proceedings Below

The proceedings in the Patent Office were unusual. Appeal was taken to the board from the final rejection and the examiner filed his answer. After the hearing, the board remanded the case to the examiner “for clarification of his position.” The board said, “We do not have the benefit of the Examiner’s views as to the application of the references to each claim, noting that process and product claims of varying scope and different species are presented.” A second Examiner’s Answer was filed, going into much greater detail as to the grounds of rejection. Appellants then filed two amendments and had an interview. The examiner entered the amendments “since they materially reduce the issues on appeal” and filed a third Answer in which it was noted that several claims had been cancelled since the original appeal and that other claims had been amended so as to obviate any question of the claims [868]*868on appeal reading directly on certain references so as to be anticipated, i. e., fully met.

The references relied on throughout all three Answers and by the Patent Office Solicitor here are:

White 2,350,380 June 6, 1944

Yutzy 2,756,142 July 24,1956

(Piled Jan. 22,1953)

Rogers 2,774,668 Dec. 18, 1956

(Piled May 28,1953)

Land (sole) 2,968,554 Jan. 17, 1961

(Piled Aug. 9,1954)

Rogers (sole) 2,983,606 May 9, 1961

(Piled July 14,1958)

(Parent applications filed Mar. 9, 1954 and June 29,1955, now both abandoned)

The patentees Land and Rogers are the appellants. Since two Rogers patents are cited, we will distinguish them as ’668 and ’606.

In the third and last Answer, the examiner summarized the situation thus:

The sole issue which appears to remain is whether the appealed claims recite obvious subject matter over Land (’554) or the claims or disclosure of Rogers (’606) in view of White, Rogers (’668) or Yutzy.

As a matter of interest, Land and Rogers, individually and jointly, are assignors to Polaroid Corporation, White to E. I. duPont de Nemours & Company, and Yutzy to Eastman Kodak Company, and are all leading inventors in the field of photography to which the present invention relates.

Following the filing of the third Answer, the board rendered its decision. In the last quotation above it will be seen that the issue of obviousness, as the examiner concisely stated it in the alternative, was a two-pronged issue: (1) It was a 35 U.S.C. § 103 issue; (2) as to Rogers ’606 plus the other references, it was also a “double patenting” issue of the type predicated on the claims of a patent to a common assignee (here Polaroid, assignee of the application at bar) considered with additional prior art alleged to render obvious the subject matter of the appealed claims in view of the claims of Rogers ’606. In re Simmons, 312 F.2d 821, 50 CCPA 990, decided by us in 1963, is a typical “double patenting” case of that type.

We here make the observation that “double patenting” is normally applied as a ground of rejection when the patent used to support the double patenting rejection is not available as a reference to show “prior art” under 35 U.S.C. §§ 102 or 103. However, Rogers ’606 was used in this case as a prior art reference, as of the filing dates to which it was entitled, the statute presumably relied on but not stated being 35 U.S.C. § 102(e). In Simmons, the applicant’s own prior patent could not be used as prior art under the statute and the rejection was therefore predicated on the theory of “double patenting.” Here the applicants are Land and Rogers (jointly), and a principal reference is Rogers ’606 (sole) plus other references. The existence of these different “legal entities,” as the Patent Office calls them (Land and Rogers being one entity and Rogers ’606 being another), is a factual distinction from Simmons bearing on the availability of Rogers ’606, as well as Land, as prior art references against the joint Land and Rogers application, a disputed point [869]*869considered later. For the moment we merely wish to point out that the examiner used Rogers ’606 in a dual capacity as a primary reference to support both a rejection for obviousness over the prior art and a rejection for “double patenting” of the type involving an obviousness issue based on Rogers’ claims. We point this out because it bears on the next question we wish to consider and dispose of before getting to the merits of the appealed claims.

The Questioned Alloioance of Claim 56

Claim 56 is not on appeal. The reason it is not on appeal is that appellants thought it was allowed by the board. The reason they thought so is that the board said, “The decision of the Examiner * * * is reversed as to claim 56.” The docket branch of the Patent Office, in making up the record for this court, listed claim 56 as an “allowed claim.” Appellants’ brief so treats it. It states on page 1:

Claim 56 was allowed by the Board of Appeals and is printed in the Record on page 203.

According to the usual procedure, the Patent Office brief was prepared after the filing of appellants’ brief and it takes issue with that statement. That is why we have before us the question, raised by the Patent Office Solicitor, whether the decision of the board did or did not allow claim 56. After devoting an inordinate amount of time at oral argument to this question, the solicitor suggests that on either of two theories claim 56 “is not before the court.” The first theory was that if all rejections of claim 56 were in fact reversed, the claim is not before us. The second is that no appeal was taken on this claim, wherefore, it is not before us. Clearly, in the absence of an appeal on claim 56, the question of its patentability is not before us on the merits. We do consider, however, that since the Patent Office brief so insistently questions appellants’ statement that the claim was allowed, we will consider whether or not it was allowed on the basis of what we find in the record.

This brings us to the.

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Bluebook (online)
368 F.2d 866, 54 C.C.P.A. 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-edwin-h-land-and-howard-g-rogers-ccpa-1966.