Application of Eli Simon, Frank W. Thomas and Welton R. Burney, Jr

302 F.2d 737, 49 C.C.P.A. 1065, 133 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 524, 1962 CCPA LEXIS 257
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6763
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 302 F.2d 737 (Application of Eli Simon, Frank W. Thomas and Welton R. Burney, Jr) 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 Eli Simon, Frank W. Thomas and Welton R. Burney, Jr, 302 F.2d 737, 49 C.C.P.A. 1065, 133 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 524, 1962 CCPA LEXIS 257 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 19 and 20 of an application for reissue of Patent No. 2,772,245, issued November 27, 1956, for “Resilient Cellular Resin Products.” The present application, Ser. No. 758,631, was filed September 2, 1958. Except for the two new claims above mentioned, the specification and claims are admittedly identical with those of the patent.

Claims 19 and 20 are admittedly broader than any claim of the patent. No question has been raised, however, as to appellants having made a timely application for a broadened reissue patent. On this the Patent Office brief is explicit, saying: “The dates make it evident that appellants satisfy 35 U.S.C. 251, last paragraph.”

In view of the nature of the issue which controls our decision, it is unnecessary to consider the somewhat complex chemistry involved in the case. Suffice it to say that the patent discloses that expanded or cellular resin or plastic products were known, including some previously patented by appellants and made by reacting a diisocyanate, an alkyd resin, and a catalyst. These are stated to have been undesirably rigid and often rather brittle and it appears to have been a principal object of the present invention to produce such a cellular resin which is resilient and flexible, varying from semi-hard to soft and rubbery materials.

The invention is broadly disclosed in what the Patent Office brief calls the following “critical passage” of the patent specification (bracketed letters added by us):

“The principal or basic components of the present formulations for preparing the expanded or cellular plastic materials or products are [A] castor oil; [D] polyhydric alcohol, mono and diesters of fatty acids containing from 1 to 3 free OH groups per molecule; [B] a diisocyanate; [E] a catalyst and [C] water.”

The bracketed letters utilized above are not in alphabetical order because we have used those corresponding with appellants’ brief wherein it is stated:

“ * * * one may * * * regard appellants’ eighteen allowed claims as directed to a cellular material resulting from the combination of ingredients A + B + C + D+ E whereas the two claims here on appeal are in terms of a * * * sub-combination of ingredients A + B + *738 C, where these letters may be regarded as having the following significance :
“A = castor oil
“B = meta-toluene, diisocyanate
“C = water
“D = glyceryl mono- and/or difatty acid esters
“E = alkali metal mono- and/or di-substituted salts of certain acids and the like, e. g., as defined in allowed claim 2 [which contains, in defining . this component, a Markush group commencing with the words ‘the catalyst being . selected from the group consisting of,’ and then names 7 compounds or classes of . compounds].
* * * * * *
“It is not an oversimplification of the case, then, to say that the allowed claims 1 to 18 are directed, in essence, to the combination A + B + C + D + E, while the two claims here on appeal are broader claims directed in terms to the subcombination A+B+C.”

To state the whole of appellants’ case, one has but to add that they rely, as the principal legal authority for the right to make claims to A+B + C, on the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Special Equipment Co. v. Coe, 324 U. S. 370, 65 S.Ct. 741, 89 L.Ed. 1006, which we shall consider later.

Claim 20, the broader of the two claims on appeal as to amounts, reads:

“20. A cellular material which is the product of reaction of a foaming composition comprising on a percentage by weight basis, 10 to 75% •castor oil, 0.1 to 5% water and the remainder meta-toluene diisocyanate.”

Referring to that portion of the brief above quoted, it can be seen that this is a' claim to A + B + C with quantity limitations (which are unimportant here) and that, compared to the patented claims, D and E have been omitted, the latter being referred to,by appellants as the “catalyst system,” at least for purposes of argument.

The Patent Office position, reduced to its essence and disregarding its various modes of expression, is that appellants’ original specification contains no disclosure of the invention A+B + C, the subject matter of claims 19 and 20, for which reason appellants cannot have a patent containing claims to such, an invention.

The examiner unequivocally stated his position as being that there is “no basis in the specification” of the original Simon et al. patent to justify claims 19 and 20, giving as his reasons: (a) that the principal or basic components of the invention include all five of those mentioned in the above-quoted “critical passage”; (b) that in an amendment of July 8, 1954, applicants stated that the catalyst is characteristic, of their invention; and (c) that the appealed claims contain “new matter in the omission of the polyhydric alcohol esters and catalyst.” For this last proposition he cited 1401.07 M.P.E.P. (2d ed.) which reads:

“New matter, that is, matter not present in the patent, is excluded from a reissue application with even greater strictness than in an ordinary case. The claims in the reissue case must also be for matter which the applicant had the right to claim in the original patent. New matter may exist by virtue of the omission of a feature or of a step in a method. See United States Industrial Chemicals, Inc. v. Carbide & Carbon Chemicals Corp., 1942 C.D. 751; 538 O.G. 741.”

The Board of Appeals fully agreed with the examiner and with the answers which he gave in his answer to the arguments of the appellants and said,

“ * * * there is only one real issue submitted for decision here, viz., whether appellants’ original application taught the invention now claimed in claims 19 and 20. That *739 is, would a worker of ordinary skill in this art derive from that disclosure a teaching that its cellular product could be produced omitting the catalyst and the glyceryl mono- or diester from its composition. No questions peculiar to the fact that this is a reissue application appear to be presented; rather, the issue is the> same as if these claims had been presented by amendment during the prosecution of the original application. In re Panagrossi et al., 756 OG 8(10). [[277 F.2d 181,] 47 CCPA 904, 125 USPQ 410]”

We fully agree that this is a correct view of the issue.

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302 F.2d 737, 49 C.C.P.A. 1065, 133 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 524, 1962 CCPA LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-eli-simon-frank-w-thomas-and-welton-r-burney-jr-ccpa-1962.