Application of Gunther Wilke and Werner Pfohl

314 F.2d 558, 50 C.C.P.A. 964
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6854
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 314 F.2d 558 (Application of Gunther Wilke and Werner Pfohl) 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 Gunther Wilke and Werner Pfohl, 314 F.2d 558, 50 C.C.P.A. 964 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

The Patent Office Board of Appeals affirmed the examiner’s rejection of twelve claims, numbered 18 through 27, inclusive, 36 and 37, 1 of appellants’ patent application 2 entitled “Carboxylic Acid Anhydrides, Carboxylic Acids and Carboxylic Acid Esters of the Cyclododecane Series, and A Process For Their Production.”

Of the remaining claims on appeal, the invention is claimed in claims numbered 18 through 27, inclusive, in terms of a process for producing novel reaction products from maleic acid anhydride and the specified cyclohydrocarbon. Claim 18, considered illustrative by the board, is the generic claim upon which the other claims in this series depend. Claim 36 claims the invention in terms of a product embodying any one of four carboxylic acid anhydrides defined by structural formulae which are placed in a Markush group.

Appealed claims 18 and 36 are as follows :

“18. A process comprising reacting at an elevated temperature from 1-4 molecules of maleic acid anhydride with one molecule of a triolefine which is a member selected from the group consisting of cyclododecatri-( 1,5,9)-ene and trivinyl cyclohexane and recovering the reaction product thereby formed.

*560 "36. A member selected from the group of carboxylic acid anhydrides having the following general formulae:

*561 The specification states that the novel compounds, carboxylic acid anhydrides, carboxylic acids and the carboxylic acid esters of the cyclododecane series (whose structure is not known with certainty), are obtained when a cyclododecatri-( 1,5,9)-ene or a trivinyl cyclohexane are reacted with maleic acid anhydride. The reaction products so obtained are in the form of the anhydrides which are convertible into carboxylic acids by saponification, or into esters by esterification. The properties of the products are said to depend upon the number of acid groups present, which can vary from 2 to 6 or 8 and on the constitution of the alcohols used for esterification. As indicated by claim 36, the reaction products can vary from a 1:1 addition product to a 1:4 addition product of a cyclododecatri-(l,5,9)-ene or a trivinyl cyclohexane and a maleic acid anhydride.

In carrying out the disclosed process for making such a product, temperatures of from 150°C to 250°C may be used, with or without an inert solvent. Variation in reaction time produces different reaction products. Seven specific examples are described, in which the reaction products are said to be resinous or viscous liquids. Despite this fact, appellants here claim the invention in terms of both product and process.

The issue here has been unnecessarily confused by the statement of the grounds of rejection in the examiner’s answer and the affirmance of this rejection by the board without clarification as to the precise reason for the rejection. The rejection as stated in the examiner’s answer is as follows:

“All of the claims stand finally rejected as being based on an insufficient disclosure with respect to utility and failing to comply with 35 U.S.C. 112.” [Emphasis added.]

The board in its opinion treats the rejection:

“ * * * as based upon an insufficient disclosure of utility, i. e., a disclosure of how to use the products as required by 35 U.S.C. 112.”

Appellants, in their brief, apparently agree with the board that:

“The claims before this Court were finally rejected by the Primary Examiner as being based upon an insufficient disclosure of utility, i. e. a disclosure of how to use the products as required by 35 U.S.C. 112 and this rejection was affirmed by the Board of Appeals. * * * ”
“The sole issue involved herein is, therefore, whether the specification as filed contains a written description indicating a use for the invention sufficient to meet the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 112.”

The solicitor, however, here takes a different view as to the meaning of the examiner’s rejection and the issues presented by it. This view as stated in the solicitor’s brief is as follows:

“Though the decision of the Board of Appeals paraphrases this rejection as one based upon an insufficient “disclosure of how to use the products as required by 35 USC 112” * * *, it is implicit in the Board’s affirmance of the decision of the examiner and the reliance upon the quotation from In re Bremner et ah, 37 CCPA 1032, 182 F.2d 216 * *, that the examiner’s rejection raises a question involving 35 USC 101 as well as 35 USC 112. Hence, appellants’ statement that “no rejection under 35 USC 101 has been entered so that there is no question of usefulness involved herein” * * * is believed to be incorrect. It is submitted that the reasonable construction of the sentence quoted above from the examiner’s answer is that the use of the conjunction “and” between the phrases “an insufficient disclosure with respect to utility” and “failing to comply with 35 USC 112” is that two distinct reasons are set forth, one being based upon section 101 (by implication) and the other, upon section 112 (expressly). * * * ” [Emphasis added.]

A reasonable compliance with 35 U.S.C.’ § 132 and Patent Office Buie 104 should *562 have resulted in such a statement of the ground of rejection that no basis could here exist for such a divergence of views. This divergence presents a separate ancillary issue which requires us to initially interpret the rejection before determining the principal issue presented for decision. We do this despite what seems to us to be the clear intent of 35 U.S.C. § 132 that the examiner should so state the rejection that there is no ambiguity as to the grounds therefor. Confusion as to the precise statutory ground of rejection such as is here present was also present in In re Nelson and Shabica, 280 F.2d 172, 47 CCPA 1031, 1033. Here, as there, the confusion appears to have arisen from a failure of the examiner to separate the so-called “utility” requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 101 from the “how to use” requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 112. Despite the present effort of the solicitor to bring 35 U.S.C. § 101

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Bluebook (online)
314 F.2d 558, 50 C.C.P.A. 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-gunther-wilke-and-werner-pfohl-ccpa-1963.