Application of Hans Hilmer, Gerhard Korger, Rudi Weyer and Walter Aumuller

359 F.2d 859, 53 C.C.P.A. 1288
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7482
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 359 F.2d 859 (Application of Hans Hilmer, Gerhard Korger, Rudi Weyer and Walter Aumuller) 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 Hans Hilmer, Gerhard Korger, Rudi Weyer and Walter Aumuller, 359 F.2d 859, 53 C.C.P.A. 1288 (ccpa 1966).

Opinions

RICH, Judge.

The sole issue is whether a majority of the Patent Office Board of Appeals erred in overturning a consistent administrative practice and interpretation of the law of nearly forty years standing by giving a United States patent effect as prior art as of a foreign filing date to which the patentee of the reference was entitled under 35 U.S.C. § 119.

Because it held that a U. S. patent, cited as a prior art reference under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) and § 103, is effective as of its foreign “convention” filing date, relying on 35 U.S.C. § 119, the board affirmed the rejection of claims 10, 16, and 17 of application serial No. 750,887, filed July 25, 1958, for certain sulfonyl ureas.

This opinion develops the issue, considers the precedents, and explains why, on the basis of legislative history, we hold that section 119 does not modify the express provision of section 102(e) that a reference patent is effective as of the date the application for it was “filed in the United States.”

The two “references” relied on are:

Habicht 2,962,530 Nov. 29, 1960 (filed in the United States January 23, 1958, found to be entitled to priority as of the date of filing in Switzerland on January 24,1957)

Wagner et al. 2,975,212 March 14,1961 (filed in the United States May 1, 1957)

The rejection here is the aftermath of an interference (No. 90,218) between appellants and Habicht, a priority dispute in which Habicht was the winning party on a single count. He won because appellants conceded priority of the invention of the count to him. The earliest date asserted by appellants for their invention is their German filing date, July 31, 1957, which, we note, is a few months later than Habicht’s priority date of January 24, 1957.

After termination of the interference and the return of this application to the examiner for further ex parte prosecution, the examiner rejected the appealed claims on Habicht, as a primary reference, in view of Wagner et al., as a secondary reference, holding the claimed [862]*862compounds to be “unpatentable over the primary reference in view of the secondary reference which renders them obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art.”

Appellants appealed to the board contending, inter alia, that “The Habicht disclosure cannot be utilized as anticipatory art.” They said, “The rejection has utilized * * * the discosure of the winning party as a basis for the rejection. The appellants insist that this is contrary to the patent statutes.” Explaining this they said:

* * * the appellants’ German application was filed subsequent to the Swiss filing date [of Habicht] but prior to the U. S. filing date of the Habicht application. The appellants now maintain that the Habicht disclosure cannot be utilized as anticipatory in view of 35 U.S.C. 119 which is entitled “Benefit of Earlier Filing Date in Foreign Countries: Right of Priority.” This section defines the rights of foreign applicants and more specifically defines those rights with respect to dates to which they are entitled if this same privilege is awarded to citizens of the United States. There is no question [but] that Section 119 only deals with “right of priority.” The section does not provide for the use of a U. S. patent as an anticipatory reference as of its foreign filing date. This interpretation of Section 119 is also set forth in the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (Section 715.01). The Manual refers to Viviani v. Taylor v. Herzog, 72 USPQ 448, wherein Commissioner Coe clarified the question of priority rights with respect to foreign and domestic filing.

Appellants further pointed out that, “The interference only decided the priority of the interference issue [i. e. the count]; there was no decision made nor was there any attempt to decide who was the inventor of the disclosure. The appellants readily admit the priority of Habicht as to the interference issue, but there is no admission as far as the remaining subject matter is concerned.”

The board, one member dissenting with an opinion, affirmed the rejection. In the majority opinion there are four statements of the issue. The first is:

As stated by appellants in their reply brief, the main issue presented by this appeal is the availability of the Habicht patent as a reference. This question was argued at length at the hearing and appellants were requested to file, and filed, a further legal memorandum concerning it. [Emphasis ours.]

The third statement (second to follow later) involves an expression of the board’s view on the relevance of the interference to the issue and reads:

It is noted that the instant application was involved in an interference with Habicht (before the patent issued), with claim 1 of the patent as the count, and appellants conceded priority to Habicht. However, no questions of estoppel or res judicata can be raised concerning the [presently claimed] cyclohexyl substituted compound; Ha-bicht did not disclose (or even suggest) any cyclohexyl or cycloalkyl compounds, no count to a cyclohexyl compound, or broad enough to include cycloalkyl compounds could have been added to the interference, nor could appellants have relied on such compounds to show priority. Appellants are free to attempt to secure claims to such compounds and to show that they preceded Habicht’s date as to them, the question being which date of Habicht is the controlling one. [Emphasis ours.]

We deem this to be a clear statement that Habicht did not claim and could not have claimed the subject matter now claimed by appellants, that therefore there could have been no interference, or priority contest, with Habicht with respect thereto, 'that for thi$ reason no estoppel or res judicata may be asserted against appellants as a result of the in-[863]*863terferenee, wherefore the question is the effective date of the Habicht patent.1 The board’s fourth statement of the issue reads:

With respect to claims 10 and 16, the issue in this case is:
When the claimed subject matter of a U. S. patent is used as a basis for rejecting a claim in an application and the reference patent is found to be entitled to the date of a prior foreign application under 35 USC 119, is the date of the reference which must be overcome, in order to remove it [as a reference], its actual filing date in the United States or the priority date to which the patent is entitled for that subject matter? [Emphasis ours.]

We note that there are two restrictions in this statement not present in any of the others. First, it refers only to claimed subject matter of the “reference” patent. That this was deliberate is shown by a footnote to the very end of the majority board opinion in which the majority said:

13.

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Bluebook (online)
359 F.2d 859, 53 C.C.P.A. 1288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hans-hilmer-gerhard-korger-rudi-weyer-and-walter-aumuller-ccpa-1966.