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

424 F.2d 1108, 57 C.C.P.A. 985
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 1970
DocketPatent Appeal 8191
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 424 F.2d 1108 (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, 424 F.2d 1108, 57 C.C.P.A. 985 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

RICH, Acting Chief Judge.

This is a sequel to our opinion in In re Hilmer, 359 F.2d 859 53 CCPA 1288, (1966) (herein “Hilmer I”), familiarity with which is assumed.

In Hilmer I, under the heading “Reason for Remand,” we pointed out that as to claims 10 and 16 there was a rejection with which the board had not dealt and remanded the case for clarification of the board’s position “on the rejection of claims 10 and 16 as ‘unpat-entable over’ the interference count in view of Wagner et al.”

By way of background, appellants (herein “Hilmer”) had been in interference No. 90,218 with a Habicht application which has matured into Habicht patent No. 2,962,530, claim 1 of which was the count in the inference *1110 referred to in the above rejection. Hilmer and Habicht had filed U.S. and foreign “convention” applications in the following order on the following dates:

Habicht Swiss application Jan. 24, 1957
Hilmer German application July 31, 1957
Habicht U. S. application Jan. 23, 1958
Hilmer U. S. application July 25, 1958

Hilmer was accorded the benefit of his German application filing date, as a date of invention, but this was noc early enough to overcome the date of Habicht’s Swiss filing date, to which he was held to be entitled on the “priority” issue. Accordingly, Hilmer conceded priority of the invention of the count to Habicht.

In Hilmer I, the question we decided was whether the Habicht patent was effective as a prior art reference under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as of the Swiss filing date. We held that it was not and that it was “prior art” under 102(e) only as of the U.S. filing date, which date Hil-mer could overcome by being entitled to rely on the filing date of his German application to show his date of invention. This disposed of a rejection predicated on the disclosure of the Habicht patent, as a primary reference, coupled with a secondary prior art patent to Wagner et al, No. 2,975,212, issued March 14, 1961, filed May 1, 1957 (herein “Wagner”).

This appeal is from the decision of the board on the remand as to claims 10 and 16, claim 17 evidently now standing allowed in view of our reversal in Hilmer I of the sole ground on which it was rejected.

The board agrees with the view we expressed in Hilmer I that it had failed to pass on the rejection based on the count of the interference in view of Wagner and a finding of obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103. It summed up the situation and the issue before it on remand as follows:

As we stated in the former opinion, we do not consider that there is any question of res judicata or estoppel arising from the interference involved with respect to the present claims and the question which arises then is: is claim 1 of the patent, that is, the subject matter of claim 1, prior art against appellants and on what statutory basis can it be so used ?

Using a claim itself as “prior art,” a claim being a definition of the scope of the patent protection, can be fraught with difficulties, 1 but in this instance Habicht’s claim 1 is to a specific bis-sulfonyl urea of a stated formula and there is no problem in this regard. The board, it is to be noted, was meticulous in specifying, in its statement of the question, that we are dealing with the subject matter of claim 1 rather than with a patent claim as such.

The board’s conclusion was that the subject matter of claim 1, the compound claimed, is prior art against Hilmer. As to the basis on which it can be considered to be, or treated as, prior art, the board divided. Two members stated that the statutory basis is 35 U.S.C. § 102(g) combined with § 119 and read in the light of § 104. The third member declined to accept this, concurred only in the result, and said, “I see no reason to go beyond the concession of priority filed by Hilmer et al. * * Since his view was not determinative of the appeal, we consider that what we have before us for review is only the correctness of the reasoning of the majority.

Note must be taken of the fact that the rejection here is under § 103 for obviousness wherefore it is clear that *1111 the subject matter of the appealed claims is different from the subject matter of Habicht’s claim l, 2 allegedly, however, only in an obvious way by reason of the further disclosures of Wagner. Were the appealed claims to the same subject matter, it seems clear that Hilmer, because he conceded priority to Habicht, would not be entitled to them and Hilmer appears to have admitted as much throughout this appeal. But, it is contended, the situation is different when the claims on appeal are to different subject matter. We confess to some difficulty in determining just what appellants’ view is but it seems to come down to this: Appellants are entitled to the benefit of their German filing date and this antedates Habicht’s U.S. filing date, which is the earliest date as of which Habicht’s claim 1 invention can be “prior art.” The words appellants use, referring to Habicht’s U.S. filing date, are, “the only possible date that can be considered for anticipation purposes.” Appellants appear to use the term “anticipation” in the broad sense to mean “prior.”

We turn now to the reasoning by which the board majority arrived at the conclusion that the compound of Habicht claim 1 is in the prior art— i. e., ahead of Hilmer’s German filing date — and usable with the Wagner patent to support a section 103 obviousness rejection. We note at the outset that the board majority in no way relied on what occurred in the interference, on the concession of priority, or on any estoppel growing out of the interference.

Before examining the board majority’s statutory theory, we will recall the fact that in Hilmer I we dealt with another statutory theory that by combining § 102(e) and § 119 a U.S. patent had an effective date as a prior art reference for all it discloses as of its foreign convention filing date. We reversed that holding and remanded. We nowT are presented with another theory that by combining § 102(g) with § 119 at least the claimed subject matter of a U.S. patent is prior art as of the convention filing date. The crux of the matter lies in § 102(g), which we must have before us. In relevant part it reads:

§ 102. Conditions for patentability; novelty * * *
A person shall be entitled to a patent unless—

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424 F.2d 1108, 57 C.C.P.A. 985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hans-hilmer-gerhard-korger-rudi-weyer-and-walter-aumuller-ccpa-1970.