Application of Heinrich Ruschig, Walter Aumuller, Gerhard Korger, Hans Wagner, Josef Scholz and Alfred Bander

379 F.2d 990, 54 C.C.P.A. 1551, 154 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 118, 1967 CCPA LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 8071
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 379 F.2d 990 (Application of Heinrich Ruschig, Walter Aumuller, Gerhard Korger, Hans Wagner, Josef Scholz and Alfred Bander) 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 Heinrich Ruschig, Walter Aumuller, Gerhard Korger, Hans Wagner, Josef Scholz and Alfred Bander, 379 F.2d 990, 54 C.C.P.A. 1551, 154 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 118, 1967 CCPA LEXIS 284 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

*991 RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claim 13 of application serial No. 601,107, filed July 31, 1956, for “New Benzene Sulfonyl Ureas and Process for Their Preparation” Apparently The Upjohn Company has been prosecuting the application.

This case is a sequel to our decision in In re Ruschig, 343 F.2d 965, 52 CCPA 1238, decided April 22, 1965. There we reversed a rejection of twelve claims of this same application based on prior art. The claim on appeal is one of those claims. It reads:

13. N-(p-chlorobenzenesulfonyl) -N'-propylurea. That compound is structurally identified as

It is known by the generic name chlor-propamide and is sold under the trademark Diabinese by Chas. Pfizer & Co., Inc., as an oral medication for the control of diabetes mellitus, as more fully explained in our previous opinion, wherein we also had occasion to discuss the claim 13 compound which is again before us. We refer to that opinion for a more complete exposition of the chemical nomenclature and further background.

The sole issue on this appeal is whether claim 13 is supported by the disclosure of appellants’ application, a question which had not been raised in this case at the time of the prior appeal. The following events gave rise to the issue.

About a year after the present application was filed, the examiner suggested claim 13 to applicants for purposes of interference with a Pfizer application filed by McLamore, serial No. 660,064 of May 20, 1957, and September 25, 1957, the claim was added. Interference 89,-091 was declared and in it McLamore moved to dissolve on the ground, inter alia, that the claim was not supported in the application at bar. The examiner held the claim was supported and denied the motion. On reconsideration, he adhered to his decision. (The suggestion of the claim and these two decisions on motions are referred to by appellants as three rulings in their favor by the Patent Office, nearly ten years ago, on the present issue.) Later the examiner dissolved the interference on his own motion on the ground claim 13 was unpat-entable to the interference parties over prior art. Meanwhile both appellants and McLamore had filed divisional applications claiming methods of treating diabetes and compositions therefor, appellants’ application being serial No. 185,865, filed April 9, 1962. It had two sets of claims, 1-4 for tablets and 5-8 for method of treatment. Claims 3 and 7 specified the same compound as that of claim 13. These claims were under rejection by reason of one-year statutory bars which could be overcome only by reliance on the filing date of the present parent application which gave rise to the question whether the application contained support for the claims. In an appeal to the board in application 185,865, by an opinion of March 4, 1965, the board, having gone into the application and interference history, held that claims 3 and 7 in that application did not have support in the present application because the claim 13 compound is not disclosed therein and issued a new rejection under Rule 196(b) on that ground. 1

*992 After our decision on the prior appeal, in which we reversed the rejection on prior art, the application was returned to the examiner. Since he knew of the board’s action in the other application holding that the disclosure does not support the compound of claim 13, he requested and obtained from the First Assistant Commissioner authorization to reopen the case to reject claim 13 on the new ground of lack of support, which he did on June 15, 1965, as follows:

In view of the decision of the Board of Appeals of March 4, 1965 in Serial No. 185,865, holding that claims 3 and 7 therein were not supported by the disclosure of the instant case and hence not entitled to the benefit of the date thereof, claim 13 herein which is specific to a compound, the use of which is recited in claims 3 and 7, supra, is rejected as having no specific support in this disclosure for reasons fully detailed in said decision (Appeal No. 283-74), Paper No. 25, at pages 4-7. The compound of claim 13 is not named or identified by formula and it can find support only as choices made between the several variables involved. This is not regarded as adequate support for a specific compound never named or otherwise exemplified in the specification as filed. See In re Fried 1963 C.D. 248 (page 257, first paragraph [50 CCPA 954, 312 F.2d 930, 136 USPQ 729]).

Appellants then argued this rejection before the examiner who adhered to it and made it final. Reconsideration was requested and given, the examiner adhering to his view. Appellants then took the question to the board where the examiner filed an extensive Answer to their lengthy brief. The board affirmed for very much the same reasons as those stated in its opinion in deciding the same issue in application serial No. 185,865. Thus the question before us has been twice decided adversely to appellants by the Board of Appeals, the same panel hearing both appeals. 2

In coming here, appellants raise a question in addition to the issue of support which requires preliminary consideration. They say that in this second appeal “involving the same and already adjudicated Claim, the United States Patent Office was without authority, or lacked jurisdiction, to reopen these proceedings (after the Court’s decision) to resurrect a ground of rejection which had already been considered by the Patent Office, this lack of authority being based upon principles of, or akin to, res judi-cata, estoppel or laches.”

In answer, the solicitor says there is no such issue before us since it was not raised before the board, is raised for the first time in this court, and was not properly raised by any reason of appeal. Appellants counter with the argument that Reason of Appeal 9, reading, “The Board of Appeals erred in matters of law,” will suffice. They also say that, being a matter of “jurisdiction over subject matter,” it can be raised at any time.

We pass these ingenious and technical legal arguments since we prefer to say that we have considered the numerous cases relied on by appellants to support their proposition that the Patent Office cannot make this rejection because many years ago an examiner ruled to the contrary and find the point lacking in merit and unsupported by authority. We appreciate the extensive memorandum of law supplied in the appendix to appellants’ brief, containing cases pro and con, and note the heavy reliance on what was said in two concurring opinions. We surmise appellants would have to agree that what precedents they have found are not, as a whole, very strong support for their theory. The words of Judge Garrett in In re Ellis, 86 F.2d 412, 24 CCPA 759, which appellants found quoted in In re Becker, 101 F.2d 557, 26 CCPA 922, fairly depict the present *993

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379 F.2d 990, 54 C.C.P.A. 1551, 154 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 118, 1967 CCPA LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-heinrich-ruschig-walter-aumuller-gerhard-korger-hans-ccpa-1967.