Application of Henry W. Reese

290 F.2d 839, 48 C.C.P.A. 1015
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1961
DocketPatent Appeal 6660
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 290 F.2d 839 (Application of Henry W. Reese) 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 Henry W. Reese, 290 F.2d 839, 48 C.C.P.A. 1015 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Appellant seeks reversal of the decision of the Board of Appeals, which affirmed the examiner and held that claims 39-42, all of the claims in the case, are unpatentable over the prior art, and for the further reason that the application is barred by some twenty years of what the examiner and the board found to be prior public use.

The invention disclosed in the instant application, Serial Number 392,980, filed November 18, 1953, relates to improvements in a “Medicinal Carrier.” One form of the invention, said to be es *840 pecially useful, is a tablet for insertion in the vaginal cavity where, upon disintegration of the tablet, a medicinal agent, which may also be a spermicide, is released.

The assignee of the present application is Fomos Laboratories, Inc. Applicant has been associated with Fomos Laboratories, Inc., since 1936, and his affidavits of record herein establish some of the historical background of the present invention. From the affidavits we find that Fomos Laboratories, Inc., has been making and selling vaginal tablets under the name “Fomos” since 1932, and that the subject matter of the claims on appeal relates to asserted improvements in such tablets.

The affidavits also establish that the original “Fomos” tablets were compounded from the same active ingredients as the tablet disclosed in the application before us, namely: sodium bicarbonate, boric acid, tartaric acid, a medicinal agent, a foaming agent, a wetting agent, filler, and a binder. These original tablets were intended to perform their function as carriers by dissolving upon contact with the moisture of the body cavity after which a reaction of the ingredients occurred resulting in the production of a gas-generated foam which carried the medicinal agent into contact with the walls of the body cavity.

It is asserted in the affidavits that in actual use, the original “Fomos” tablets did not always function as intended. Complaints were received from users claiming that the tablet did not dissolve, and thus was useless. Even when the tablet did dissolve, users frequently complained of a burning sensation resulting from the reaction. Moreover, reports indicated that the tablets were stable for something less than six months.

It was discovered that even with a fresh tablet, frequently there was insufficient body moisture to dissolve the tablet and permit reaction of the ingredients. It also was found that the tablet did not dissolve as rapidly as desired. Variations in the amount of body moisture available to support the desired reactions were found to be a principal reason why varying results were obtained from fresh undeteriorated tablets.

In order to assure the desired operation of the old “Fomos” tablets it was necessary to so compound them that they were readily reactive to small amounts of moisture. This resulted in the production of relatively unstable tablets which had an undesirably short shelf life. The contact of water vapor from the air caused the boric acid and tartaric acid of the tablets to react and produce more water, which, in turn, caused further interreaction of the constituents of the tablet. That reaction, for practical purposes, resulted in the deterioration of the tablets while still in the supplier’s stock.

The tablets here disclosed as an improvement on the original “Fomos” tablets are asserted to have solved the problem of how to provide adequate moisture to facilitate the desired reaction under all conditions of use and yet to provide a tablet having an adequate shelf life. The tablets are said to be more sensitive to moisture under the conditions of use than were the original “Fomos” tablets and thus are said to be readily disintegrated to ensure full and rapid reaction with whatever moisture is present in the body cavity. Yet the tablet of the present invention is said to be sufficiently insensitive to moisture prior to its use so that the shelf life was doubled over that of the old “Fomos” tablets.

Applicant has changed the proportions of boric acid, tartartic acid and sodium bicarbonate in the original “Fomos” tablets to obtain the benefit of the water-producing reaction between the boric and tartaric acids. The water produced by this reaction together with the structure of the tablet are asserted to improve the solubility of the tablet.

The shelf life and stability of the tablet are asserted by applicant to result from the new tablet structure. Applicant separately coats each of the active ingredients of the tablet with different *841 binders, and separately granulates such coated ingredients. After drying they are formed into a single tablet. Applicant uses methyl cellulose as a coating for the tartaric acid, to provide a moisture barrier to isolate the tartaric acid from both the boric acid and the sodium bicarbonate. The sodium bicarbonate is coated with a foaming agent, and the boric acid is coated with a water solution of a common binder and the desired medicinal agent.

Since the rejection on the ground of public use goes to all the claims and the other issues relating to patentability of the claims become moot if that rejection is sustained, we shall first consider that ground. The board’s finding that the tablets defined in the claims of the instant application were “in public use for twenty years prior to the filing date of the application,” and were therefore not patentable under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b), raises an issue of fact. The precise question is whether the evidence of record supports the finding of the board that there was public use or sale of the tablet claimed in the application prior to November 18,1952. The only evidence of record before us is found in affidavits submitted by the applicant, which affidavits were directed primarily to the issue of utility which had been raised by the examiner. We shall review these affidavits in chronological sequence.

On January 17, 1955, Reuben Posner, one of the assignees of the instant application, and president of the other as-signee, Fomos Laboratories, Inc., submitted an affidavit which contained the following paragraph:

“I annex to this application a true copy of a report made by the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. I state that the formula of the Fomos tablet mentioned in this report is exactly the same as the formula of the tablet in the application.”

In that report, under the heading “Statement of Background Material,” is the following statement:

“The manufacturer reports that Fomos. tablets have been used by physicians in private practice for twenty years.”

On January 2, 1957, Posner submitted another affidavit, annexed to which was an “Exhibit A,” which appears to be the same report of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America that had been annexed to his affidavit of January 17, 1955. However, in his affidavit filed January 2, 1957, Posner stated:

“The ‘Fomos’ tablets mentioned in ‘Exhibit A’ are the tablets disclosed in this application, and áre not the tablets previously manufactured under the name ‘Fomos’ prior to November 18, 1952.”

The applicant Reese also submitted an affidavit on January 2, 1957.

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290 F.2d 839, 48 C.C.P.A. 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-henry-w-reese-ccpa-1961.