Application of Hugh Harper Gibbs and Richard Norman Griffin

437 F.2d 486, 58 C.C.P.A. 901
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1971
DocketPatent Appeal 8367
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 437 F.2d 486 (Application of Hugh Harper Gibbs and Richard Norman Griffin) 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 Hugh Harper Gibbs and Richard Norman Griffin, 437 F.2d 486, 58 C.C.P.A. 901 (ccpa 1971).

Opinions

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 1-3 in application serial No. 290,184, filed June 24, 1963, for “Trifluorovinyl Sulfonic Acid Polymers.” The real party in interest is E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, assignee. We reverse.

The same applicants who are appellants here were issued a patent, assigned to duPont, No. 3,041,317, on June 26, 1962, which was less than a year before the filing of the application on appeal. That patent is the sole reference relied on to support the rejection.

The ground of rejection is that claims 1-3 are unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 102(c) 1 because the invention claimed thereby has been “abandoned.” Such abandonment is predicated solely on the issuance of the patent, which is alleged to disclose the subject matter without claiming it, and on the fact that the instant application, wherein it is claimed, was not copending with the application on which the patent issued. It was the examiner’s final position as stated in his Answer before the board that the claimed subject matter was “dedicated” to the public by failure to claim it in the issued patent wherein it was disclosed. The examiner’s words were: “Appellants have dedicated the disclosure of the present application in Gibbs et al and have effectively abandoned their invention for patenting purposes * * The authority he relied on was McCrady, Patent Office Practice, 4th ed., p. 182.

Apparently because the examiner in his first action rejected the claims on the Gibbs et al. patent “on the grounds [487]*487of double patenting” (among other grounds), although in his second action he changed it to dedication and abandonment under § 102(c), duPont, as as-signee, filed a terminal disclaimer 2 and cited the two double patenting eases of In re Robeson, 331 F.2d 610, 51 CCPA 1271, and In re Kaye, 332 F.2d 816, 51 CCPA 1465 (1964), in which we held terminal disclaimers effective to overcome a “double patenting” rejection. Those cases had nothing whatever to do with either abandonment or dedication. In his Answer, the examiner said:

Appellants’ arguments with respect to the terminal disclaimer are moot since no double patenting rejection is being maintained.

The board opinion, while recognizing the existence of the terminal disclaimer as part of appellants’ argument “based upon double patenting considerations,” makes no further mention of it. Appellants, in their brief in this court, continue to rely on the disclaimer for reasons discussed hereinafter. This presents a novel aspect in a case wherein the rejection is predicated on § 102(c) abandonment, the sole ground on which the board affirmed.

The Invention

Claim 1 exemplifies the subject matter of the application. It reads:

1. A normally solid acid ion exchange resin polymer of trifluorovinyl sulfonic acid containing units of the structure

where X is a member of the class consisting of hydrogen, alkali metals, ammonium ions and amine ions.

Claim 2 is nearly the same except that the resin is stated to be a copolymer, rather than a “polymer,” of a fluoroeth-ylene and the trifluorovinyl sulfonic acid specified in claim 1. Claim 3 depends from claim 2 and specifies that the flu-oroethylene component is ieirafluoro-ethylene.3

The Rejection

The rejection in this ease is one which, the. Patent Office admits, is rarely applied. Consequently there is little recent case law on the subject. The statutory ground of “abandonment of the invention” is predicated on the fact, which is not in dispute, that the subject matter of the appealed claims is to some extent disclosed in the Gibbs and Griffin patent and is not claimed therein or in any application copending with the patent. It is therefore said to be “dedicated” to the public and that dedication is equated by the Patent Office with the abandonment referred to in § 102(c).

We shall now briefly explain in what manner the invention of the appealed claims is disclosed in the issued patent. The acid ion exchange resin polymers or copolymers of the claims are referred to generally by appellants as “polyacids”. The application at bar says:

The polyacids of the present invention are prepared by the hydrolysis polymers of trifluorovinyl sulfonyl fluoride. The polymerization of trifluorovinyl sulfonyl fluoride is disclosed in our patent U. S. 3,041,317, issued June 26, 1962. * * *

The polytriflu oro vinyl sulfonic acids are of particular utility as ion exchange resins and as acid catalysts. * * * the polyacids generally employed are copolymers of trifluoro-vinyl sulfonic acids with fluorinated ethylenes, and, particularly, tetrafluo-roethylene * * *. [Emphasis ours.]

The Gibbs et al. patent contains a full description of the preparation of the aforesaid fluorides, their polymerization or copolymerization, and specifically the production of copolymers with tetraflu-

[488]*488oroethylene. The concluding paragraph of the patent contains this statement:

The polymers of the present invention serve many purposes. * * * However, a particular utility of the polymer comprises its use as an ion exchange resin after hydrolysis4 of the sulfonyl fluoride group to the sul-fonic acid group. [Emphasis ours.]

That is the totality of the disclosure of the now-claimed polyacids. Thus, the patent discloses the production of the polymerized fluorides and then contains the broad statement that by hydrolysis they can be converted into the polyacids now claimed and states what the latter will be useful for. The patent does not disclose how to carry out the hydrolysis, as does the present application, nor does it specifically name any of the resulting polyacids.

The essence of the rejection is that by this much disclosure, coupled with failure to claim in the patent or in a copend-ing application, the invention of the poly-acids was abandoned in the sense of § 102(c) and no patent can issue.

The board so held on the ground that the fuorides of the patent and the poly-acids of this application are “mutually dependent inventions,” predicating the dependency on its findings that (a) the polyacids claimed here require the fluorides of the patent as a starting material, saying, “No other method for producing the herein claimed polymer is disclosed,” and (b) the “major utility disclosure in the patent is directed to the hydrolysis of the sulfonyl fluoride copoly-mer to the corresponding sulfonic acid copolymer which is useful as an ion exchange resin * * (Our emphasis.)

The legal significance of this holding of mutual dependency will appear hereinafter.

Appellants’ Points

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Application of Hugh Harper Gibbs and Richard Norman Griffin
437 F.2d 486 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
437 F.2d 486, 58 C.C.P.A. 901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hugh-harper-gibbs-and-richard-norman-griffin-ccpa-1971.