Application of Scott Searles, Jr

422 F.2d 431, 57 C.C.P.A. 912
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1970
DocketPatent Appeal 8211
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 422 F.2d 431 (Application of Scott Searles, Jr) 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 Scott Searles, Jr, 422 F.2d 431, 57 C.C.P.A. 912 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals, adhered to on reconsideration, sustaining the final rejection of all claims in appellant’s application. 1

The invention defined by the appealed claims relates to a method for making cyclic mono-sulfides, such as ethylene sulfide, which comprises heating an alkali or alkaline earth metal thiocyanate salt with a cyclic carbonate of certain diols. Since the issues to be decided in this appeal do not require it, the invention will not be explained in more detail.

The claims were finally rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 102(a) as being unpatentable over an article published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society and co-authored by appellant and one Eugene F. Lutz. Appellant does not dispute that the reference discloses the subject matter claimed. The questions brought here on appeal arose from appellant’s attempts to remove the reference as prior art.

Appellant initially attempted to remove the reference by filing an affidavit swearing that Lutz was, at the time of the invention, a paid research assistant to appellant, that the work was carried out by Lutz, but at the suggestion and direction of appellant, and that Lutz’s name was added to the article “merely as a matter of academic courtesy.” This was deemed insufficient by *433 the examiner, who ruled 2 that a disclaiming affidavit by the co-author would be necessary to overcome the rejection.

The propriety of the examiner’s action in refusing to give the desired effect to the initial affidavit thereafter became moot, however, and is therefore not before us. It seems that in attempting ,to pursue the examiner’s requirement, appellant’s attorney became apprised of facts which made him decide to convert the application to a joint one with appellant and Lutz as co-applicants. In a display of commendable candor, these facts were explicitly stated in the “Verified Statement of Facts” filed, in accordance with Patent Office Rule 45(c), 3 with the request to amend the application ,to include Lutz as a joint inventor.

In summary, the facts alleged were as follows:

1. In 1958 Lutz was a graduate student working under the direction of Searles on a program designed to produce small-ring cyclic ethers (not cyclic sulfides, the eventual product).

2. Potassium propionate had been used as a catalyst in reactions in the program. One of the reactants in the program suggested by appellant was the cyclic carbonate of a diol specified in the claims. As a substitute for potassium propionate appellant suggested use of a “lower melting-point salt.” The new reaction was to be carried out under conditions selected by appellant as part of the program to produce cyclic ethers. Potassium thiocyanate was thereafter substituted for the potassium propionate.

3. Appellant and Lutz are in disagreement as to who proposed specifically the use of potassium thiocyanate, each claiming that he and not the other made the proposal.

4. Lutz recollects that, upon carrying out the reaction using potassium thiocyanate and before talking to appellant, he suspected the formation of the cyclic sulfide.

5. When appellant came to the laboratory Lutz called attention to the odor of the product and the fact that it did not have the boiling point of the desired cyclic ether. Appellant recollects that he then recognized the probable production of a sulfide and predicted the mechanism and generality of the reaction.

6. Appellant, when he filed the parent application and the present application, believed himself to be the sole inventor of the invention disclosed in the article.

The requested conversion of the application was refused by the examiner who stated “[t]he deficiency resulting in the denial is considered to rest in the ‘Verified Statement of Facts’. * * * ” His reasoning was articulated later in the Examiner’s Answer, when, denying that he was making an “ex parte determination of inventorship”, the examiner took the position that the facts presented were not sufficient to warrant a conclusion that Searles was not the sole inventor and that Searles and Lutz were joint inventors. The rejection over the joint publication was continued.

Before filing his brief to the Board of Appeals, appellant filed a petition to the Commissioner wherein he asked that the examiner be directed to enter the preferred papers, thus allowing conversion of the application, or, in the alternative, to make a positive determination that ei *434 ther Searles or Lutz was a sole inventor. His reasoning appears to have been that either action would serve the same purpose in clarifying the issues and paving the way to the removal of the reference as prior art and obtaining the grant of a patent to someone. The Commissioner, however, dismissed the petition, refusing to rule on the question “since it is determinative of the rejection made, [and] is thus appropriate for consideration on appeal to the Board of Appeals rather than by petition.” 4

The board, in its decision on the appeal, specifically declared:

The question here is solely one of whether applicant has sufficiently complied with the provisions of 35 USC 116 5 and Rule 45(c) to entitle him to convert this application to a joint one with Lutz and hence, through the parent application, to dispose of their joint publication as a reference.

It then went on to analyze the requirements of the statute and rules regarding the inclusion in an application of an omitted joint inventor. Agreeing with the examiner that the facts were dubious regarding error in determining inventor-ship, the board concluded

on the facts before us the Examiner’s holding denying the entry of the conversion amendment and rejecting on the point publication must be sustained.

We are thus presented with the anomalous situation that the only rejection of record is not contested by appellant and nothing presently in the official file of the application may be used to obviate that rejection. On this appeal the court is asked to rule on the propriety of the examiner’s refusal to permit entry of an amendment into the official file record. We note that traditionally, such actions being considered procedural, rather than substantive, recourse was available only through petition to the Commissioner of Patents, 6 review of his decision being possible by means of civil action. See, In re Pavlecka, 319 F.2d 180, 50 CCPA 1342 (1963). Here, however, the Commissioner has decided, and a majority 7 of the board of appeals agreed, that because the question involved is “determinative of the rejection” it is properly an *435 appealable matter.

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422 F.2d 431, 57 C.C.P.A. 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-scott-searles-jr-ccpa-1970.