Application of Vladimir Petrow, Alan Jeffery Thomas and Oliver Stephenson

402 F.2d 485, 56 C.C.P.A. 710, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 449, 1968 CCPA LEXIS 251
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1968
DocketPatent Appeal 7970
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 402 F.2d 485 (Application of Vladimir Petrow, Alan Jeffery Thomas and Oliver Stephenson) 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 Vladimir Petrow, Alan Jeffery Thomas and Oliver Stephenson, 402 F.2d 485, 56 C.C.P.A. 710, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 449, 1968 CCPA LEXIS 251 (ccpa 1968).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claim 10 of appellants’ application for a reissue patent. 1

The claimed invention is a novel chemical compound formed by the reaction of chloral and betaine. The description of the compound is set forth in the specification as follows:

We have made the unexpected discovery that chloral and its hydrate combine exothermically with betaine, a physiologically inactive, naturally-occurring base, to form a new com *486 pound of empirical formula C7H14O4 NCI3 which may be obtained in crystalline form from solvents such for example as water or ethanol. Infrared examination of this new compound reveals that it no longer possesses the hydroxyl bands characteristic of chloral hydrate, but only a shoulder on the high frequency side of the main band of the dispersing medium (viz. liquid phraffin B.P.) at 3000 cm.-1, and one broad carbonyl band at 1615 cm.-1 (betaine carboxylate). This indicates strong hydrogen-bonding between the hydroxyl groups of chloral hydrate and the

COO.

group of betaine which is held with charge by the stable positive

+ -N(CH3)3

group. This new compound is probably 6 - trichloromethyl - 4,8 - dihydra - 1,3,5,7 - tetroxacyclooct - 2 - ato - trimethylammoniomethane of formula:

which formula represents a structural type hitherto unknown in organic chemistry.

According to the present invention there is provided a compound of betaine or betaine hydrate and chloral or chloral hydrate having the empirical formula.

C7H14O4NCl3 and M.P. 122.5° to 124.5° C.

******

The new compound according to the present invention separates from solvents such for example as water or ethanol in the form of large crystals of M.P. 122.5° to 124.5° C. (corr.).

These crystals are free from the odour of chloral and its hydrate. The new compound may be converted into pharmaceutical preparations such as tablets, which tablets are free from chloral-Iike odour and when taken with a glass of water are essentially free from unpleasant chloral-like taste. The new compound is fully effective clinically as an hypnotic agent and thus represents a new and significant advance in chloral therapy.

The sole claim before us on this appeal is product claim 10, process claims having been allowed:

10. A compound having the empirical formula C7H14O4NCl3 corresponding to an equimolar ratio of chloral, betaine, and water, said compound having the hypnotic and sedative properties of chloral while being essentially free from unpleasant chloral-like taste and odor, said compound on infra-red examination in liquid paraffin as the dispersing medium having no hydroxyl bands characteristic of chloral hydrate, but only a shoulder on the high frequency side of the main band of the dispersing medium at 3000 cm.-1, and one broad carbonyl band at 1615 cm.-1, and said compound being crystallizable from water and ethanol in the form of crystals having a melting point of 122.5° C. to 124.5° C.

This claim was rejected on the ground that appellants had given up true product claims during prosecution of their original application in order to obtain a patent containing product-by-process claims, and that this abandonment of true product claims created an estoppel which prevents appellants from recapturing a true product claim by reissue.

The pertinent claim which appellants abandoned during prosecution of their original application and upon which the alleged estoppel is based was claim 4, which reads as follows:

4. A compound of betaine and chloral having the empirical formula C7H14O4NCl3 and M.P. 122.5° to 124.-5° C.

*487 The examiner twice rejected this claim as being an “improper product-by-process” claim, but did not make the second rejection final. Appellants’ attorney, being as mystified as this court as to why the examiner thought this was a product-by-process claim at all, let alone an improper one, held an interview with the examiner. Appellants’ attorney concluded at the interview that the examiner’s real concern was his feeling that no true product claim could issue based upon this specification, but that a proper product-by-process claim would be allowable. Appellants’ attorney therefore canceled his true product claim, and replaced it “by one proper product-by-process claim, namely, claim 6.”

Claim 6, as subsequently amended, is as follows:

6. The compound of betaine and chloral produced by the process of claim 1, said compound having the empirical formula C7H14O4NCl3 and M.P. 122.5° to 124.5° C.

Appellants’ patent subsequently issued containing this product-by-process claim and three process claims. After issuance, appellants concluded that the product-by-proeess claim is not as broad a claim as they had a right to, and they filed the reissue application now before us in an attempt to obtain a true product claim.

The issue here is whether appellants committed “error” within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 251. Determination of that issue requires consideration of the specific question of whether the circumstances shown by the record are such as to establish that the cancellation of claim 4 was such an action as would estop appellants from obtaining, through reissue, the appealed claim. In deciding the question, it will be necessary to compare appealed claim 10 with canceled claim 4.

We think it well to state at the outset that we are guided herein by the language in In re Willingham, 282 F.2d 353, 48 CCPA 727, where this court observed :

The deliberate cancellation of a claim of an original application in order to secure a patent cannot ordinarily be said to be an “error” and will in most cases prevent the applicant from obtaining the cancelled claim by reissue. The extent to which it may also prevent him from obtaining other claims differing in form or substance from that cancelled necessarily depends upon the facts in each case and particularly on the reasons for the cancellation.

In appealing to this court, appellants have noted the case law which holds that an applicant who has abandoned a claim is estopped from recapturing a claim of equal scope in a reissue. Appellants argue that these cases are inapplicable because the claim presented in the reissue application is of much different scope than abandoned claim 4. They argue that claim 4, listing only a melting point and an empirical formula, which is no more than an elemental analysis, does not pinpoint a specific compound because it could describe a plurality of compounds having identical melting points and empirical formulae. They contrast this with claim 10 which they say contains a sufficient recitation of properties to insure that a single compound only is encompassed within the claim.

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402 F.2d 485, 56 C.C.P.A. 710, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 449, 1968 CCPA LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-vladimir-petrow-alan-jeffery-thomas-and-oliver-stephenson-ccpa-1968.