Application of William M. McLamore

379 F.2d 985, 54 C.C.P.A. 1544
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7829
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 379 F.2d 985 (Application of William M. McLamore) 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 William M. McLamore, 379 F.2d 985, 54 C.C.P.A. 1544 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of, and new rejection by, the Patent Office Board of Appeals, as finally formulated on reconsideration August 26, 1965, refusing the single claim, claim 1, of Mc-Lamore application, serial No. 660,064, filed May 20, 1957, for “Oral Antidia-betic Agent.”

Introduction

This case is related to In re Ruschig, 379 F.2d 990, 54 CCPA- (No. 8071), decided concurrently herewith, in that the claim here on appeal is for the same chemical compound as the single claim, claim 13, there on appeal. As explained in our opinion therein, the claim originated in this McLamore application, was suggested to Ruschig et al. for interference, interference No. 89,010 was instituted, and subsequently dissolved by the examiner on his own motion on the ground the claim was not patentable over prior art. We refer to our concurrent opinion in the Ruschig case and also to our earlier opinion of April 22, 1965, in the same case, 343 F.2d 965, 52 CCPA 1238 (No. 7254), for further information and background and for other purposes as will appear.

*986 Briefly, the invention here involved is a specific chemical compound defined in the single claim on appeal as

N - (p - ehlorobenzenesulfonyl) - N' - propylurea.

This compound is also known by the generic name chlorpropamide and is sold by the assignee of this application, Chas. Pfizer & Co., Inc., under the trademark “Diabinese” as an oral antidiabetic medication when compounded with a suitable carrier to make a tablet for oral administration.

This appeal and the second appeal in the Ruschig case (No. 8071) were both considered by the same panel of the Board of Appeals and, as will be seen, have become somewhat interrelated. In the above-mentioned interference, McLa-more moved to dissolve on the ground the count (claim 1 here, claim 13 of Ruschig et al.) was not supported by the Ruschig et al. disclosure and that motion was denied by the examiner who held it was supported. The patentability over prior art of a number of Ruschig et al. claims, including claim 13, came to this court from a board decision affirming rejection on prior art and we reversed in the above-cited decision (No. 7254). On return of the case to the examiner, he reopened it and rejected claim 13 alone on the new ground that it was not supported by the Ruschig et al. disclosure and that question was appealed to us. In our concurrent opinion in No. 8071 we are affirming that rejection. We now have before us the ex parte question of the patentability of the same claim to McLa-more over prior art which now Includes a patent issued to Ruschig et al, on an application which was a division of the application we had before us in the Ruschig case. 1 There is no connection between the assignees of the McLamore and Ruschig et al. applications. They are competitors. In this country the real parties in interest appear to be Pfizer and The Upjohn Company.

The Rejection

The examiner rejected claim 1 as un-patentable over the references listed below because their disclosures render the compound obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art.

Martin et al. 2,371,178 Mar. 13, 1945

Swedish patent 120,428 Dec. 16, 1947

French patent 919,464 Mar. 10, 1947

As shown by our opinion in In re Rus-chig, No. 7254, supra, the same references were relied on in that case to support the rejection of claims which included claim 13 for the same specific compound as claim 1 here. We there reversed that rejection on April 22, 1965.

March 4, 1965, before our Ruschig decision, the board affirmed the examiner’s rejection. It did so in an opinion common to two appeals, this case, which is called Case I, and an appeal by McLamore in a division of Case I claiming the process of lowering blood sugar in diabetic humans and tablets for such use, which is called Case II.

Appellant filed a request for reconsideration and a few days after our Ruschig decision a supplemental request calling the board’s attention to it. Thereupon the board granted the request, coupling it with a statement that it *987 wished to reconsider both cases at the same time. Thereafter appellant filed considerable further material bearing on the usefulness of chlorpropamide.

August 26, 1965, the board rendered a new decision in both McLamore Cases I and II, opening with the statement:

The following references are cited:

Euschig et al. Application No. 601,107 filed July 31,1956

Euschig et al. Patent No. 3,198,706 Aug. 3, 1965

(filed Apr. 9,1962, division of 601,107)

The board explained: “The patent is used as the reference, with the application being made of record for its dates.”

The Euschig et al. patent and its origin are described in our opinion in No. 8071. Like McLamore’s Case II, it claims the process for lowering blood sugar and tablets for oral administration. The board’s rejection based on this newly cited reference appears in its context as follows (all emphasis ours):

The question remains as to whether the claims [of Cases I and II] are obvious under 35 U.S.C. 103 over Euschig et al. The Euschig et al. patent (as well as the application, the disclosures being substantially the same) discloses a large class of benzene sulfonyl urea compounds useful in the oral treatment of diabetes. Appellant discloses a single compound falling within the class and used for the same purpose. Furthermore, the difference between this compound and several disclosed by Euschig et al. is such that the compound would be obvious to the chemist.
Appellant urges the outstanding results obtained in using his compound in the oral treatment of diabetes. It is pointed out that the Court in In re Euschig et al., supra, emphasized the properties of appellant’s compound; it even referred to the results of the work of appellant’s assignee. In view of the singular advantages, the recommendation made in Case II [in the prior opinion of the board, that the examiner re-examine the case in the light of any Euschig et al. patent that issued] is withdrawn and a new rejection tvill not be made.
However, the situation in Case I is considered different. The claim is for the compound itself, not restricted to any particular use, and appellant does not even pretend that the compound would be unobvious to the chemist.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Diane M. Dillon
919 F.2d 688 (Federal Circuit, 1990)
In Re John P. Chupp
816 F.2d 643 (Federal Circuit, 1987)
In re Arkley
455 F.2d 586 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
379 F.2d 985, 54 C.C.P.A. 1544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-william-m-mclamore-ccpa-1967.