In re Anderson

471 F.2d 1237, 176 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 331, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 433
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 26, 1973
DocketPatent Appeal No. 8837
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 471 F.2d 1237 (In re Anderson) 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
In re Anderson, 471 F.2d 1237, 176 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 331, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 433 (ccpa 1973).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the Patent Office Board of Appeals decision affirming the rejection of claims 1-10, all claims of application serial No. 642,294, filed May 31, 1967, entitled “Wound Dressing.” The application is stated to be a continuation-in-part of serial No. 337,709, filed January 8, 1964, which matured into patent No. 3,328,259, and of serial No. 782,515, filed December 23, 1958, now abandoned. We reverse in part and affirm in part.

The Invention

The invention described and claimed by appellant is a surgical dressing which is soluble in plasma and completely absorbable in the body and hence suitable for both external and internal use. It is intended to afford a substantial degree of containment against excess flow of plasma from a wound to which it is applied. Being absorbable, it becomes incorporated in the scab or eschar which forms over an external open lesion. The abstract forming part of the specification reads:

The invention comprises a laminated dressing for a wound comprising a primary layer which is readily soluble in plasma and a secondary layer in face adhering contact with the primary layer, also soluble in plasma but to a lesser extent than the primary layer.

Claim 1, which is the only independent claim and is an unamended original claim in this application and therefore, by elementary principles of patent law, to be considered as a part of the original [1239]*1239disclosure,1 reads (paragraphing supplied) :

1. A laminated dressing for a wound comprising a laminated structure made up of two layers arranged face to face,
both layers being plasma-soluble, one layer constituting a primary layer adapted to be applied directly to the wound, and being more readily soluble in plasma than the other layer,
the other layer constituting a secondary layer serving as a backing for said primary layer.

It is thus seen that the invention of claim 1 is an article of manufacture comprising a combination of elements. Since claims 2-10 all depend, directly or indirectly, from claim 1, they are likewise combination claims. We shall not discuss them here but in connection with our discussion of the various rejections pertaining to them. The primary issue is the patentability of claim 1, the parent and broadest claim. We find it was erroneously rejected.

The Rejections

The board did not altogether agree with the grounds of rejections as stated by the examiner, affirmed some, reversed some, and added some of its own, not designated as new rejections. Appellant has made no issue of the fact that some of the rejections originated with the board. The Patent Office Solicitor has presented an analysis showing that we have seven different rejections before us, five of them on the ground that claims are “broader than warranted by the disclosure” for one reason or another. A sixth is for indefiniteness and the seventh for new matter.

We agree with the solicitor’s explanation of what the statutory bases of these rejections should have been stated to be, which he has made in the light of two cases we decided after the date of the examiner’s Answer herein and so close to the board’s decision that it certainly did not consider them, In re Borkowski, 422 F.2d 904, 57 CCPA 946 (1970), and In re Wakefield, 422 F.2d 897, 57 CCPA 959 (1970). See also In re Hammack, 427 F.2d 1378, 57 CCPA 1225 (1970). The solicitor’s explanation, which differs in several respects from the reasons given by the examiner and affirmed by the board, reads:

It is apparent from the preceding analysis of the various grounds of rejection that all claims (grounds 1-5) have been rejected for failure to satisfy Section 112, paragraph 1, that claims 7, 9, and 10 have additionally been rejected for failure to satisfy Section 112, paragraph 2 (ground 6), and that claim 2 has additionally been rejected for failure to satisfy Section 132 (ground 7).

Further details as to these rejections will be given as we consider them. There is no rejection on prior art nor any prior art relied on.

OPINION

I

All claims except 4, 9, and 102 were rejected as “broader than warranted by the disclosure” in the use of the expression (in the third clause in claim 1 as set forth above) “a primary layer adapted to be applied directly to the wound, and being more readily soluble in plasma than the other layer.”

In making this rejection, the examiner did not explain the basis of his assertion that the claims be so rejected are [1240]*1240“broader than warranted by the disclosure.” Challenged with having given no explanation, the only light he shed in his Answer was to say that “the above phrase was rejected on breadth,” citing in justification In re Sus, 306 F.2d 494, 49 CCPA 1301 (1962), and In re Lund, 376 F.2d 982, 54 CCPA 1361 (1967). Of course, it was not the “phrase” the examiner was rejecting but the claim and we will assume that is what he meant. We find no support for the rejection in Sus. That case essentially involved the patentability of claims to a group of chemical compounds and to their uses claimed as processes of making printing plates. We found the claims to be not in compliance with § 112 because, as clearly stated at the end of the opinion, they did not conform to what the applicant described as his invention in the specification. The situation here is that the broad claims are of the same scope as the invention described. We also note that appellant relied on Sus below for our statement, to which we adhere, that:

The public purpose on which the patent law rests requires the granting of claims commensurate in scope with the invention disclosed. This requires as much the granting of broad claims on broad inventions as it does the granting of more specific claims on more specific inventions.

Lund was another case where the claims were for chemical compounds, useful as medicaments. It relied on Sus. We there said, “the invention claimed should be no broader than the invention set forth in the written description [contained in the] specification.” We found that not to be the case. Here we find it is the case which is sufficient to distinguish Lund.

In affirming, the board presented an entirely different justification, as follows (emphasis ours):

The major part of appellant’s specification is directed to a laminate in which the primary layer is hemostatic.' Such a layer is exemplified by the disclosures of two specific ethers of cellulose. The prophetic paragraph in page 5 of the specification, however, has no support by way of exemplification and does not demonstrate or suggest to one skilled in this art how to use

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Bluebook (online)
471 F.2d 1237, 176 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 331, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anderson-ccpa-1973.