In Re Cady

77 F.2d 106, 22 C.C.P.A. 1190, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1935
DocketPatent Appeal 3433
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 77 F.2d 106 (In Re Cady) 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 Cady, 77 F.2d 106, 22 C.C.P.A. 1190, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 161 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

GARRETT, Associate Judge.

This appeal, in the form finally presented to us, is from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office rej ecting two claims of a divisional application for patent solely upon the ground of double patenting, the examiner’s decision rejecting them solely upon prior art being, in the same decision, reversed.

On March 19, 1926, appellant filed an application, serial No. 95,820, for patent relating to prepared roofing. The application recited that it was a continuation of ap *107 pellant’s then pending application, serial No. 526,329, filed December 31, 1921 (which subsequently ripened into patent No. 1,599,-512 issued September 14, 1926), “as to all subject matter common to both.”

Application serial No. 95,820 included both process and product claims, and the Primary Examiner made a ruling requiring division, which ruling, being traversed by appellant, was approved by the Classification Examiner with the statement, “The article is not limited by the method of making.”

The record in the instant case docs not contain the several office actions relating to application serial No. 95,820, but it does disclose that appellant, after the ruling requiring division, struck the product claims therefrom and on January 2, 1930, filed a divisional application containing them; it being serial No. 418,206, the application here involved.

Application serial No. 95,820 containing only the process claims was prosecuted to completion and culminated in patent No. 1,755,049, issued April 15, 1930, some three and a half months after the filing of the divisional application containing the product claims.

The divisional application here involved seems to have been first tentatively rej ected by the examiner on June 26, 1931. Thereafter it was amended in certain respects, not clearly stated in the record, and, as amended, was finally rejected by the examiner on May 24, 1932. As so rejected, it contained three product claims numbered, respectively, 5, 11, and 12.

Appeal was taken to the Board of Appeals and, from the examiner’s statement to the board, it appears that his rejection of all three claims was based solely upon prior art; the references cited being:

Kirschbraun, 1,612,776, December 28, 1926.

Abraham, 1,126,932, February 2, 1915.

Overbury, 1,482,090, January 29, 1924.

Upon appeal, the Board of Appeals affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claim No. 11 upon Kirschbraun (the other references apparently having been withdrawn) and reversed his rejection of claims 5 and 12 upon that ground, but itself rejected them upon “the ground of double patenting with respect to appellant’s patent 1,755,049.”

Appellant thereupon presented a petition for reconsideration, filing therewith an affidavit of the patentee Kirschbraun to which allusion will be made later. The board denied the petition as to claim No. 11 and adhered to its rejection of claims Nos. 5 and 12 upon the ground of double patenting. Later, the board, in response to a formal request, advised that it had considered the Kirschbraun affidavit but that it was not regarded as pertinent to the questions before it.

The instant appeal followed, and at the hearing before us appellant moved to dismiss as to claim 11. This motion will be granted. We have, therefore, to consider only claims 5 and 12, which read as follows :

“5. A roofing element comprising a felted fibrous base of sheet material cut to desired size and shape, a sealing coat of waterproofing material overlying both faces and all the edges of the element, and a masking layer of grit partially embedded in the coating on the surface and edges of the element which are exposed to the weather when the element is laid on a roof.”
“12. An individual shingle unit to be used for building construction cut from prepared roofing and having butt and adjacent side edges and being provided with vertical slots to provide shingle simulating tabs and a continuous protective bituminous coating covering at least the exposed portion of the upper face and the exposed butt and side edges and the edges of said slotted portions of the unit and a coating of comminuted grit applied to the upper face of said exposed butt and side edges.”

The sole question to be determined is that of whether the allowance of the claims at issue will result in double patenting, in view of the patent, No. 1,755,049, of April 15, 1930, granted to Cady upon the process claims. The process claims of the said patent are two in number. Claim No. 1, which is typical, reads: “1. The process of treating individual shingle units cut from prepared roofing and having butt and adjacent side edges which includes the successive steps of coating all portions of the units uniformly with waterproofing bituminous material and applying granular surfacing material to the units in a continuous operation.”

The requirement of division respecting application serial No. 95,820 was made in consonance with rules 41 and 42 of the United States Patent Office, the here material provisions of which read:

“41. Two or more independent inventions can not be claimed in one application; *108 but where several distinct inventions are dependent upon each other and mutually contribute to produce a single result they may be claimed in one application: * * *.
“42. If several inventions claimed in a single application be of such a nature that a single patent may not be issued to cover them, the inventor will be required to limit the description, drawing, and claim of the pending application to whichever invention he may elect. The other inventions may be made the subjects of separate applications, which must conform to the rules applicable to original applications. If the independence of the inventions be clear, such limitation will be made before any action upon the merits; otherwise it may be made at any time before final action thereon, in the discretion of the examiner. A requirement of division will not be repeated without the written approval of the examiner of classification. After a final requirement of division, the applicant may elect to prosecute one group of claims, retaining the remaining claims in the case with the privilege of appealing from the requirement of division after final action by the examiner on the group of claims prosecuted.”

.[1,2] It is presumed that the Primary Examiner and the Classification Examiner made the rulings requiring division before there had been any consideration of the application upon the merits, such as testing the claims by prior art or by other factors affecting their per se patentability, but it is also the presumption that those - tribunals, having measured the claims by each other, that is, having considered the process claims in the light of the product claims and vice versa, were of the opinion that, if invention did exist as to both classes, two independent inventions would be involved, not dependent upon each other and not mutually contributing to .produce a single result so as to render them claimable in one application.

It was only upon such .theory that the examiner had authority -.to--make the divisional requirement, and the rulings, in legal effect, amounted to an.

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Bluebook (online)
77 F.2d 106, 22 C.C.P.A. 1190, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cady-ccpa-1935.