In re Hanna

136 F.2d 749, 30 C.C.P.A. 1115, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 393, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1943
DocketNo. 4707
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 F.2d 749 (In re Hanna) 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 Hanna, 136 F.2d 749, 30 C.C.P.A. 1115, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 393, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 67 (ccpa 1943).

Opinion

Gakeett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the examiner [1116]*1116rejecting three claims, numbered 24, 25, and 26, introduced by amendments into appellant’s application for patent filed August 6, 1936, which application was a division of a prior application filed November 6, 1928.

The subject matter of the application relates to stokers, “particularly to stokers for use on locomotives and the like.” For reasons hereinafter appearing it is unnecessary to quote or analyze the claims.

It appears that claims 25 and 26 were copied from a patent, No. 2,029,295, issued to one H. P. Anderson February 4, 1936, upon an application originally filed June 24, 1930, and renewed June 9, 1934, appellant’s purpose in copying them being to secure declaration of an interference with the Anderson patent. In the patent the claims were numbered 28 and 29.

The record certified to us by the Commissioner of Patents does not embrace the text of the proposal to amend by copying the claims from the patent, but it appears that it took place at some time between February 18, 1941, and May 13, 1941, the same occurring under the. following circumstances.

Appellant’s divisional application filed August 6, 1936, seems to have been allowed on January 11,1939, and on May 6,1939, he renewed it with claims additional to the claims which had been granted. On April 12,1940, the renewal application was amended by consolidating and rewriting claims 21 and 23 thereof, the new or amended claim being numbered 24, and being the claim 24 here involved. With the amendment appellant called attention to claim 29 of the Anderson patent and suggested that if the latter claim was allowed Anderson “it would seem logical that appellant’s claim 24 should be allowed.”

No interference proceeding was suggested or requested by appellant at that time, but favorable consideration was requested “of claims 22 and 24” with the further request.that in the event of their rejection “the amendments to claim 22, together with claim 24, be entered for purposes of appeal.” On April 17, 1940, claim 22, as amended (the amendments being of no consequence here), was finally rejected by the examiner (apparently it had been previously rejected on October 19, 1939, before amendment) upon a patent to one Fahne-stock in view of a patent to one Jackson, and new claim 24 was finally rejected by him upon the patent to Jackson alone. With respect to appellant’s reference to the Anderson patent the examiner said:

Applicant’s remarks as to the Anderson patent 2,029,295 are noted, but there is nothing in that situation which would warrant the Examiner in reversing his present position or allowing the rejected claims. Aside from the fact that these' claims must be considered here on their merits, rather than by blind following of alleged precedent which may have involved other factors and other background of art, it is to be noted that applicant had opportunity to copy claim 20 of Anderson promptly and seek an interference, but did not avail himself of that opportunity. The question of interference cannot now be entertained.

[1117]*1117Upon appeal, tlie board, in a decision rendered February 18, 1941, reversed tlie. examiner’s decision rejecting the claims on the patents cited (and claim 22 stands allowed), but of its own motion rejected claim 24 “as not patentably distinguishing over the matter disclosed and claimed in Anderson.”

This was the first citation of the Anderson patent as a reference and, since it constituted a new ground of rejection, prosecution of tlie case was reopened before the examiner under Patent Office rule 139, and appellant then, upon some date not disclosed by the record before us, copied the claims of the Anderson patent which became claims 25 and 26 here at issue (thus adding them to claim 24 for consideration) and, for the first time, requested the declaration of an interference with the Anderson patent. So far as we can determine from tlie record, the request for an interference did not specifically embrace claim 24 which, as lias been indicated, was a new claim originating with appellant and not copied from the patent.

It will be noted that claim 24 was introduced more than four years after the issuance of the Anderson patent and that claims 25 and 26, in connection with which the interference was sought, were introduced more than five years aftei such issuance.

In a decision dated May 13, 1941, the examiner expressed “full concurrence with the ultimate conclusion reached by the Board that claim 24 is not in fact patentable to applicant,” and denied appellant’s request that he withdraw the Anderson patent as a reference.

It appears from that decision of the examiner that he had previously rejected claims 25 and 26 on April 28,1941, and that he adhered to that rejection. The decision of April 28, 1941, is not in the record, but in the examiner’s statement following the second appeal to the board it is stated:

Claims 25 and 20, verbatim copies of Anderson’s claims 28,'29, stand rejected on tlie ground that they are not readable on applicant’s disclosure and on the ground that applicant has no right at this time to copy the patent claims and contest priority, because of laches.

Following tlie above, the examiner analyzed the claims, stated his reasons for holding that they were not readable upon appellant’s disclosure, and (we quote at some length because of the character of the issue involved) continued:

It is obvious that the ultimate issue here involved, including the question of declaring an interference with a patent (a matter for the discretion of the Commissioner) cannot be entirely separated from the question of patentability of claims 25, 26 to applicant (a matter for review by the Board of Appeals). Certain comments are therefore appended.
Applicant urges that it was the duty of the Examiner to suggest a claim or claims of Anderson to him for the purpose of interference, and that no responsibility rested on him [applicant] to discover interfering patent claims and copy them promptly. The Examiner does not. agree with this position, and [1118]*1118after a careful review of the record in this case and its parent case fails to find evidence of any situation where it would have been proper for the Examiner to suggest an interference.
The present case as filed was directed to a coal crushing feature irrelevant to the present issue; and for two years after issue of the Anderson patent, it contained no claim suggestive of conflict with Anderson. During the same period no claims of the parent case warranted interference proceedings. Certain claims canceled from the parent case before the critical period began, are urged as maintaining the present right to an interference, but applicant’s theory of relying on a claim pending at any time in the life of the application is deemed unsound. In the opinion of the Examiner, the most careful interference search on Anderson’s claims as passed' for issue, and on applicant’s claims during the period Feb. 4, 1936 to Feb. 4, 1938, would not have revealed any basis for interference.
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Bluebook (online)
136 F.2d 749, 30 C.C.P.A. 1115, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 393, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hanna-ccpa-1943.