In re Kaisling

44 F.2d 863, 18 C.C.P.A. 740, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketNo. 2518
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 F.2d 863 (In re Kaisling) 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 Kaisling, 44 F.2d 863, 18 C.C.P.A. 740, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 127 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case is a rather complicated one by reason of the multiplicity of actions relating to it which were bad in the Patent Office, but [741]*741it presents only a question, or questions, of law, and we are not immediately concerned with the patentability of the claims from a mechanical standpoint.

It does not seem to be essential to the understanding and decision of the case fully to detail the various steps that have been taken.

The applications have been prosecuted by Kaisling’s (appellant’s) assignee. From the brief it appears that disagreements between the parties led to some of the procedure which brought about the complications.

The parent application was filed December 15, 1913. This application, as filed, carried three features of claimed invention, to wit (a) a lock switch structure, (b) a lock per se, and (c) a system in which the lock switch was a useful element for dimming certain of the lights. The complete structure was apparently primarily for use on automobiles.

In 1915 the examiner required a division of the application (which had been amended by inserting claims that finally became claims 1 and 2 of the instant controversy) so as to divide the claims covering the lighting switch arrangement (including a dimming feature) from the other claims.

In 1917 claims were filed for the purpose of interferences with a copending application of another party.

The required divisional applications were held in abeyance while the interference proceedings were pending, but on November 10, 1919, a divisional application was filed including some subject matter not involved in .the interferences. This application eventually became the basis upon which the issue before us was formulated.

Final decision was not had in the interference proceedings until January 4, 1924. It was favorable to applicant herein, and, following it, the ex parte prosecution of the claims was proceeded with, ft was appellant’s insistence that one of his claims (No. 3 in the case now before us) stood allowed as a result of the decision in the interference case, but the examiner required the division, as theretofore had been suggested, and the inclusion of that claim in the divisional application.

The parent application was several times amended, and, as amended, was finally allowed on December 15, 1924. The patent as No. 1523426, seems to have been formally taken out on January 20, 1925, and it included only claims for the switch.

In the meantime, the divisional application of November 10, 1919, had been so amended and proceeded with as that, on July 18, 1924, patent was ordered covering only the claims to the lock per se. _

This latter patent did not issue, however, because the final fee was not paid within the time fixed by the statute.

[742]*742On January 21, 1925 (the day following the actual taking out of the patent granted on the parent application) the assignee of Kais-ling filed an application for the renewal of the patent allowed, but not taken out, under the divisional application.

In taking this action appellant proposed to proceed under section 4897, Revised Statutes which, at that time (1925) provided that within two 1 years from the allowance of a patent application, where there had been a failure to take the allowed patent out because of nonpayment of the final fee within six months from date of allowance, a person in interest might file application for renewal.

In this renewal application, however, appellant did not simply seek a renewal of the ordered, but unissued, patent on the lock fer se. On the contrary, it was proposed, by an amendment submitted with the renewal application, virtually to cancel the lock claims as they had been allowed and substitute therefor the claims that are here at issue as Nos. 1, 2, and 3, these being duplicates of claims that had, on November' 22, 1924, been canceled from the parent case (as claims therein Nos. 24, 25, and 34, the latter being the claim won by applicant in the interference proceeding). In other words, as stated by the examiner:

* * * the petition for renewal was presented, accompanied by an amendment directing the change of the statement of invention so as to cover the system, and directing the substitution for the loch claims of claims for the system. (Italics ours.)

So, in the final analysis, the primary .question presented is, whether applicant proceeding under section 4897, Revised Statutes, by a petition, purporting to be an application for renewal, may change the character of the proceedings so that he will virtually eliminate the patent as allowed, or secure it in connection with subject matter not claimed, or attempted to be claimed, in the application as allowed. In other words, is appellant’s application such a renewal application as is contemplated and provided for in the statute?

Both the examiner and the Board of Appeals held against appellant, and the question is before us on appeal from the decision of the latter.

At the time of filing the renewal petition (which included 13 claims), appellant accompanied it by a statement from which we quote:

The claims allowed in this application have been slightly amended and transferred to the parent application. They have been so changed as to make them switch structure claims. As to the claims submitted by this amendment, the first three of these claims are claims that have been transferred to this [743]*743application from the parent application to maintain a line of division. Tlie third claim is a claim from interference No. 41977, in which interference priority was awarded to applicant. As to the other claims submitted by this amendment these are believed to be all allowable to applicant in view of the award of priority in said interference No. 41977. \

The examiner held, in substance, that the petition could not be treated as a renewal application for the reason that it was not for the same invention, and the reasoning of the board was in line with that of the examiner.

It may be stated that there was agreement by the examiner and the board as to certain other phases of the controversy, but we regard the question of appellant’s rights under his renewal petition as being of first importance, and hence do not complicate the matter by bringing these additional issues forward here.

The material portion of section 4897 reads:

Seo. 4897. Any person wbo bas an interest in an invention or discovery, whether as inventor, discoverer, or assignee, for which a patent was ordered to issue upon the payment of the final fee, but who fails to make payment thereof within six months from the time at which it was passed and allowed, and notice thereof was sent to the applicant or his agent, shall have a right to make an application for a patent for such invention or discovery the same as in the case of an original application.

Appellant insists that under the wording an applicant is not confined, in a renewal application, to the claimed invention allowed in the forfeited patent but that, on the contrary, he may “ claim any invention or discovery the same as in the case of an original application,” and in the course of his brief refers the court to Ex parte Barrett, 1891 C. D. 154; Karl Kiefer Mech. Co.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F.2d 863, 18 C.C.P.A. 740, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kaisling-ccpa-1930.