In Re Leonard Kaplan and Wellington Epler Walker

789 F.2d 1574, 229 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 678, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 21209
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1986
DocketAppeal 85-2522
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 789 F.2d 1574 (In Re Leonard Kaplan and Wellington Epler Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Leonard Kaplan and Wellington Epler Walker, 789 F.2d 1574, 229 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 678, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 21209 (Fed. Cir. 1986).

Opinion

RICH, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (board) rejecting, under 37 CFR 1.196(b), the single claim of appellants’ application serial No. 364,221, filed April 1, 1982, entitled “Homogeneous Liquid Phase Process for Making Alkane Polyols,” on the sole ground of “double patenting, because it constitutes an improper extension of monopoly for an invention claimed by Kaplan.” We reverse.

Background

The Kaplan and Walker application at bar and the cited Kaplan patent, No. 3,944,-588, issued Mar. 16, 1976, to one of the appellants on an application filed Jan. 2, 1975, are both assigned to Union Carbide Corporation, the real party in interest. As is apparent, the Kaplan patent application was pending only about fourteen and a half months. It was copending with the great-great-grandparent of the application at bar, filed Sept. 30, 1975. Its title is “Catalytic Process for Polyhydric Alcohols and Derivatives.” The Kaplan patent contains one independent claim and thirteen dependent *1575 claims. The claims most relevant here are those incorporated in dependent claim 4, which is the only claim specifically relied on by the board to support its double patenting rejection. They read as follows (emphasis ours):

1. The process of making alkane diols and triols having from 2 to 3 carbon atoms in the molecule which comprises reacting in a homogeneous liquid phase mixture of hydrogen and oxides of carbon in the presence of a rhodium carbonyl complex and a trialkanolamine borate at a pressure of from about 1000 psia to about 50,000 psia correlated with a temperature of about 100°C to about 375°C sufficient to produce said diols and triols.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein the temperature is from about 100°C to about 300°C.
4. The process of claim 2 wherein the reaction is effected in the presence of an organic solvent.

Among organic solvents disclosed and specifically claimed in the Kaplan patent are two known as “tetraglyme” (in more explicit nomenclature, dimethyl ether of tetraethylene glycol) and sulfolane. Two of the Kaplan dependent claims (10 and 11) individually name these specific solvents, respectively. No claim in Kaplan calls for a solvent mixture, which is significant with respect to the double patenting rejection for reasons which will appear. There are, however, a number of examples of mixed solvents in Table VI of the Kaplan patent specification, particularly Example 45, upon which the board relied. Example 45 is specific to a mixture of “Tetraglyme/sul-folane (65/10).” The heading of Table VI is “Triisopropanolamine Borate in Mixed Solvents.”

Against this much of the background, we now reproduce the single claim on appeal of this joint application of Kaplan and Walker which stands rejected for double patenting in view of claim 4 of the Kaplan patent (emphasis ours):

In the homogeneous liquid phase process of producing alkane polyols by the reaction of oxides of carbon and hydrogen in the presence of a rhodium catalyst in which rhodium is complexed with carbon monoxide to provide a rhodium carbonyl complex at a temperature between about 100°C. to about 375'“C. and a pressure between about 1000 psia to about 50,000 psia, the improvement which comprises effecting said reaction in a solvent mixture of tetraglyme and sul-folane under conditions whereby such solvent mixture is essentially inert and the rate of formation of such alkane polyol is greater than would be obtained by effecting said reaction under equal conditions using tetraglyme or sulfolane as the solvent.

It will be observed from a comparison of this claim with the Kaplan claims reproduced above that the Kaplan and Walker (joint) claim at bar is, generally speaking, defined as an improvement on the Kaplan (sole) catalytic process of producing alkane polyols (diols and triols) by reacting hydrogen and carbon oxides (e.g., carbon monoxide) in an organic solvent. The reason why the process using the solvent mixture of the appealed claim was not claimed in the Kaplan patent, although it is disclosed in the patent specification, is that Kaplan alone was not the inventor of that process; it was the joint invention of Kaplan and Walker and therefore the application on appeal was filed. The reason it was disclosed in Kaplan’s patent was that it was part of the “best mode” of practicing Kap-lan’s catalytic process. See 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph. (“The specification ... shall set forth the best mode contemplated by the inventor of carrying out his invention.”) By the time Kaplan filed his application he knew of (“contemplated”) the Kaplan and Walker improvement on his own sole invention and therefore he disclosed it. It is a given, of course, that a sole inventor and joint inventors including the sole inventor are separate “legal entities,” a legal proposition from which certain legal consequences flow, In re Land and Rogers, 368 F.2d 866, 879, 151 USPQ 621, 633 (CCPA 1966), 1 “such as who must *1576 apply for patent.” It is worth remembering an axiomatic statement on the same page of the Land and Rogers case, which is also applicable here:

When the joint and sole inventions are related, as they are here, inventor A commonly discloses the invention of A & B in the course of describing his sole invention and when he so describes the invention of A & B he is not disclosing “prior art” to the A & B invention, even if he has legal status as “another.” [the reference to “another” is to that word as used in 35 USC 102(e) and (g).]

Having been filed during the pendency of the Kaplan application, the present Kaplan and Walker application with its single mixture claim had a difficult time in the PTO resulting in the passage of much time. To summarize, there were two appeals to the board prior to the appeal which resulted in the decision now before us. Three continuation applications were filed under 37 CFR 1.60. The last of these, filed Jan. 9, 1981, is the present application and was appealed to the board from the examiner’s rejections under §§ 102(g), 102(a), and 103 based on the Kaplan patent and a patent to Pruett. Declarations under 37 CFR 1.131 were filed by appellants and by Kaplan explaining who invented what and when.

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Bluebook (online)
789 F.2d 1574, 229 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 678, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 21209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-leonard-kaplan-and-wellington-epler-walker-cafc-1986.