In re Orita

550 F.2d 1277
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1977
DocketPatent Appeal No. 76-625
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 550 F.2d 1277 (In re Orita) 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 Orita, 550 F.2d 1277 (ccpa 1977).

Opinion

LANE, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent and Trademark Office Board of Appeals (board), adhered to on reconsideration, affirming the rejection of claims 5-8 in appellants’ application for reissue.1 We affirm.

Background

Appellants filed original application serial No. 598,590 on December 2, 1966 (application I). As filed, that application contained the following: (1) claims 1-4 to compounds and a method for their preparation, and (2) dependent claims 5-8 to a color-developable coating composition, an emulsion, and a coated sheet. The coating composition, emulsion, and coated sheet all recited, as an essential component thereof, a compound of generic claim 1. The examiner required restriction between these two sets of claims, pursuant to 35 USC 121.2 Appellants’ counsel, by telephone, elected the compound and compound-preparation claims and preserved the right to traverse the restriction requirement. However, the traverse was never perfected. During prosecution, three compound claims were allowed, and appellants were notified by examiner’s amendment that the non-elected claims to coating composition, emulsion, and coated sheet had been cancelled, as authorized by appellants’ counsel in a telephone conversation. The last paragraph of the examiner’s amendment, dated December 20, 1968, reads:

No traverse is noted in applicants’ response to the restriction requirement. Non-elected claims 5-8 have been canceled as authorized by applicants’ attorney [in a telephone conversation of December 12, 1968] * * *.

Upon payment of the final fee, application I matured into U.S. 3,442,908, issued on May 6, 1969.

Appellants filed serial No. 140,287 on May 4, 1971 (application II) for reissue of their patent, presenting therein the three compound claims of their patent and four additional claims substantially identical to the originally non-elected claims. In support of application II, appellants filed a [1279]*1279reissue declaration under 37 CFR 1.175,3 wherein they averred, inter alia:

Applicants verily believe that the original patent, through error without deceptive intention, is partially inoperative by reason of the patentee claiming less than he had a right to claim in the patent for the following reasons: * * *

By way of explanation why patentee is “claiming less than he had a right to claim in the patent,” appellants indicated that they had forgotten to timely file a divisional application covering the originally non-elected subject matter.4 Appellants further averred that their failure to file the divisional application was an error without any deceptive intention. The examiner rejected the claims in application II, and this application became abandoned for failure to respond.

However, appellants timely filed the present application (application III) as a division of reissue application II, application III containing only claims 5-8, which are substantially identical to the originally non-elected claims. The examiner rejected the claims in application III on the ground that appellants have not established the requisite error to justify granting a reissue patent, 35 USC 251, para. I.5 The Board affirmed, and the appeal to us followed.

The Board

The board held that, under the' circumstances of this case, failure to file a timely divisional application cannot be corrected by reissue. Reviewing the history of application I, the board found that the prosecution thereof was entirely error-free, and the resulting patent was likewise error-free. In the board’s view, the error in failing to file a timely divisional application in order to obtain a divisional patent is akin to an error in failing to file an application before a statutory bar arises. Appellants’ error, the board found, cannot be related back as an error correctable by reissue. Regarding the pre-1952 cases of In re Cornell, 150 F.2d 702, 32 CCPA 1251, 66 USPQ 320 (1945), and In re Smyser, 135 F.2d 747, 30 CCPA 1093, 57 USPQ 402 (1943), as pertinent, the board held that appellants have not established the requisite error to justify granting a reissue patent.

[1280]*1280 ISSUE

The issue before us is whether appellants have established the requisite error under 35 USC 251, para. 1, to justify granting a reissue patent containing claims substantially identical to those originally non-elected in application I.

OPINION

We are in substantial agreement with the board’s analysis of this case. Although appellants undoubtedly erred by failing to file a timely divisional application in order to obtain a divisional patent, it does not follow that such error caused the original patent to be “partially inoperative by reason of the patentee claiming less than he had a right to claim in the patent” as appellants aver in their reissue declaration under 37 CFR 1.175. We agree with the board that the prosecution of application I and the patent resulting therefrom were error-free. Pat-entees claimed exactly what they had a right to claim in the patent, no more nor less, and appellants’ failure to timely re-file does not change this fact. As the board stated, “Appellants’ error cannot be related back as an error correctable by reissue of the original patent under 35 U.S.C. 251.”

We further agree with the board that the pre-1952 Cornell and Smyser cases, cited supra, are pertinent. The basic facts in those two cases and the case at bar are the same. In the two older cases, we held that appellants therein were estopped from obtaining by reissue claims which, because of a requirement for restriction in which they had acquiesced, they could not claim in their patent. Having deliberately cancelled claims to non-elected subject matter, we said, appellants could not successfully contend that their failure to include such claims in their patent was due to “inadvertence, accident, or mistake” as provided in section 64 of former Title 35 (R.S. section 4916; Act of May 24, 1928, ch. 730, 45 Stat. 732).6

In the case at bar, as in Cornell and Smyser, appellants acquiesced in the examiner’s requirement for restriction.7 Such action manifestly was not “error” causing patentee to claim “less than he had a right to claim in the patent” in the language of current section 251. In this regard, we have previously concluded that the substitution of “error” in section 251 for “inadvertence, accident, or mistake” in former R.S. section 4916 did not involve a substantive change. In re Wadlinger, 496 F.2d 1200, 1207, 181 USPQ 826, 831 (Cust. & Pat.App. 1974); In re Byers, 230 F.2d 451, 43 CCPA 803, 109 USPQ 53 (1956). See also A. R.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Inre: Dinsmore
757 F.3d 1343 (Federal Circuit, 2014)
In Re Yamazaki
702 F.3d 1327 (Federal Circuit, 2012)
Landmark Screens, LLC v. Morgan, Lewis, & Bockius, LLP
676 F.3d 1354 (Federal Circuit, 2012)
MBO LABORATORIES, INC. v. Becton, Dickinson & Co.
602 F.3d 1306 (Federal Circuit, 2010)
In Re Arnold B. Serenkin
Federal Circuit, 2007
Medrad, Inc. v. Tyco Healthcare Group LP
391 F. Supp. 2d 374 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2005)
In Re Michael P. Doyle
293 F.3d 1355 (Federal Circuit, 2002)
In Re Sarah C. Watkinson
900 F.2d 230 (Federal Circuit, 1990)
In Re Elmar W. Weiler and Richard L. Mansell
790 F.2d 1576 (Federal Circuit, 1986)
Principle Business Enterprises, Inc. v. United States
7 Cl. Ct. 433 (Court of Claims, 1985)
In re Mead
581 F.2d 251 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
550 F.2d 1277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-orita-ccpa-1977.