In re Prater

415 F.2d 1378, 56 C.C.P.A. 1376, 160 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1969 CCPA LEXIS 417
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1969
DocketNo. 7987
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 415 F.2d 1378 (In re Prater) 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 Prater, 415 F.2d 1378, 56 C.C.P.A. 1376, 160 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1969 CCPA LEXIS 417 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

Eicii, Judge,

dissenting from the grant of the petition, with whom Almond, Judge, joins:

The Petition for Rehearing, filed by the Patent Office, should be denied. None of the reasons advanced for granting shows compliance with our rule on rehearings. In effect, as hereinafter explained, our four-to-nothing opinion is the result of a careful ^consideration of an earlier opinion, which is equivalent to a rehearing.

Rehearing at this time can serve only to foster uncertainty in the law, to encourage the Patent Office in its policy of refusing to follow [1377]*1377what this reviewing court has now declared the law to be and to have been, at least since 1952, and to prolong the controversy about what the law is.

A major function of courts, be they right or wrong, is to settle disputes about the law one way or the other. Of course, even after decision, the debate may continue and there will always be those who disagree with the conclusion the court has reached; but it is not proper for a court, on a relatively simple question of statutory interpretation like this one, to further the debate by vacillation once it has rendered its decision without a single dissent.

i. The Buie

The only reason justifying the grant of rehearing is that the court has overlooked or misapprehended something. Our Rule 7, entitled “REHEARINGS,” which here controls, reads in pertinent part:

Tie petition in each case shall be confined to a brief statement of points supposed to have been overlooked or misapprehended by the court, with proper references to the particular portion of the transcript of the record or original briefs relied upon, and with authorities and suggestions, concisely stated, in support of the points.

The Patent Office has not filed such a petition. Its petition, which is most disrespectful in tone, charges us generally with ignoring1 and overlooking “important issues” and “prior adjudications of this court and others, including the Supreme Court.”2 More particularly, we are charged with “Completely disregard[ing]” the holdings in certain of our own prior cases. In the guise of demanding by way of a rehearing, “the right to know why these pronouncements are ignored,”3 the solicitor is merely asking for further explanation of why we have refused to adopt his desired interpretation of some of our own utterances. The simple answer is that we did not agree with his desired interpretation. The reasons were fully developed in our opinion.

In the event the solicitor is unable to reconcile what we have said in this case with what the court has said in some older cases, the time has come to repeat once more the words of Judge Smith, as [1378]*1378quoted by Judge Almond in In re Riden, 50 CCPA 1411, 1415, 318 F.2d 761, 138 USPQ 112:

We * * * caution again against the tendency “to freeze into rules of general application what, at best, are statements applicable to particular fact situations.” [Citing Judge Smith’s opinion in In re Mills, 47 CCPA 1185 1190, 281 F. 2d 218, 126 USPQ 513.]

This has been stated many times by many judges in many different ways as a fundamental of American jurisprudence but zealous advocates have to be constantly reminded of the truism that opinions are written to explain the decisions in particlular cases and must be construed in that light. The reasoning on one fact situation is not applicable to utterly different facts; much less are the particular statements applicable.

The solicitor’s next point is that we failed to realize that the appealed claims “are not commensurate with the designated holding or principle set by the majority.”4 Since the opinion itself contains a detailed consideration of the claims, the implication here is that we lack the capacity to construe patent claims. This is a matter frequently involved in patent appeals and one on which we do not always see eye-to-eye with the Patent Office.

Finally, the solicitor makes an argument to the effect that we have authorized the granting of a patent which would “confer upon a patentee the right to exclude others from thinking in a certain manner.” This, we are told, would make the patent statutes, as we have construed them, unconstitutional as in violation of the First Amendment.5 This is an entirely new proposition, never suggested before in this case, and is thus entirely improper on a petition for rehearing. Moreover, as counsel for Prater point out, in furthering this argument the Patent Office has deliberately misquoted from Prater’s brief by the omission of a qualifying introduction to a sentence, turning it into an alleged admission of something Prater did not admit with respect to the scope of a claim. We did not sanction [1379]*1379claims which, would preclude people from thinking, Prater did not ask for such claims, and surely no court would ever place such a construction on the claims which were before us. Their construction by the Patent Office is therefore an improper construction. Prater’s statement, in objecting to the petition, is that “There is no such thing as mental infringement” and that “thought is still unpatentable.” This is unquestionably true.

So much for the nature of the petition and why it fails, under our Pule, to point out any ground on which we can properly grant the petition.

n. The Oase Has Already Been Reconsidered

The second point is that this case has already been as thoroughly considered as a case can be, including full-scale reconsideration and revision of an earlier “majority” opinion of Judge Smith.

In fairness to other litigants in this court, with its growing backlog, no more judicial man-hours should be expended on this case, especially when we are short a judge by reason of Judge Smith’s death and when we have already cut back by five cases a month the cases planned to be heard in the two months of December and January on account of it.

In a statement which he appended to Judge Smith’s opinion, the Chief Judge has already made known that this case was argued eight months ago, on May 9, 1968, and that Judge Smith wrote an earlier opinion which he revised and rewrote, the final version having been adopted by a majority on November 8, 1968.

After court convened for the October hearings and while they were in progress, Judge Smith initiated, about October 10, steps to obtain the views of all members of the court, and the supporting legal staff, as to how his earlier opinion, done on July 5,1968, might be improved and revised so as to meet with general approval. Views having been collected from various sources, a concentrated effort was put into a revision over the course of about two weeks preceding November 8, when it was completed except for the inevitable minor corrections. It was in final form and sent to the reproduction department for final run on November 15 and was therefore a decided case in condition to be handed down, awaiting only decision by the other two out of the five judges6 as to the position they wished to take when Judge Smith quite unexpectedly died.

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Bluebook (online)
415 F.2d 1378, 56 C.C.P.A. 1376, 160 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1969 CCPA LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-prater-ccpa-1969.