In re Prutton

120 F.2d 332, 28 C.C.P.A. 1221, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 725, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1941
DocketNo. 4526
StatusPublished

This text of 120 F.2d 332 (In re Prutton) 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 Prutton, 120 F.2d 332, 28 C.C.P.A. 1221, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 725, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 92 (ccpa 1941).

Opinion

LeNROOt, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming a decision of the examiner rejecting all of the claims, seven in number, of appellants’ application for a patent.

Claim 1 is illustrative of the subject matter of the claims and reads as follows:

1. A lubricating composition including as a principal lubricating constituent the combination of both added sulphur in solution in active form and a separate halogenated petroleum fraction.

The references cited are:

Miller et ah, 2,156,265, May 2, 1939.
Prutton et al., 2,178,513, October 31, 1939.

For the purposes of this appeal the subject matter here involved is sufficiently described in the above-quoted claim.

It is conceded by appellants that the claims before us are substantially co-extensive with claims of the Miller et al. patent, application for which was filed on November 21,1933.

The patent to appellants, serial No. 2,118,513, was issued on an application filed December 4,1934, serial No. 155,988. This application disclosed but did not claim the subject matter of the claims before us.

[1223]*1223Appellants’ application here directly involved was filed on October 4,1939. It alleges that it is a continuation in part of application No. 755,988, and also of application No. 649,734, filed December 31, 1932, upon which a patent, No. 2,213,532, was issued on September 3, 1940. This last-named patent does-not disclose the invention here involved.

It appears that appellants had-been involved in an interference, No. 69,595, with applications of other parties, including the application of Miller et al. upon which the Miller et al. patent reference here involved was issued on May 2, 1939.

This interference was originally declared on October 18, 1934, between an application of Prutton, Smith and Harry E. Johnson (Prut-ton and Smith being the appellants here), serial No. 744,600, being a division or continuation of application of Prutton and Smith, No. 649,734, filed December 31, 1932, and two applications, one by Philip D. Carter and the other by Carl L. Johnson. Later this interference was reformed and redeclared, the Miller et al. application and two ■other applications being added thereto.

On March 25, 1935, this interference was again reformed by the substitution of the application of Prutton and Smith, serial No. 755,988, filed December 4,1934, for the joint application of Prutton, Smith and Johnson, No. 744,600, aforesaid.

On October 7, 1935, appellants moved to add to the interference their application serial No. 649,734, filed December 31, 1932, for the purpose of shifting the burden of proof and making appellants the senior party to the interference upon the sole count of the interference then involved.

Upon the same date appellants moved to add further counts to the interference.

On December 26, 1935, the Primary Examiner denied appellants’ motion to add further counts to the interference, and with respect to appellants’ motion to add to the interference their application No. 649,734, the examiner stated:

The party Prutton and Smith mores under Rule 109 to acid application Ser. No. 649,734 to the interference, and under Rule 122 to shift the burden of proof. This is understood to be intended as a motion to substitute.
The motion of Prutton is [to] substitute application Ser. No. 649,734, and to shift the burden of proof is granted.

Appellants appealed from the decision of the Primary Examiner denying their motion to add counts to the issue. The Board of Appeals on July 6, 1936, affirmed the decision of the examiner, and with respect to appellants’ motion to add their application No. 649,734, stated:

In so far as this interference is concerned, applicants wanted to add the earlier case in order to shift the burden of proof. The decision of the examiner effects this result by substituting the earlier case for the latter one in [1224]*1224this interference. In fact, this action puts the interference hack where it started, in September, 1934, where Prutton et al. relied on the parent case, Serial No. 649,734.
Hs sj« * * * H« ❖
The decision of the examiner referring the right of Prutton et al. to make proposed counts 1 to 3 to the earlier case, Serial No. 649,734, was correct, since the circumstances permitting a party to hare two applications in one interference do not exist here. * * *

On August 7, 1936, the Primary Examiner entered the following order reforming the interference:

Examiner oe Interference.
Sir: Interference No. 69,595, Prutton et al. v. Carter v. Johnson v. Smith v. Miller et al. v. Sullivan et al., is reformed by the substitution of the application of Carl E. Prutton and Albert K. Smith, Ser. No. 649,134, filed December 31, 1932, for Lubricating Composition, for the application Ser. No. 755,988 of Carl E. Prutton and Albert R. Smith, formerly involved in the interference. The attorney and assignee are the same, as well as the post office address.
The issue of the interference remains the same.
The relation of the count of the interference to the claims of Prutton and Smith is as follows:
Count. Prutton and Smith.
1 95

So far as the record shows, appellants never made any objection to this order before the tribunals of the Patent Office.

By reason of appellants’ application No. 649,734 being filed earlier than the applications of any of the other parties to the interference, appellants became the senior party.

Apparently two of the parties, Carter and Johnson, were eliminated from the interference upon an order to show cause why judgment on the record should not be entered against them.

The decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention upon the single count there in issue reads as follows:

The date set for final hearing in this case having passed, and Miller and Smith, and Sullivan and Shelley, the junior parties, having failed to file any printed copies of their testimony within the time allowed for that purpose, priority of invention of the subject matter in issue is hereby awarded to Carl E. Prutton and Albert K. Smith, the senior party.
Limit of appeal: July 6, 1937.

No appeal was taken from said decision and it became final.

The claims now before us were rejected by the examiner on the-patent to Miller et al. as prior art. The examiner further held that appellants were estopped to overcome as a reference the Miller et al. patent. In the statement of the examiner we find the following:

It is the Examiner’s position that Miller et al. are the first and only-inventors of the invention in question in so far as the record shows.

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120 F.2d 332, 28 C.C.P.A. 1221, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 725, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-prutton-ccpa-1941.