In re Robertshaw

75 F.2d 203, 22 C.C.P.A. 939, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1935
DocketNo. 3561
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 F.2d 203 (In re Robertshaw) 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 Robertshaw, 75 F.2d 203, 22 C.C.P.A. 939, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 105 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Tbe immediate question bere involved grows out of a petition for remand of the above styled case to the Patent Office, as hereinafter set forth.

An application for patent by appellant, relating to improvement in valves, was finally rejected, for lack of invention over prior art cited, by tbe Primary Examiner of the United States Patent Office on July 24, 1933. Appeal was duly taken to the Board of Appeals and on June 21, 1934, the latter tribunal affirmed the action of the examiner.

Thereafter appeal was taken to this court and a certified transcript of the record was duly filed with the clerk of the court on September 21, 1934. On October 20, 1934, for satisfactory reasons, the court granted a motion of appellant for a sixty day -extension of time for [940]*940printing the record. Later, tbe court, of its own motion, entered an order giving an additional extension.

On November 12, 1934, a petition was filed on behalf of appellant, seeking a remand and return of the cause “ and the transcript of record filed herein ” to the United States Patent Office. At the end of this petition there was a “.joinder ” on the part of the Commissioner of Patents, the same being signed by the Solicitor for the Patent Office. We here quote the texts of the petition and “ joinder ”:

PETITION TO REMAND
To the Honorable, the Judges of said court:
Tour petitioner, GEORGE A. ROBERTSHAW, appellant in the above-entitled case, respectfully represents that:
1. The application for Letters Patent involved in this appeal was duly filed in the United States Patent Ofiice on September 17, 1926 and was thereafter duly prosecuted before the Primary Examiner in Division 39. After prosecuting this case before the Primary Examiner from September 17, 1926 until July 24, 1933, this application was finally rejected by the Primary Examiner on the latter date. Thereafter on January 20, 1934 an appeal was duly taken to the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Ofiice which, on June 21, 1934, denied applicant’s request for a patent and affirmed the action of the Primary Examiner. Thereafter this appeal to this Honorable Court was duly taken, which appeal is now pending before it and remains unheard by said Court.
2. On September 25, 1934, United States Letters Patent No. 1,974,975 were issued by the United States Patent Office to Louis Stein and Walter C. Peters on an application therefor filed September 30, 1932. This patent relates to exactly the same subject matter as the application involved in this appeal; both applicants were claiming exactly the same subject matter; and the applications were copending in the Patent Office. An interference should have been but was not declared by the Patent Office between these two applications during their pendency in the Patent Office.
3. Since the discovery by petitioner of this error on the part of the United States Patent Office, appropriate steps have been taken by the petitioner in order to obtain an adjudication of the quéstion of priority as between petitioner and the patentees of the aforesaid patent. On November ,7, 1934, the United States Patent Office in accordance with the statutes and rules in such cases made and provided, declared an interference between petitioner’s application Serial No. 136,039, the application involved in this appeal to this court, and said Stein et al. patent No. 1,974,975, said interference being identified as No. 69,678. A correct copy of the declaration of the aforesaid interference-is attached hereto and marked “ Exhibit A.”
' 4. It is essential that this cause and the transcript of record filed herein be remanded and returned to the United States Patent Office to the end that full and appropriate proceedings may be had in the United States Patent Office in accordance with the statutes and rules in such cases made and provided. As appears from paragraphs 2 and 3 of page 2 of “Exhibit A” attached hereto consideration de novo will be given this application including the claims now pending before this Court.
[941]*941Wherefor your petitioner prays that this cause and the transcript of record filed herein be remanded and returned to the United States Patent Office for further proceedings in accordance with the statutes and rules in such cases made and provided.
JOINDER
The Commissioner of Patents hereby joins in the foregoing petition to remand^and return this cause and the transcript of record therein to the United States Patent Office for further proceedings.

Affidavit in support of the petition was made by one of the attorneys for appellant.

It is noted from the transcript of record, filed in the appeal to this court, that appellant gave the notice of appeal to the Commissioner of Patents on August 7, 1934, and, in a brief in support of the petition to remand, the statement is made that the decision of the Board of Appeals sustaining the right of Stein and Peters to patent was rendered on that same day. The patent in fact issued under date of September 25, 1934, according to the petition. The petition does not state the date upon which notice of the patent was first brought to appellant’s attention, but it does allege that “ this patent relates to exactly the same subject matter ” as appellant’s application; that since the application of appellant and that of Stein and Peters were copending, an interference should have been declared, and that, following discovery of this situation, appellant took appropriate steps “ to obtain an adjudication of the question of priority ” between the parties.

The exact nature of the steps taken is not revealed by the record, but apparently the procedure comprised, at least in part, the copying of two claims from the patent into appellant’s application and requesting an interference. These were claims 1 and 2 of the patent and they became claims numbered 38 and 39, respectively, in appellant’s application. The interference so sought was declared, apparently on November 7, 1934.

As Exhibit A to the petition for remand, there was filed what purports to be a copy of the interference so declared. It sets forth two counts numbered 1 and 2, respectively, they being in the identical language of claims 1 and 2 of the patent.

These two counts, however, are not in the specific language of any of the claims involved in the appeal and no one of the appealed claims is embraced in the interference. It should be said that the appeal involves only three claims. These are numbered 33, 34 and 35, respectively. At one period during the prosecution of the case in the Patent Office two other claims numbered 36 and 37, respectively, apparently were presented, but these had been, in some way, eliminated prior to the final decision of the examiner.

[942]*942For the purposes of the question now before us, it will be assumed by us that the procedure above related was in conformity with the Patent Office practice and that, although the appeal to this court as to certain claims had been taken, the application of appellant still remained in the Patent Office in such position as that he was entitled to proceed as he did proceed.

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Bluebook (online)
75 F.2d 203, 22 C.C.P.A. 939, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-robertshaw-ccpa-1935.