In re Schaumann

572 F.2d 312, 197 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 5, 1978 CCPA LEXIS 317
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1978
DocketAppeal No. 77-598
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 572 F.2d 312 (In re Schaumann) 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 Schaumann, 572 F.2d 312, 197 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 5, 1978 CCPA LEXIS 317 (ccpa 1978).

Opinion

ALMOND, Senior Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) Board of Appeals (board), one member dissenting, affirming the rejection of claims 2-4 of appellants’ application serial No. 336,567, filed April 17, 1975, for “l-(3-Hydroxyphenyl)-2-Aminopropane Compounds and Chemotherapeutic Compositions.” We affirm.

The Invention

The claims on appeal are drawn to a single chemical compound, and certain pharmacologically compatible salts thereof, disclosed as being effective in increasing peripheral blood pressure in mammals without causing a significant pressure increase in pulmonary circulation or bradycardia.1

Claim 2 reads:

Compound * * * designated DL-1-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-2-ethylaminopropane.2

Claims 3 and 4 are directed, respectively, to the hydrobromide and hydrochloride salt of DL-l-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-2-ethylaminopropane (HEP). The compound itself has the following structural formula:

[[Image here]]

The sole reference relied upon by the examiner and the board as evidence of the unpatentability of appellant’s claims is patent No. 2,344,356, issued to G. Hildebrandt on March 14, 1944. Hildebrandt discloses a class of ß-(meta-hydroxyphenyl)-isopropylamines3 of the general formula:

[[Image here]]

wherein “R designates hydrogen, an alkyl radical, for example methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, butyl, isobutyl, isoamyl, etc. or a cycloalkyl radical, for example cyclohexyl, ortho-, meta- or para-methylcyclohexyl, tet-rahydronaphthyl, decahydronaphthyl etc.”

With respect to utility, Hildebrandt’s specification states that ß -(meta-hydroxyphenyl)-isopropylamines in general possess “favorable therapeutic properties” similar to ß -(parahydroxyphenyl)-isopropylemethylamine,4 which is described as physiologically active, exerting effects similar to those of ephedrine.”5

The only compound falling within the above general formula that is exemplified by Hildebrandt is ß-(meta-hydroxyphenyl)isopropylmethylamine, which happens to be the lower adjacent homologue of HEP. Hildebrandt’s specification teaches how to make ß -(meta-hydroxyphenyl)-isopropylmethylamine as the free base, or as the hydrochloride salt thereof, and it also states that other ß -(meta-hydr oxyphenyl)-isopropylamines may be made by the same method. [314]*314Claim 1 of the Hildebrandt patent reads:

The chemical compounds ß-(meta-hydroxyphenyl)-isopropylamines of the formula

[[Image here]]

wherein R is a lower alkyl radical.

We note in passing that appellants’ application mentions the Hildebrandt patent in a discussion of the prior art, and points out that 8

Our investigations of [prior art compounds, including the lower adjacent homologue of HEP] have shown that, in addition to the desired increase of the blood pressure in the peripheral circulation, a considerable increase of the blood pressure in the pulmonary circulation also occurs as a clinically uncontrollable side effect or, at the same time, causes brady-cardia.

According to appellants, such undesirable side effects are negligible when HEP is administered.

Proceedings Below

Claims 2, 3, and 4 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b), the examiner’s contention being that Hildebrandt’s description of a limited class of compounds encompassing HEP is sufficient under the statute to “fully anticipate the claims in the instant [application] under the doctrine set forth in In re Petering, [49 CCPA 993, 301 F.2d 676,] 133 USPQ 275 [1962].”

In response to appellants’ primary argument that the general formula of Hilde-brandt’s specification cannot constitute an anticipation of every one of the one hundred and five or more compounds encompassed thereby, the examiner noted that the method disclosed by Hildebrandt for producing (3 -(meta-hydroxyphenyl)-isopropyla-mines would result only in the production of secondary amines,6 thus limiting to fourteen the number of possible compounds taught by the reference. That number is further reduced to seven, said the examiner, if one considers the preference for lower alkyl secondary amines expressed in claim 1 of the reference.

With respect to the affidavit of appellant Roesch, submitted under 37 CFR 1.132 to substantiate the alleged superiority (i. e., greater effectiveness in increasing peripheral blood pressure without aforementioned side effects) of HEP as compared with the lower homologue of Hildebrandt, the examiner stated that “a showing over the adjacent homolog is not sufficient to overcome the teachings of the prior art * * *."

A majority of the board affirmed the 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) rejection, noting that the structural formula of Hildebrandt’s claim 1 contains but a single variable, R, defined as “a lower alkyl radical,” and that the expression “alkyl radical,” as set forth in the specification, includes, inter alia, ethyl.

The dissenting board member, however, voiced the following opinion:

It is axiomatic to me that for a rejection to properly lie under 35 USC 102 a disclosure which identically describes the claimed invention must exist. Such is clearly now the view of the CCPA, as noted [in ?] In re Arkley et a1, 59 CCPA 804, 455 F.2d 586, 172 USPQ 524 [1972] * * *. By having to select an ethyl radical from among the many possibilities which R in the structural formula given by Hildebrandt may be, in my view, does not give rise to the claimed compound being fully anticipated by the reference. The question is, as is emphasized by the Court [sic] even in the earlier case of In re Ruschig et al, 54 CCPA 1551, 379 F.2d 990, 154 USPQ 118 [1967], is the claimed compound described in the reference, that is does its specification convey clearly to one skilled in the art the information that [315]*315patentee invented that specific compound. * * *
If the view of the majority were to prevail it must be said that patentee also invented l-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-2-propy-laminopropane * * *, as well as l-(3hydroxyphenyl)-2-isoamylamine [sic] and could have claimed these specific compounds. Such a conclusion, on its face, must manifestly be held as being contrary to existing law. [Emphasis in original.]

OPINION

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Bluebook (online)
572 F.2d 312, 197 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 5, 1978 CCPA LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schaumann-ccpa-1978.