Josef Fried, David Perlman, Richard W. Thoma, and Elwood O. Titus v. Herbert C. Murray, and Durey H. Peterson

268 F.2d 223, 46 C.C.P.A. 914
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1959
Docket6398
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 268 F.2d 223 (Josef Fried, David Perlman, Richard W. Thoma, and Elwood O. Titus v. Herbert C. Murray, and Durey H. Peterson) 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
Josef Fried, David Perlman, Richard W. Thoma, and Elwood O. Titus v. Herbert C. Murray, and Durey H. Peterson, 268 F.2d 223, 46 C.C.P.A. 914 (ccpa 1959).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences of the United States Patent Office, awarding priority to the junior party, Murray et al., for an invention relating to a process for introducing oxygen into a steroid nucleus. Appellants, Fried et al., are involved in this interference on their application S.N. 296,256 filed June 28, 1952, and appellees, Murray et al., are involved on their Patent No. 2,649,402 issued August 18, 1953, on an application filed August 23, 1952.

Murray et al. offered no evidence but instead rely upon the disclosure of their prior filed application S.N. 272,944, filed February 23, 1952 (issued as Patent No. 2,602,769), to support the contested counts of interference. Since the record herein shows that Patent No. —769 (2,602,769) wae issued on July 8, 1952, and that the application on which Patent No. 2,649,402 was granted was not filed until August 23, 1952, we remanded the cause to the Board of Patent Interferences for clarification of its basis for finding copendency. The board thereupon rendered a Supplemental Decision, finding continuity of disclosure of the subject matter of the contested counts on the basis of the disclosure of a bridging application, S.N. 297,242 filed July 5, 1952 (now Patent No. 2,735,800), which bridging application was held to contain “ * * * the same two pertinent paragraphs which appear in Patent No. —769 * * and which paragraphs are here relied upon to support the counts in issue. Appellant has not contended that there is any material distinction, insofar as the disclosure of the invention in issue is concerned, between the bridging application and application S.N. 272,944, and since the bridging application has not been made a part of the record before us, we must accept the board’s statements pertaining thereto. Cf. Ericson v. Shaff, 104 F.2d 626, 26 CCPA 1350, 1355.

Of the twenty-two counts of interference, the following are deemed illustrative:

*224 “1. A process for the introduction of oxygen into a steroid which comprises: growing an Aspergillus under aerobic conditions in the presence of a fermentation medium containing assimilable non-steroidal carbon and a steroid having an eleven methylene group and recovering the resulting oxygenated steroid.
“18. A process which comprises: dispersing a steroid substrate, consisting essentially of a 3-keto steroid, in an aqueous fermentation medium and aerobically subjecting such dispersed 3-keto steroid to the action of viable Aspergillus niger.
“20. A process of oxygenating a steroid which comprises: growing an Aspergillus under aerobic submerged conditions in a fermentation medium containing assimilable nitrogen, phosphate, carbohydrate, and a steroid substrate, consisting essentially of a steroid having an eleven methylene group, and recovering the resulting oxygenated steroid.”

Murray et al. rely upon the following paragraph, found in Patent No. —769, to support the contested counts:

“Other microorganisms which have been found useful in the oxygenation of steroids, including eleven desoxy steroids, although not necessarily producing the same result as the fungi of the murcorales order, include various strains of Penicil-lium, e. g., P-100, Aspergilli, e. g., Aspergillus niger, * * [Emphasis ours.]

In addition, it is contended that the necessary modes of fermentation of As-pergilli, as well as of various genera in the order Mucorales, are disclosed in Kane et al. Patent No. 2,327,191, incorporated by reference in Murray et al. Patent No. —769 by the following provision :

“ * * * The addition of steroid in the concentration and at the times as mentioned above, to the media and under the conditions utilized for the production of fumwric acid, as in * * * Kane et al. 2,327,191 * * * achieves the production of oxygenated steroids * * [Emphasis ours.]

The board held that the above “ * * * two pertinent paragraphs * * * were sufficient, either alone or in' view of the teachings of the Kane et al. patent, to support the process of the instant counts in its suggestion of oxygenating eleven desoxy steroids by means of fungi of the genus Aspergillus, and more particularly with the species Aspergillus niger.

Appellant contends that the first quoted statement from the Murray et al. patent is ambiguous and speculative, in view of the provisions contained therein that the other microorganisms there mentioned, including the Aspergilli, “have been found useful * * * although not necessarily producing the same result as the fungi of the Mucorales order * * It is further urged that such disclosure fails to teach which Aspergilli will function to introduce oxygen into the eleven position of the eleven desoxy steroid molecules recited.

Additionally, appellant claims that the teachings of the associated Kane et al. patent, relied on by the board to show the necessary conditions for fermentation of Aspergilli, are of no assistance to the party Murray et al. since they fail to suggest any particular species of As-pergillus which would function to facilitate steroid oxygenation. Rather, it is argued that the Kane patent shows only the production of fumaric acid by a fermentation process employing selected species of Aspergillus, and, therefore, the associated teachings of that patent, serve only “to compound prophecy by speculation.”

The sole issue for determination is whether or not Murray et al. Patent No. —769 (application S.N. 272,944) adequately supports the counts in issue so as to constitute a constructive-reduction to practice of the invention defined therein. In other words, is there sufficient disclosure in this patent, together with what was previously known, to teach one skilled in the art to oxygenate a steroid by growing an Aspergillus under aerobic *225 conditions in the presence of the steroid and an appropriate fermentation medium, without necessitating extensive experimentation. Farrington v. Mikeska, 155 F.2d 412, 33 CCPA 1073. We answer this question in the affirmative.

There is no doubt that Patent No. —769 teaches the oxygenation of steroids by means of the fermentation of fungi of the Mucorales order; the substitution of the genus Aspergillus in lieu of the Mucorales in accordance with the suggestion of the first above quoted paragraph discloses the basic and most significant element included in all the counts in this interference. Although it is true Patent No. - — 769 does not teach the modes of growing the Aspergilli under aerobic fermentation conditions, appellant agrees generally that this procedure is old and well known. Furthermore, the Kane et al. patent adequately teaches the conditions of growing Aspergilli and, since the Murray et al. Patent No. —769 incorporates the Kane et al. patent as an integral part of the process in the production of oxygenated steroids, any one skilled in this art, with the knowledge of these teachings, could produce the results contemplated by these counts.

Appellant’s contention that the Kane et al.

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Bluebook (online)
268 F.2d 223, 46 C.C.P.A. 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/josef-fried-david-perlman-richard-w-thoma-and-elwood-o-titus-v-ccpa-1959.