Philippe Bey and Michel Jung v. Janos Kollonitsch and Arthur A. Patchett

806 F.2d 1024, 231 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 967, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 20400
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 1986
Docket19-1565
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 806 F.2d 1024 (Philippe Bey and Michel Jung v. Janos Kollonitsch and Arthur A. Patchett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philippe Bey and Michel Jung v. Janos Kollonitsch and Arthur A. Patchett, 806 F.2d 1024, 231 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 967, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 20400 (Fed. Cir. 1986).

Opinion

EDWARD S. SMITH, Circuit Judge.

The final decision of the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (board), Interference No. 100,988, awarding priority of invention to Janos Kollonitsch and Arthur A. Patchett (Kollonitsch) over Philippe Bey and Michel Jung (Bey), is reversed.

Issue

The issue is whether the board erred in holding that Bey had not established diligence based on his attorney’s work on related applications during the 41-day critical period from before June 1, 1977, to July 11, 1977.

Background

A. Interference Proceedings

Kollonitsch’s patent application has the effective filing date of June 1,1977. Bey’s patent application has the effective filing date of July 11, 1977. The interference *1026 count is for certain irreversible enzyme inhibitors (for pharmaceutical use), including the monofluoromethyl derivatives of ornith-ine, lysine, and arginine. 1 Bey presented testimony 2 and exhibits in support of his claim to priority; Kollonitsch chose to rely solely on his filing date.

Bey made two arguments before the board. First, he argued that Kollonitsch was not entitled to make his claim correspond to the interference count because Kollonitsch’s application did not sufficiently disclose the utility of the invention under 35 U.S.C. §§ 101, 112. Second, Bey argued that he was entitled to priority because he had prior conception of the invention coupled with reasonable diligence in reducing it to practice. The board held against Bey on both issues, and Bey appealed both issues to this court. We hold that Bey was entitled to priority on the basis of prior conception coupled with diligence; thus, we need not reach the issue whether Kollonitsch’s application made a sufficient disclosure.

B. Bey’s Conception and Diligence

The board set forth the following standard for priority which Bey had to establish: 3

In order to prevail in this interference, Bey must establish by a preponderance of the evidence a conception of the invention defined by the count prior to June 1, 1977, the effective filing date of Kollon-itsch, coupled with diligence from just prior to that date up to July 11,1977, the filing date of his parent application. * *

The board found that Bey satisfied the first part of the test for priority because he established conception of the invention by at least March 10, 1977, prior to the effective filing date relied upon by Kollonitsch.

Bey claimed constructive reduction to practice, based on the filing of his patent application, on July 11, 1977. Thus, Bey had to show that he was reasonably diligent during the 41-day continuous critical period from May 31, 1977, a date just prior to the June 1, 1977, filing date of Kollon-itsch’s parent application, to July 11, 1977, the filing date of Bey’s parent application.

Bey’s case for diligence hinged on whether his patent attorney, Ruth Hattan (Hat-tan), had been reasonably diligent in preparing and filing the patent application during the 41-day critical period. During the critical period, Hattan worked on a group of 22 patent applications relating to irreversible enzyme inhibitors, including the parent to the present application. Bey argued to the board that Hattan’s work on the closely related applications contributed substantially to the preparation of the present application. Thus, Bey argued that work on the related applications should be considered in determining whether Bey was reasonably diligent in filing the present application. 4

The irreversible enzyme inhibitors were invented by a small group of researchers at Richardson-Merrell, Inc., in Strasbourg, France. Bey presented unrebutted evi *1027 dence that the irreversible enzyme inhibitors are interrelated in their chemistry, structure, and utility because they are similar derivatives of amino acids.

The supervisor of Richardson-Merrell’s patent law department in Cincinnati, Ohio, selected Ruth Hattan, an experienced pharmaceutical patent attorney, to prepare the resulting patent applications. The supervisor testified that he chose to have one attorney handle the applications because of the closely related technology, the small number of inventors, and the required travel to the Strasbourg, France, location.

Hattan went to Strasbourg in January 1976, to obtain the necessary disclosure from the inventors. She returned to the United States and she subsequently prepared 22 patent applications, listing only four inventors with considerable overlap of inventorship.

A status report dated May 31, 1977, at the beginning of the critical period, showed that the 22 applications were in various stages of completion with expected filing dates between June 15 and August 15, 1977. Bey presented evidence that Hattan worked on the applications from this group on almost every working date in the critical period. There was no evidence that priority was given to any applications docketed after the group of 22 applications. Hattan traveled to Strasbourg again on June 25, 1977, for a conference with the inventors. In Strasbourg, she completed 16 of the patent applications, including the parent to the present application, and she mailed them from Strasbourg directly to the PTO, resulting in the filing date of July 11,1977, for the present application.

In the present interference decision, the board found that Bey had failed to show diligence because Hattan had not documented sufficient specific activity on the present application, and Hattan could not show that the applications were taken up in chronological order. The board rejected Bey’s argument that work on the related applications should be considered as diligence with respect to the present application. The board found that Bey failed to show that the irreversible enzyme inhibitor applications were sufficiently related, notwithstanding the unrebutted, corroborated evidence of the relationships between the applications. Thus, the board found that Bey had not exercised reasonable diligence, holding that Bey could not rely on his attorney’s work on the other applications involving irreversible enzyme inhibitors.

The board noted that its decision was consistent with its decision in a previous interference between the same parties, where the board considered the same testimony and found that these applications were not sufficiently related. 5 Bey did not appeal from the previous interference decision, and we do not rule on that decision here. We note that neither the board nor the parties treated the previous decision on the “related case” issue as binding in the present case. Therefore, we must review the board’s present decision for errors of law or clearly erroneous findings of fact on the basis of the record now before us. 6

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Bluebook (online)
806 F.2d 1024, 231 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 967, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 20400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philippe-bey-and-michel-jung-v-janos-kollonitsch-and-arthur-a-patchett-cafc-1986.