Richard C. Loshbough v. Kenneth C. Allen

373 F.2d 747, 54 C.C.P.A. 1113
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7898, 8068
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 373 F.2d 747 (Richard C. Loshbough v. Kenneth C. Allen) 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
Richard C. Loshbough v. Kenneth C. Allen, 373 F.2d 747, 54 C.C.P.A. 1113 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

We are here faced with a continuation of a complex legal dispute not involving the merits of appeal No. 7898 which we had hoped would have been greatly simplified by our per curiam decision of May 12, 1966, Loshbough v. Allen, 359 F.2d 910, 53 CCPA 1214. Unfortunately, simplification has not resulted. Instead, a determination of the merits Of this appeal appears to be no closer than at the time of the board’s first decision some sixteen months previous. Dúring this period this dispute between the parties has expended the time and .effort of this court once, the Board of Interferences twice, and the Assistant Commissioner of Patents twice. Resolution of this dispute is nowhere in sight and it now appears of such proportion as to foreclose á determination of the merits. For the reasons that follow, we think it is time to cut the Gordian knot.

Appellant presents us at this time with a motion to summarily reverse the decision of the board and remand this case to the board for further proceedings. This motion in the continuing legal dispute stems from the fact that junior party appellee requested the board after its original decision “to ‘cancel’ from the interference the 5 counts on which priority was awarded to him and to substitute a new count.” Loshbough v. Allen, supra.

Subsequent actions by the board and the Assistant Commissioner concerning this motion are explained in detail in our previous decision in which we remanded this appeal to the board “to take whatever further action it may deem advisable.”

The events which have transpired since our remand may be briefly summarized. The board on August 8, 1966 denied appellee’s motion to amend the interference, 1 that is, it refused to consider the merits of the motion. Appellee then filed a “Petition to the Commissioner or for Reconsideration by the Board of Interference Examiners,” in which he requested “action on Allen's Motion to Amend by the Commissioner or by the Primary Examiner.” Allen’s request was thereafter joined in by appellant. The Assistant Commissioner denied the petition, 2 that is, no consideration was given to the merits of Allen’s motion. Appellant then filed a second appeal to this court assigning as error the board’s refusal to direct the attention of the Commissioner to Swedish Patent No. 173,332, which patent may amount to a bar to the grant of *749 a patent to either of the parties for the claims in interference.

In support of his motion here, appellant repeats arguments advanced earlier in his motion to remand and points out:

* * * Since the remand the Patent Office has again refused to act upon the winning junior party’s statement that the counts on appeal are unpatentable, therefore the case still cannot be disposed of by this court at this time; if the counts are in fact unpatentable the board’s decision should not stand; and whether unpatentability exists and whether another count should be substituted are still questions for the Patent Office to decide prior to review here. Thus, in its present posture, this court would still be required to decide an involved and complex question of priority which may have become moot.
* * *
The time of this court to study a 1600 page transcript accompanied by hundreds of highly technical exhibits, to consider briefs and arguments and to prepare an opinion, must be balanced against the time it will take the primary examiner to consider the simple issue of the patentability of all of the present counts and the propriety of Allen’s proposed new count.

Appellant summarizes the reasoning underlying the position of the Patent Office as follows:

The persistent refusal of the Patent Office to consider Allen’s motion has been based on a narrow and rigid interpretation of its own rules. The motion has been denied (a) because the motion was filed after the decision of the board on priority, (b) because it failed to state how or when Allen discovered the Swedish patent, * (c) because the motion was not directed for action by the Commissioner or the primary examiner under his delegated authority, (d) because the board lacked authority to consider the question of patentability under the rules of practice, (e) because the Patent Office, once having been put to the burden of time and expense of deciding an issue should not be required to assume the burden of considering changes in the issue and (f) because the interference might be prolonged.
All of the above reasons ignore the substantive injustice done to the parties.
In connection with Allen’s motion, had the Patent Office interpreted its Rules in the spirit in which they are intended and had the Commissioner exercised the broad authority given him by Rules 182 and 183, ** it would not have been improper to suspend the interference and to refer the matter to the primary examiner for his determination of the question of patentability in accordance with Rule 237. Neither would it have been improper for the board under the provisions of Rule 259 to direct the attention of the Commissioner to the question of patentability which had been brought to their attention. In such event, the Commissioner could have suspended the interference and remanded the case to the primary examiner.

Concerning the alleged prejudice to appellant’s rights should this appeal pro *750 ceed without a consideration of the merits of the Allen motion, appellant argues:

As to appellee’s proposed new count, appellant has never had an opportunity to be heard with respect to the same, no testimony has been taken specifically directed to it and the question of priority of invention with respect to the subject matter thereof has never been determined. However, if this appeal is continued and priority determined on the present record, the losing party (either Loshbough or Allen) will thereafter be precluded under Patent Office Rules from contesting in the Patent Office the issue of priority or patentability with respect to the proposed substitute count. The claim could be added to the application of the winning party on resumed ex parte prosecution. The losing party will not have had his day in court with respect thereto or with respect to the invention defined thereby. If Allen were found to be the prior inventor with respect to the present counts (which he concedes are unpatentable), it does not follow that he would be entitled to such an award with respect to the different invention defined by his proposed new count. This can be determined only through inter partes consideration of the matter.

Appellee, in answering appellant’s motion, agrees to a second remand but not to a reversal of the board’s decision, arguing:

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Related

Cleary v. Brown
8 Vet. App. 305 (Veterans Claims, 1995)
Tofe v. Winchell
645 F.2d 58 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1981)
Hester v. Allgeier
646 F.2d 513 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1981)
Richard C. Loshbough v. Kenneth C. Allen
404 F.2d 1400 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 F.2d 747, 54 C.C.P.A. 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-c-loshbough-v-kenneth-c-allen-ccpa-1967.