Sydney Archer v. Maxwell Gordon and John J. Lafferty v. Kuhrt Freter and Karl Zeile, Maxwell Gordon and John J. Lafferty v. Sydney Archer v. Kuhrt Freter and Karl Zeile

427 F.2d 1402
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1970
Docket8117
StatusPublished

This text of 427 F.2d 1402 (Sydney Archer v. Maxwell Gordon and John J. Lafferty v. Kuhrt Freter and Karl Zeile, Maxwell Gordon and John J. Lafferty v. Sydney Archer v. Kuhrt Freter and Karl Zeile) 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
Sydney Archer v. Maxwell Gordon and John J. Lafferty v. Kuhrt Freter and Karl Zeile, Maxwell Gordon and John J. Lafferty v. Sydney Archer v. Kuhrt Freter and Karl Zeile, 427 F.2d 1402 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

427 F.2d 1402

Sydney ARCHER, Appellant,
v.
Maxwell GORDON and John J. Lafferty, Appellees,
v.
Kuhrt FRETER and Karl Zeile, Appellees.
Maxwell GORDON and John J. Lafferty, Appellants,
v.
Sydney ARCHER, Appellee,
v.
Kuhrt FRETER and Karl Zeile, Appellees.

Patent Appeal No. 8116.

Patent Appeal No. 8117.

United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.

July 9, 1970.

Rehearing Denied October 8, 1970.

Thomas F. Reddy, Jr., J. Phillip Anderegg, New York City, Pennie, Edmonds, Morton, Taylor & Adams, New York City, attorneys of record, for Archer. Laurence & Laurence, Washington, D. C., of counsel.

George J. Harding, 3rd, Philadelphia, Pa., for Gordon and Lafferty.

Nelson Littell, Jr., New York City, for Freter and Zeile.

Before RICH, ALMOND, BALDWIN and LANE, Judges, and FISHER, Chief Judge, Eastern District of Texas, sitting by designation.

RICH, Judge.

These combined appeals are from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences1 awarding priority to Freter and Zeile (hereinafter "Freter") in a three-party interference, No. 91,986, involving Freter application serial No. 62,099, filed October 12, 1960, entitled "Derivatives of 6, 7-Benzomorphan"; Gordon and Lafferty (hereinafter "Gordon") application serial No. 13,982 filed March 10, 1960, entitled "Novel N-Allyl and N-Propargyl Benzmorphan Derivatives"; and Archer application serial No. 72,844 filed December 1, 1960, entitled "Compounds and Preparation Thereof."2 The compounds of the counts

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINING TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINING TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE are N-allyl and N-propargyl 5, 9-dimethyl-6, 7-benzomorphan derivatives. Count 1 is directed to 2'-hydroxy compounds while count 2 is generic both to the 2'-hydroxy compounds and to 2'-methoxy compounds. The compounds of the counts are disclosed by each of the parties as being useful as antagonists3 of analgesics (narcotics).

Summary of the Case

The sole issue in this interference is priority of invention. Since the applications of all three parties are copending, the applicable burden of proof on the junior and intermediate parties is by a preponderance of the evidence.

Freter took no testimony, and relied on a German priority date (35 U.S.C. § 119) of October 16, 1959. It is not disputed that Freter was properly accorded the benefit of that date and therefore made senior party. Thus October 16, 1959,4 is the date which must be overcome by either Gordon or Archer to prevail over Freter.

Gordon and Archer each filed a main brief and a reply brief and each was represented at oral argument. Freter, however, has relied solely on the opinion and decision of the board.

The Case for Gordon

Gordon took extensive testimony and submitted numerous documentary exhibits in an attempt to prove (1) a reduction to practice of 2'-methoxy-5, 9-dimethyl-2-allyl-6, 7-benzomorphan prior to October 16 and (2) conception of 2'-hydroxy-5, 9-dimethyl-2-allyl-6, 7-benzomorphan prior to October 16 coupled by diligence with both actual and constructive reductions to practice after that date. The structures of these two compounds are represented by the formula in count 2, supra, when R is "allyl" and R' is "methyl" and "hydrogen," respectively.

The board held that a reduction to practice of the 2'-methoxy compound had not been established, and Gordon does not seek to have us review that holding. As for the 2'-hydroxy compound,5 the board held that Gordon's diligence towards its reduction to practice did not begin until October 22, after the critical date.

The record shows that probably as early as May of 1959, Gordon had conceived of the structure of the 2'-hydroxy compound, had conceived of its usefulness as an analgesic antagonist, and had conceived of two synthetic routes for producing it. These two routes, which involve the use of the same starting material, are represented by the following schematic, italicization indicating the moiety introduced by each process step:

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINING TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

At the time these two routes were proposed, success with the three-step process (first route) was thought to be more likely. Preparation of the 2'-methoxy-2allyl intermediate in this process was carried out on June 23. However, instead of using the compound as an intermediate to prepare the 2'-hydroxy-2-allyl compound, as originally intended, it was submitted for "biological testing." Additional quantities of the 2'-methoxy-2-allyl compound were produced on August 27 and September 22, and on a third date between September 22 and October 22. Eventually, all of these preparations were combined and a portion was used October 22 in the unsuccessful attempt to produce the 2'-hydroxy-2-allyl compound by "ether cleavage," according to the first route, supra. On that same day, October 22, the second proposed route ("direct allylation") was successfully practiced.

Gordon argues that the additional quantities of 2'-methoxy compound produced between June and October must have been produced so that they could be used to prepare the 2'-hydroxy compound, and argues that the time spent making these additional quantities should be counted as diligence towards a reduction to practice of the 2'-hydroxy compound.

We agree with the board's conclusion that Gordon's diligence towards reduction to practice of the 2'-hydroxy compound began no earlier than October 22. The record is silent as to why the additional amounts of the 2'-methoxy compound were prepared. The inference most reasonably to be drawn from the record is that the preparations were for the purpose of carrying out further pharmacological testing of the 2'-methoxy compound rather than for the purpose of using it as an intermediate. Such being the case, the activity in question cannot be considered diligence towards a reduction to practice of the 2'-hydroxy compound.

The Case for Archer

Archer asserts a conception of 2'-hydroxy-5, 9-dimethyl-2-allyl-6, 7-benzomorphan (the same 2'-hydroxy compound referred to above) on October 8 coupled by diligence with an actual reduction to practice after October 16.

Archer alleges that he first conceived of the 2'-hydroxy-2-allyl compound and its usefulness as an analgesic antagonist in January 1959. Although Gordon contests this, we will assume, arguendo, that Archer did have a complete conception of the compound at that time. There is no allegation that anything further was done with respect to that compound until October 8. There is testimony

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Related

Archer v. Gordon
427 F.2d 1402 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1970)

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427 F.2d 1402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sydney-archer-v-maxwell-gordon-and-john-j-lafferty-v-kuhrt-freter-and-ccpa-1970.