William S. Credle, Jr. And Debra Boone Overman v. Curtis J. Bond

25 F.3d 1566, 30 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1911, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 13098, 1994 WL 235750
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 1994
Docket93-1447; (Interference 101,823)
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 25 F.3d 1566 (William S. Credle, Jr. And Debra Boone Overman v. Curtis J. Bond) 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
William S. Credle, Jr. And Debra Boone Overman v. Curtis J. Bond, 25 F.3d 1566, 30 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1911, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 13098, 1994 WL 235750 (Fed. Cir. 1994).

Opinion

CLEVENGER, Circuit Judge.

William S. Credle, Jr. and Debra Boone Overman (Boone) appeal from the reconsideration decision of the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (PTO) Board of Patent Appeals & Interferences (Board) awarding priority of invention of the subject matter defined by the interference count to Curtis J. Bond. 1 For the reasons set forth below, we reverse-in-part, affirm-in-part, and remand.

I

Boone filed patent application, Serial No. 542,322, entitled “Conduit Member for Collapsible Container,” on October 17, 1983. Bond, with Liqui-Box Corporation as his as-signee, filed patent application, Serial No. 594,761, entitled “Collapsed Bag With Evacuation Channel Form Unit,” on March 29, 1984. Finally, on May 18,1984, Credle et al. (Credle) filed patent application, Serial No. *1568 611,796, entitled “A Disposable Liquid Containing and Dispensing Package and Method for its Manufacture.” Credle’s ’796 application and Boone’s ’322 application are commonly assigned to the Coca-Cola Company. On May 16, 1986, after concluding that all of both Credle’s and Bond’s claims were allowable, the examiner suspended ex parte prosecution on both applications “due to a potential interference.”

In response to Credle’s subsequent request for clarification on the status of his application, the PTO required Credle to add a suggested allowable method claim thereto in order to facilitate the declaration of an interference. See 37 C.F.R. § 1.605(a). 2 Credle added the suggested claim to his application on February 12,1987. Interference No. 101,823 was then declared on August 10, 1987, 3 between the applications of three parties: Bond, Credle, and Scholle et al. 4 See § 1.610(a). Claim 26 of Credle’s application and claims 30-34 of Bond’s application correspond to the count. Bond was designated the senior party to the interference based on his filing date of March 29, 1984. See § 1.601(m). For reasons unstated on the record before this court, Boone was not independently declared a party to the interference based on her ’322 application. See § 1.602 (no interference shall be declared between commonly owned applications unless “good cause” is shown).

The subject matter of the interference count concerns collapsible bags that facilitate complete liquid evacuation therefrom through use of an elongated “form” or “dip strip” therein. More specifically, the sole count, taken verbatim by the examiner from claim 34 of Bond’s application, 5 covers a method of making such collapsible bags. It is reproduced below in part II.

On November 10, 1987, at the close of the three-month preliminary motions period set by the Examiner-in-Chief (ÉIC) pursuant to §§ 1.611(d), 1.636(a), Credle filed a preliminary statement, see §§ 1.621-1.623, which set forth, inter alia, two distinct, non-over-. lapping 6 sets of dates for the activities specified in § 1.623(a)(l)-(6). 7 One set of dates solely concerned Credle’s activities; the other set solely concerned Boone’s independent activities. Credle’s preliminary statement also contained the averment: “The invention of Count 1 ... was made by William S. Credle, Jr. and Debra C. Boone in this country [the United States]” (hereinafter “inven-torship statement”). Also on November 10, 1987, Credle filed a preliminary motion to correct inventorship of his application under §§ 1.48, 1.634(a), by adding Boone as a joint inventor. The EIC granted this motion on December 8, 1988.

Credle also filed several preliminary motions under § 1.633 seeking, inter alia, to benefit from the filing date of Boone’s application, § 1.633(f); to substitute an alternative proposed method count for the count on which the interference was declared, § 1.633(c); and to add a proposed article count to the interference, § 1.633(c). Credle also filed a preliminary motion under § 1.633(a) seeking a judgment that the Bond claims corresponding to the count were un-patentable under 35 U.S.C. §§ 102(e) & 103 (1988) over U.S. Patent No. 4,524,458, entitled “Moisture Responsive Stiffening Members for Flexible Containers,” to Pongrass et *1569 al. (Pongrass), 8 in part because Bond’s § 1.131 declaration attempting to antedate Pongrass as a prior art reference was unsupported by the evidence of record. On December 8, 1988, the EIC resolved all motions filed by the parties, specifically denying all of Credle’s enumerated motions. 9

On April 24, 1990, after both the EIC’s decision on the preliminary motions and the close of the period for taking testimony, Cre-dle filed a motion under § 1.634(a) to further correct inventorship, inter alia, of the Credle application by adding Mladomir Tomic, a Coca-Cola subsidiary employee with whom Boone conferred during development of the collapsible bag, as a joint inventor. Pursuant to § 1.628(a), which permits a party to correct a “material error ... in connection with ... a preliminary statement” if the correction is shown to be “essential to the ends of justice,” Credle also filed a motion for leave to file a corrected preliminary statement that included, in addition to the allegations in the original preliminary statement, a discrete set of dates for Tomic’s individual inventive activities, and the inventorship statement: “The invention of Count 1 ... was made by William S. Credle, Jr., Debra C. Boone and Mladomir Tomic in this country [the United States].” Tomic’s set of dates overlapped with those of the other alleged inventors only to the extent that Boone and Tomic were each alleged to have actually reduced the invention defined by the count to practice “on or after May 18, 1983 and before June 3, 1983.” Boone’s alleged § 1.623(a) dates otherwise predated those of Tomic. The EIC deferred these motions to final hearing before the Board.

The EIC’s dispositions of Credle’s motions, as well as the deferred motions, were at issue before the Board in the October 1,1991, final hearing. See § 1.654. The Board at that time also addressed the limiting effect of Credle’s original preliminary statement, the issue having been raised in Scholle’s main brief.

After considering Credle’s arguments, the Board on November 25, 1992, affirmed the EIC’s denial of Credle’s motion for benefit of the Boone ’322 application’s filing date, reasoning in part that “the Boone disclosure is insufficient to constitute a constructive reduction to practice of the count in issue,” as the count was construed by the Board.

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25 F.3d 1566, 30 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1911, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 13098, 1994 WL 235750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-s-credle-jr-and-debra-boone-overman-v-curtis-j-bond-cafc-1994.