Application of Carreira

Decision Date15 April 1976
Docket NumberPatent Appeal No. 76-525.
Citation532 F.2d 1356
PartiesApplication of Leonard M. CARREIRA et al.
CourtU.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA)

Gaetano D. Maccarone, Rochester, N. Y., attorney of record, for appellants.

Joseph F. Nakamura, Washington, D. C., for the Commissioner of Patents, Jack E. Armore, Washington, D. C., of counsel.

Before MARKEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, LANE and MILLER, Judges, and ALMOND, Senior Judge.

LANE, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent and Trademark Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner's rejection of claims 1-10, all of the claims in application serial No. 126,219, filed March 19, 1971, for an "Imaging Process." We affirm.

Background

The subject matter of the claims is a method of photoelectrophoretic imaging, i. e., a method of preparing a visible image in which electrically photosensitive pigment particles are suspended in a non-conductive liquid carrier. The suspension is exposed to an image and, at the same time, subjected to an electrical potential between two electrodes. Selective migration of the electrically photosensitive pigment particles takes place, producing a visible image at one or both electrodes.

Appellants have found a class of azo compounds, compounds containing the (-N = N-) linkage, which are useful as electrically photosensitive pigment particles in a photoelectrophoretic imaging process. These azo compounds have a hydroxyl group (-OH) in a position adjacent to the site of the azo linkage. The claims vary in scope with respect to the azo compounds included. Claim 1 is representative:

1. The method of photoelectrophoretic imaging comprising subjecting a layer of a suspension to an electric field and exposing said suspension to an image of activating electro-magnetic radiation until an image is formed, said suspension comprising a plurality of finely divided electrically photosensitive particles of at least one color in an insulating liquid, said particles of one color comprising a photosensitive pigment having the formula:
X-N = N-Y
wherein:
(A) X and Y are each selected from the group consisting of:
(1) an aromatic group,
(2) a heterocyclic group,
(3) a substituted aromatic group,
(4) a substituted heterocyclic group,
(5) a polynuclear group, and
(6) a substituted polynuclear group, and salts and mixtures thereof; and wherein:
(B) at least one of X and Y has an -OH substitutent sic in a position adjacent in respect to the site of the azo linkage, the corresponding hydrazone and tautomeric mixtures thereof.
The Rejections

The patents relied upon by the board are:

                   Tulagin and Carreira   3,384,565   May 21, 1968
                   Clark                  3,384,566   May 21, 1968
                

Both patents disclose photoelectrophoretic imaging processes. Both patents disclose (but do not claim) the use of certain specific azo compounds having a hydroxyl group in a position adjacent to the position of the azo linkage as pigment particles in a photoelectrophoretic imaging process. Appellants admit that the patents disclose species of compounds meeting the limitations of appellants' claims in a process which also meets the limitations of appellants' claims. The examiner rejected all of the claims under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) and 35 U.S.C. § 103 in view of the Tulagin et al. or Clark patents.

Appellants submitted parallel declarations under 37 CFR 1.132 by Tulagin and Clark in which each declarant simply stated that he was "not the inventor of the use of compounds having a hydroxyl group in a position ortho to an azo linkage" in a photoelectrophoretic imaging system.

It is appellants' position that these declarations are sufficient to establish that the portions of the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents relied upon by the examiner are appellants' own invention and are not available as references under either 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) or 35 U.S.C. § 103. Appellants rely upon the opinions of this court in In re Mathews, 408 F.2d 1393, 56 CCPA 1033 (1969) and In re Facius, 408 F.2d 1396, 56 CCPA 1348 (1969).

The examiner found that the declarations were inadequate to remove the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents as references because they did not establish an effective prior date of invention by appellants of the portions of the references asserted to be appellants' invention. The examiner was of the opinion that appellants could remove the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents as references only by proving that they had invented the relevant subject matter disclosed in the patents prior to the filing dates of the patents.

The Board of Appeals held the test set forth in Mathews and Facius controlling with respect to the issue of whether the declarations were sufficient to remove the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents as references. The board stated that in order to overcome a patent as a reference through the use of declarations submitted under 37 CFR 1.132, the declarations must establish that appellants invented the relevant subject matter disclosed in the patent, and that the patentees derived their knowledge of the relevant subject matter from appellants. The board found that the declarations failed to establish derivation of the relevant subject matter from appellants, and held the declarations inadequate to remove the patents as references. The board affirmed the rejections of all the claims under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) and 35 U.S.C. § 103 in view of either the Tulagin et al. or Clark patent.

OPINION

The sole issue in this appeal is whether the declarations submitted by appellants under 37 CFR 1.132 are sufficient to remove the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents as references in the rejections. The Tulagin et al. and Clark patents are the evidence upon which the rejections for lack of novelty, and obviousness, are based. In re McKellin, 529 F.2d 1324, 1329, 188 USPQ 428, 432 (Cust. & Pat.App. 1976); In re Hilmer, 359 F.2d 859, 879, 53 CCPA 1288, 1313 (1966). If the declarations submitted by appellants are sufficient to remove these patents as references, then the rejections under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) and 35 U.S.C. § 103 must be reversed for lack of evidence.

The origin and legislative intent of 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) were reviewed by this court in In re Mathews, supra. We pointed out in Mathews that the origin of 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) is the Supreme Court decision in Alexander Milburn Co. v. Davis-Bournonville Co., 270 U.S. 390, 46 S.Ct. 324, 70 L.Ed. 651 (1926). Therein Mr. Justice Holmes expressed the opinion of the Supreme Court saying: "The fundamental rule we repeat is that the patentee must be the first inventor." Id. at 402, 46 S.Ct. at 325, 70 L.Ed. at 654. Consistent with the Milburn "rule," appellants concede that the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents are prima facie evidence that appellants are not the first inventors. More particularly, the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents are prima facie evidence of prior invention by another of certain species of compounds meeting the limitations of appellants' claims in a process which also meets the limitations of appellants' claims. Appellants admit that these species, if by another, anticipate appellants' claims. But appellants assert that the declarations under 37 CFR 1.132 by Tulagin and Clark are sufficient to prove that the species disclosed in the patents are appellants' own work, and therefore the patents do not establish a lack of novelty of their claimed invention. We do not agree.

As we have said, each declarant merely stated that he was "not the inventor of the use of compounds having a hydroxyl group in a position ortho to an azo linkage" in a photoelectrophoretic imaging system. We find these statements ambiguous and inconclusive. The Tulagin et al. and Clark patents do not disclose the general or generic use of compounds having a hydroxyl group in a position ortho to an azo linkage in a photoelectrophoretic imaging system. The patents disclose the use of certain species of compounds meeting the limitations of appellants' claims in a photoelectrophoretic imaging system. We do not infer from these statements that the declarant was not an inventor of the species of appellants' invention disclosed in their patents. The declarants could be the inventors of the species disclosed in their patents, but at the same time never have conceived of the general or generic use of compounds having a hydroxyl group in a position ortho to an azo linkage in a photoelectrophoretic imaging system. For this reason, inter alia, we do not find the declarations submitted under 37 CFR 1.132 adequate to prove that appellants are the inventors of the species disclosed in the Tulagin et al. and Clark patents. See In re Borkowski, 505 F.2d 713, 717, 184 USPQ 29, 32 (Cust. & Pat.App.1974).

Because we hold that the declarations submitted under 37 CFR 1.132 fail to establish that appellants invented the relevant...

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