HEUSCHEN et al. V. OKAMOTO - Page 9




              Interference No. 103,272                                                                                       


              reference contains no disclosure of any Kasha Index values or any molecular weight                             
              ranges.  Moreover, during ex parte prosecution, in the Office Action dated June 21, 1989                       
              (Paper No. 7 of the involved Heuschen application), the examiner rejected the Heuschen                         
              claims as being obvious over the Japanese reference and after considering Heuschen's                           
              response (Paper No. 14, filed December 26, 1989) thereto, the examiner withdrew the                            
                        6                                                                                                    
              rejection .  Nowhere has the party Okamoto shown where the examiner's action is                                
              erroneous.  Cf. Brown v. Bravet, 25 USPQ2d 1147, 1150 (Bd. Pat. App. & Int. 1992).  Nor                        
              would the party Okamoto have been able to do so.  In its involved patent specification, the                    
              party Okamoto made a showing of unexpected results with respect to its particular                              
              polycarbonate molecular weight ranges.  In our view, this showing would also inure to the                      
              benefit of the party Heuschen, especially since both parties are claiming the same                             
              invention, albeit in different terms.  The party Okamoto does not urge that an interference-                   
              in-fact does not exist, i.e., that the Okamoto claims are patentably distinct from the                         
              Heuschen claims.                                                                                               







                      6                                                                                                      
               In this regard, we note that the Heuschen application claims were finally rejected on the                     
              grounds of indefiniteness, that Heuschen filed an appeal to the Board of Patent Appeals and                    
              Interferences, that a panel of the Board reversed the examiner’s rejection and did not enter any               
              new ground of rejection over the Japanese reference under 37 CFR § 1.692, as it could have,                    
              and should have, done if the panel deemed that the claims were unpatentable over that                          
              reference.                                                                                                     
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