KIPOURAS et al. V. BARNHOUSE et al. - Page 22




          Interference No. 103,029                                                    



          948, 951, 1925 Dec. Comm'r Pats. 245, 251 (D.C. Cir 1925).  A               
          satisfactory showing under the rule must include evidence that              
          the party was not negligent in preparing the original                       
          statement and the error could not have been avoided by the                  
          exercise of due care.  See Rivise and Caesar, Interference Law              
          and Practice §100, Vol. I, p. 278 (Michie Co., 1940).  In the               
          more recently reported cases, the requirement outlined above                
          has been followed, and the rule and its predecessor have been               
          construed strictly.  In fact,                                               




          the predecessor to 37 CFR § 1.628 (37 CFR § 1.222) has been                 
          interpreted to "require a showing demonstrating that the                    
          moving party was not negligent in preparing the original                    
          preliminary statement and that the error could not have been                
          avoided by the                                                              
          exercise of due care" if the motion were "filed after the                   
          preliminary statements were approved and their contents known               
          to the parties."  Fleming v. Bosch, 181 USPQ 761, 763 (Bd.                  
          Pat. Int. 1973).  Cf. Chan v. Kunz, 231 USPQ 462, 471 (Bd.                  


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