Ex Parte Friddle et al - Page 6


                Appeal No. 2005-0731                                                                        Page 6                             
                Application No. 09/974,712                                                                                                     

                         The Court, finding “no specific assistance in the legislative materials underlying §                                  
                101,” based its analysis on “the general intent of Congress, the purposes of the patent                                        
                system, and the implications of a decision one way or the other.”  Id. at 532, 148 USPQ                                        
                at 695.  The Court concluded that “[t]he basic quid pro quo contemplated by the                                                
                Constitution and the Congress for granting a patent monopoly is the benefit derived by                                         
                the public from an invention with substantial utility.  Unless and until a process is refined                                  
                and developed to this point—where specific benefit exists in currently available form—                                         
                there is insufficient justification for permitting an applicant to engross what may prove to                                   
                be a broad field.”   Id. at 534-35, 148 USPQ at 695.                                                                           
                         The Court considered and rejected the applicant’s argument that attenuating the                                       
                requirement of utility “would encourage inventors of new processes to publicize the                                            
                event for the benefit of the entire scientific community, thus widening the search for                                         
                uses and increasing the fund of scientific knowledge.”  The Court noted that, while there                                      
                is value to encouraging disclosure, “a more compelling consideration is that a process                                         
                patent in the chemical field, which has not been developed and pointed to the degree of                                        
                specific utility, creates a monopoly of knowledge which should be granted only if clearly                                      
                commanded by the statute.  Until the process claim has been reduced to production of a                                         
                product shown to be useful, the metes and bounds of that monopoly are not capable of                                           
                precise delineation.  It may engross a vast, unknown, and perhaps unknowable area.                                             
                Such a patent may confer power to block off whole areas of scientific development.”   Id.                                      
                at 534, 148 USPQ at 695.                                                                                                       
                         The Court took pains to note that it did not “mean to disparage the importance of                                     
                contributions to the fund of scientific information short of the invention of something                                        





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