Ex Parte 7100710 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardNov 23, 201295001118 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 23, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 95/001,118 11/18/2008 7100710 069669-0007-03 8426 9629 7590 11/26/2012 MORGAN LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP (WA) 1111 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW WASHINGTON, DC 20004 EXAMINER GRAHAM, MATTHEW C ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3993 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 11/26/2012 PAPER Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ TESCO CORP. Requester v. Patent of WEATHERFORD/LAMB, INC. Patent Owner and Appellant ____________ Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 Technology Center 3900 ____________ Before RICHARD M. LEBOVITZ, JEFFERY B. ROBERTSON, and DANIEL S. SONG, Administrative Patent Judges. LEBOVITZ, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is a decision on appeal by the Patent Owner from the Patent Examiner’s rejections of claims 1-6 in an inter partes reexamination of U.S. Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 2 Patent No. 7,100,710, issued September 5, 2006. The Board’s jurisdiction for this appeal is under 35 U.S.C. §§ 6 and 134. We affirm-in-part. STATEMENT OF THE CASE A request for inter partes reexamination of U.S. Patent 7,100,710 (hereinafter, “the ‘710 patent”) was made by Third Party Requester Tesco Corporation on November 18, 2018 pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §§ 311-318 and 37 C.F.R. 1.902-1.997. The Patent Owner is Weatherford/Lamb, Inc. App. Br. 1 dated September 27, 2010). The claims were amended during the reexamination proceeding before the Examiner. A Right of Appeal Notice was mailed by the Examiner on June 24, 2010, rejecting pending claims 1-6. The Patent Owner appealed the Examiner’s decision to the Board. Notice of Appeal dated July 26, 2010. An oral hearing was held on September 5, 2012. A transcript of the hearing has been entered into the record. Oral Hearing Transcript dated October 16, 2012. The Third Party Requester did not participate in the oral hearing nor file a Respondent’s Brief. The ‘710 Patent has been involved in litigation in Weatherford Int’l, Inc. v. Tesco Corp., C.A. No. 2:07-cv-531 (E.D. Tex), which was dismissed by joint stipulation on October 26, 2010. THE CLAIMS Independent claims 1 and 4 are representative and read as follows (underlining and bracketing indicates changes to the claims relative to the original claims in the ‘710 Patent): Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 3 1. (Amended) A method of drilling and lining a[making a cased] wellbore in one single drilling pass comprising at least the steps of: assembling a lower segment of a drill string comprising in sequence from top to bottom a first hollow segment of drill pipe, a latching subassembly means, and a rotary drill bit having at least one mud passage for passing drilling mud from the interior of the drill string to the outside of the drill string; rotary drilling the well into the earth to a predetermined depth by rotating the drill string which rotates the drill attached to[with] the drill string and by attaching successive lengths of hollow drill pipes to said lower segment of the drill string and by circulating mud from the interior of the drill string to the outside of the drill string during rotary drilling so as to produce a wellbore; after said predetermined depth is reached, pumping a latching float collar valve means down the interior of the drill string with drilling mud until it seats into place within said latching subassembly means; leaving the drill bit in the well; pumping a bottom wiper plug means down the interior of the drill string with a physically alterable bonding material until the bottom wiper plug means seats on the upper portion of the latching float collar valve means so as to clean the mud from the interior of the drill string; pumping any required additional amount of said physically alterable bonding material into the wellbore by forcing it through a portion of the bottom wiper plug means and through at least one mud passage of the drill bit into the wellbore; pumping a top wiper plug means down the interior of the drill string with water until the top wiper plug seats on the upper portion of the bottom wiper plug means thereby cleaning the interior of the drill string and forcing additional physically alterable bonding material into the wellbore through at least one mud passage of the drill bit; Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 4 allowing the physically alterable bonding material to cure; thereby encapsulating the drill string in the wellbore with cured [banding] bonding material to make a cased wellbore. 4. (Amended) A method for drilling and lining a wellbore with a tubular in one single drilling pass comprising: drilling the well bore using a drill string, the drill string having a tubular that comprises a casing portion[;], and locating the casing portion within the wellbore by rotating the casing portion which rotates an earth removal member attached to the casing portion; leaving the earth removal member in the wellbore; placing a physically alterable [banding] bonding material in an annulus formed between the casing portion and the well bore by pumping the bonding material through the casing portion and through passages in the earth removal member; establishing [a] an ambient hydrostatic pressure condition in the wellbore; and allowing the bonding material to physically alter under the ambient hydrostatic pressure condition. Claim interpretation The claims are directed to methods for drilling and lining a wellbore with casing “in one single drilling pass.” The Examiner did not give weight to the preamble limitation of “single drilling pass,” but in view of the ‘710 Patent Specification, we conclude this was an error.1 1 See Bicon, Inc. v. Straumann Co., 441 F.3d 945, 950-51 (Fed. Cir. 2006)(“While it is true that preamble language is often treated as nonlimiting in nature, it is not unusual for this court to treat preamble language as limiting, as it is in this case. Preamble language that merely states the purpose or intended use of an invention is generally not treated as limiting the scope of the claim. [Citations omitted]. However, we have stated that there is no ‘litmus test’ for determining whether preamble language is Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 5 According to the ‘710 Specification: The present invention allows for cementation of a drill string with attached drill bit into place during one single drilling pass into a geological formation. The process of drilling the well and installing the casing becomes one single process that saves installation time and reduces costs during oil and gas well completion procedures. ‘710 Specification, col. 7, ll. 30-35 (emphasis added). The ‘720 Patent also refers to installing the casing “during one single pass down into the earth of the steel drill string.” ‘710 Patent, col. 15, ll. 29-30. The ‘710 Patent specifically distinguishes its “single pass drilling” process as reducing the number of steps taught in the prior art to accomplish well drilling. ‘710 Patent, col. 19, l. 20 to col. 20, l. 29. The ‘720 Patent further states that in single pass drilling, a drill bit is chosen “so the entire production can be drilled to its final depth using only a single drill bit.” ‘710 Patent, col. 19, l. 26. See also Oral hearing Transcript, p. 12, l. 13 to p. 13, l. 20. Thus, the claim preamble is more than statement of an intended use, but rather is used to describe a specific process in which a well is drilled in a single pass with one drill bit. During the Oral Hearing, counsel for Patent Owner further explained that single pass drilling precludes removing parts from the wellbore during the drilling process: limiting. [Citation omitted]. To the contrary, we have stated that ‘whether to treat a preamble as a claim limitation is determined on the facts of each case in light of the claim as a whole and the invention described in the patent.’ [Citation omitted]”). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 6 This is so that you don’t have to pull something out that’s an integral part of the drilling process itself, the bit, and then being able to cement without having anything come out, such as a down-hole drill motor or the bit itself. Oral Hearing Transcript, p. 18, ll. 12-15. Accordingly, we interpret a “one single drilling pass” method to be one in which the drilling and cementing of the casing is done in one drilling pass, without requiring extraction of the bit or other drilling parts during the drilling process. THE REJECTIONS The claims stand rejected by the Examiner over ten different grounds of rejection. We address each below. 1. ANTICIPATION BY DISMUKES ‘856 Claim 4 stands rejected by the Examiner under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Dismukes ‘856.2 Answer 5. The Examiner found that Dismukes ‘856, which describes a motor assembly for drilling wells, teaches all the steps of the claimed method. Answer 5. Patent Owner contends that Dismukes ‘856 does not teach the recited step of “locating the casing portion within the wellbore by rotating the casing portion which rotates an earth removal member attached to the casing portion.” App. Br. 8. According to Patent Owner, the drill bit (“earth removal member”) described by Dismukes ‘856 is not rotated by the casing portion because the drill bit is connected to the casing through bearings that allow for relative rotational movement between the two. Id. 2 Newton B. Dismukes, U.S. 4,646,856 (Mar. 3, 1987). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 7 Patent Owner’s argument is supported by the disclosure in Dismukes ‘856. Figures 3 and 4 of Dismukes ‘856, which illustrate the structure of a motor assembly for drilling, are reproduced below: Figure 3 is proximal to, and contiguous with, the portion of the motor assembly illustrated in Figure 4. As shown in Figure 4 of Dismukes ‘856, the drill bit 19a is attached to the drive shaft 32, but not directly to the housing 13a which corresponds to the casing. Dismukes ‘856, col. 6, ll. 14- 17. The drill bit 19a and hollow drive shaft 32 are connected to housing 13a, which serves as a casing string, through bearings 34, 35. Dismukes ‘856, col. 6, ll. 14-17; col. 7, ll. 44-47. The motor 14a (top of Figure 3) is Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 8 connected to drive shaft 32 (bottom of Figure 3) which rotates the drill bit 19a (Figure 4). The casing (“housing 13a”) as shown in Figures 3 and 4 runs along the entire motor assembly, but does not rotate the drill bit, but rather is only connected to the drill bit 19a by a bearing assembly 33 comprised of bearings 34, 35 as shown in Figure 4. In further support of this position, a declaration by inventor William Banning Vail III, was provided by Patent Owner. Dr. Vail testified in his written declaration that the drill bit 19a and drive shaft 32 are rotated by the motor 14a, and that the casing portion (housing 13a) does not rotate the earth removal member (drill bit 19a). Vail. Decl. ¶¶ 7 & 8. The Examiner contends that the casings inherently cause the bit to rotate. Answer 15. However, the Examiner did not provide evidence of this or reasonable basis to believe that the casings rotate the bit, when the drawings clearly show that the motor rotates the bit. For the foregoing reason, we reverse the anticipation rejection of claim 4 over Dismukes ‘856. 2. ANTICIPATION BY DISMUKES ‘719 Claim 4 stands rejected by the Examiner under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Dismukes ‘719.3 Answer 6. The Examiner found that Dismukes ‘719, which is an apparatus for installing casing and pipe in a well, teaches all the steps of the claimed method. Answer 6-7. Patent Owner contends that Dismukes ‘719 does not teach the claimed step of “locating the casing portion within the wellbore by 3 Newton B. Dismukes, U.S. 4,616,719 (Oct. 14, 1986). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 9 rotating the casing portion which rotates an earth removal member attached to the casing portion.” App. Br. 9. Patent Owner contends that the drill bit is rotated by a motor, not the casing as required by the claim. Id. Patent Owner’s arguments are supported by the disclosure in Dismukes ‘719. Figure 12 of Dismukes ‘719 is reproduced below: As shown in Figure 12 and taught by Dismukes ‘719, “motor 432 will cause rotary tool 366 to turn.” Dismukes ‘719, col. 7, ll. 13-14. Rotary tool 366 serves as the claimed “earth removal member.” Rotary tool 366 is rotatably connected to the casing 326 by bearings 416 and 418. Dismukes ‘719, col. 6, l. 64 to col. 7, l. 4. Tube 412, which is shown connected to the stem of the rotary tool 366, is “prevented from vertical movement by upper thrust bearing 416 and lower thrust bearing 418 while being free to turn with respect to casing 326.” Dismukes ‘719, col. 7, ll. 1-4. This disclosure supports Patent Owner’s argument that the earth removal member is rotated by the motor, not the casing. Dr. Vail’s written declaration makes the same assertion based on his interpretation of Figure 12. Vail Decl. ¶¶ 9 & 10. Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 10 Accordingly, we reverse the rejection of claim 4 as anticipated by Dismukes ‘719. 3. OBVIOUS: BROWN IN VIEW OF DISMUKES, ‘856, DISMUKES ‘719, OR SCOTT Claim 4 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Brown4 in view of Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719, or Scott.5 Answer 7. The Examiner found that the claimed invention “differs from Brown only in leaving the earth removal member in the wellbore and pumping bonding material through the casing portion and through passages in the earth removal member.” Answer 8. Based on Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719, and Scott, all of which teach cementing casing and an earth removal member in place, the Examiner determined it would have obvious to have modified Brown with these “well known” teachings and “to have allowed the drill bit 38 to remain in place and then pumped down the usual cementing valve and then cemented the casing portion and the drill bit in place.” Id. Patent Owner contends that “[a]ny attempt to combine Brown with Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719 and Scott would not be obvious because it would destroy the intended functionality of Brown which is to have a removable bit.” Appeal Br. 11. According to Patent Owner, “Brown’s invention allowed worn out bits to be replaced without having to remove the entire drill string each time replacement was necessary.” Id. at 11-12. 4 Cicero C. Brown, U.S. 3,552,508 (Jan. 5, 1971). 5 L.B. Scott, U.S. 3,159,219 (Dec. 1, 1964). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 11 The Examiner did not provide sufficient evidence or reasoning that the subject matter of claim 4 is obvious over the cited publications. Brown describes a casing which is used as a drill string to rotate the drill bit section. Brown, col. 1, ll. 29-34; col. 4, ll. 71-74. The bit section can be made removable or retractable to enable it to be easily withdrawn, without removing the casing, when necessary to remove it. Brown, col. 1, ll. 14-16 & 60-65; col. 4, ll. 33-35. Dismukes ‘856 and ‘719, on the other hand, do not use the casing to rotate the bit. The motor assembly and drill bit in the Dismukes publications therefore operate differently from Brown, and as a result, the combination is not simply a case of merely substituting one part for another.6 Scott teaches methods and devices for cementing casing in a well bore. The Examiner did not provide evidence or explain as to how Scott teaches or renders obvious, “pumping the bonding material through the casing portion and through passages in the earth removal member” as required by the claim, and said by the Examiner to be missing from Brown. Answer 8. Thus, Scott in combination Brown as applied by the Examiner does not describe or suggest all the elements of the claim. In sum, as the Examiner did not present sufficient evidence to establish obviousness of claim 4 over Brown, Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719, and Scott, we reverse the rejection. 6 KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 416 (2007)(“when a patent claims a structure already known in the prior art that is altered by the mere substitution of one element for another known in the field, the combination must do more than yield a predictable result.”) Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 12 4. OBVIOUS: LETURNO IN VIEW OF DISMUKES ‘856, DISMUKES ‘719, OR SCOTT Claim 4 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Leturno7 in view of Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719, or Scott. Answer 8. The Examiner found that the claimed invention “differs from Leturno in leaving the earth removal member in the well bore and pumping bonding material through the casing portion and through passages in the earth removal member.” Answer 9. The Examiner found that each of Dismukes ‘856 and Dismukes ‘719 teach “the well known practice of cementing casing and earth removal members in place after using a casing to drill a well bore.” Id. Scott, according to the Examiner, “teaches of the use of cementing plugs and float equipment that is pumped into the well casing for purposes of cementing the casing into the wellbore.” Id. Based on these teachings, the Examiner concluded “it would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art have allowed the drill bit 38 to remain in place and then pumped down the usual cementing valve and then cemented the casing portion and the drill bit in place.” Id. at 9-10. Patent Owner contends that “Leturno is fundamentally different from the other cited references. Leturno removes the drill bit after the wellbore is drilled and before cement is introduced. Any attempt to combine Leturno with Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719 and Scott would not be obvious because it would destroy the intended functionality of Leturno, which is to have a removable bit.” App. Br. 13 (emphasis omitted.) We agree. 7 Richard E. Leturno, U.S. 5,197,553 (Mar. 30, 1993). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 13 In the “Summary of the Invention,” Leturno characterizes its invention as “method of drilling well by utilizing a liner or casing as the drillstem in combination with a retrievable bit . . .” Leturno, col. 1, ll. 53-55. The use of a “retrievable bit” is described by Leturno as an “important aspect of the present invention.” Leturno, col. 1, ll. 59-62; col. 2, ll. 3-5. Leturno also states that the invention “provides a unique retrievable bit drive motor and bit assembly which may be inserted in and retrieved from a wellbore . . .” Leturno, col. 2, ll. 10-12. The retrievable bit is retrieved from the drillstem after the drilling of the wellbore is completed. Leturno, col. 5, ll. 48-57. In sum, the invention described by Leturno requires a retrievable bit. In view of this requirement by Leturno of a retrievable bit, and the express teaching of removing it upon completion of the wellbore, a person of skill in the art would not have been led to leave the bit in the wellbore and pump cement through it in “one single drilling pass” as required by the claim. See In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (A reference teaches away when “a person of ordinary skill, upon reading the reference, would be discouraged from following the path set out in the reference, or would be led in a direction divergent from the path that was taken by the applicant.”). The ‘710 Patent specifically distinguishes its claimed “one single drill pass” from prior art in which a succession of removable bits are used to drill a well bore. ‘710 Patent, col. 7, ll. 3-6 (in section titled “Description of the Prior Art.”). The claim preamble reciting “one single drilling pass” drilling reflects this distinction. The rejection of claim 4 over Leturno in view of Dismukes ‘856, Dismukes ‘719, or Scott is reversed. Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 14 5 & 6. OBVIOUS: 5. DISMUKES ‘856 IN VIEW OF SCOTT OR LANGER; 6. DISMUKES ‘719 IN VIEW OF SCOTT OR LANGER Claims 1-3 and 5 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Dismukes ‘856 in view of Scott or Langer;8 and Dismukes ‘719 in view of Scott or Langer. Answer 10-11. The Examiner found: The claimed invention differs from Dismukes ‘856 only in the inclusion of commonplace elements of a latching float collar valve and a top wiper plug, both of which are shown by Scott and Langer. It would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to have utilized a latching float collar valve and a wiper plug in Dismukes ‘856 as commonplace methods of cementing a drill string into place in a well bore. Answer 10. The Examiner made the same findings and conclusion for the rejection involving Dismukes ‘719. Id. at 11. We thus treat the rejections together. Patent Owner contends that the Examiner erred because the “combination of Dismukes ‘856 . . . in view of Scott or Langer does not render claims 1-3 and 5 obvious for at least the reason that none of them teaches drilling the well by rotating the casing string, which in turn rotates the drill bit to accomplish single pass drilling.” App. Br. 15. Patent Owner makes the same argument for rejection 6 in which Dismukes ‘719 is relied upon instead of Dismukes ‘856. 8 Friedrich H. Langer et al., U.S. 4,589,495 (May 20, 1986). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 15 Independent claim 1 recites that rotary drilling the well into the earth to a predetermined depth by rotating the drill string which rotates the drill bit attached to the drill string . . . and by circulating mud from the interior of the drill string to the outside of the drill string during rotary drilling so as to produce a wellbore. The “drill string” is defined in the ‘710 Patent as the “casing”: Accordingly, the field of invention relates to apparatus that uses the steel drill string attached to a drilling bit during drilling operations used to drill oil and gas wells for a second purpose as the casing that is cemented in place during typical oil and gas well completions. ‘710 Patent, col. 4, ll. 14-18. Thus, as with independent claim 4, the drill string/casing is used to rotate the drill bit. In the previous rejections over Dismukes ‘856 and ‘719, alone, we determined that the latter patents do not describe using the casing to rotate the drill bit. As this feature is not described in the Dismukes patents, nor said to be taught in either Scott or Langer, we are compelled to reverse the rejection of claims 1, 3 (“drilling the well by rotating the drill string which rotates said drill bit attached to the drill string”), and 5 (which depends on claim 4) for the same reasons as for Dismukes ‘856 and Dismukes ‘719, alone. Claim 2 is an independent claim directed to a “[r]otary drilling apparatus.” The claim requires “a rotary rig for rotating the hollow drill string.” As already discussed, neither Dismukes publication describes rotating the drill string, i.e., the casing. We thus reverse the rejection of claim 2. Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 16 7. ANTICIPATION BY DOBSON Claim 4 stands rejected by the Examiner under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Dobson.9 Answer 11-12. The Examiner found that Dobson describes the drilling method recited in claim 4. Answer 11-12. Patent Owner contends that the Examiner erred because “Dobson pumps cement through ports 224 which are in the radial port collar 222, and are not in the earth removal member 18” as required by claim 4. App. Br. 18. Patent Owner’s argument is supported by the explicit disclosure of Dobson. According to the Examiner, Dobson “shows leaving the earth removal member 18 in the well bore and injecting a cement slurry into and through the casing liner sections 216 and 218 and out of the cementing ports 224 of the earth removal member 18.” Answer 12. However, ports 224 are not part of the drill 18 of Dobson, the part referred to by the Examiner as the “earth removal member.” The ports 224 are described by Dobson as part of the liner assembly of the well completion tool. Dobson, col. 7, ll. 6-15. The Liner assembly 14 is described by Dobson as discrete part from the drill 18 and is shown that way. Dobson, col. 2, ll. 61-65; Fig. 2B (middle section) and Fig. 2C (bottom section). Claim 4, on the other hand, expressly requires “pumping the bonding material through the casing portion and through passages in the earth removal member.” Dobson pumps cement through the ports in the liner assembly, not the earth removal member. Because the Examiner erred in finding this limitation met by Dobson, we reverse the rejection of claim 4 as anticipated by Dobson. Richard M. Dobson et al., U.S. 5,425,423 (Jun. 20, 1995). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 17 8. ANTICIPATION BY WO ‘211 Claim 4 stands rejected by the Examiner under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by WO ‘211.10 Answer 12. The Examiner found that WO ‘211 teaches that the casing string is attached to the drill pipe and drill bit, causing the drill bit to rotate. Answer 12. Patent Owner contends: a permanent guide base 45 connected to the top of the casing string, and guide lines 55 that are connected to guide posts 56 on the guide base. This means that in order for the conductor to rotate all this other equipment must be rotated, which is not taught and which would be impractical if not impossible. App. Br. 19. WO’ 211 describes a device for running and cementing pipes, where the device comprises larger and smaller pipes. The larger pipe serves as a casing and has a jet shoe attached at its end, which is an earth removal member as recited in claim 4. WO ‘211, p. 2, ll. 29-32. The larger casing pipe is lowered over the smaller pipe: The method in accordance with the invention includes the steps of lowering the larger pipe string on the smaller pipe string from the water's surface to the ocean floor and pumping fluid through the smaller pipe string and out through the jet shoe connected to the lower end of the larger pipe string while lowering the pipe strings until the predetermined setting depth for the larger pipe string is reached. Cement slurry is then pumped through the smaller pipe string and the jet shoe to cement the larger pipe string in place. The smaller pipe string is then disconnected from the upper end of the larger pipe string and removed to the water's surface. WO ‘211, page 3, ll. 23-35. 10 Christopher Gaines et al., WO 82/01211 (pub. Apr. 15, 1982). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 18 The Examiner stated that “[d]uring operation, any degree of rotation of the drill pipe 25 causes a rotation of the casing string 31 and the earth removal member 10 attached thereto.” Answer 12-13. However, as indicated in the quoted passage, rotation is not disclosed in WO ‘211. The Examiner did not provide sufficient evidence or an explanation as to how rotation necessarily occurs in lowering the casing over the drill pipe. The Examiner stated that it is “well known and commonplace in the art that running drill string and/or casing typically involves rotation of the string as part of the make up process,” but the Examiner did not provide substantiating evidence of this or that such a “well known” event would take place under the conditions in WO ‘211. As the Examiner did not meet the burden of establishing prima facie anticipation, we are compelled to reverse the rejection of claim 4 over Dobson. 9. OBVIOUS: DOBSON IN VIEW OF SCOTT AND LANGER Claims 2, 3, and 5 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Dobson in view of Scott or Langer. Answer 13-14. The Examiner relied upon Scott and Langer for their teaching of specific limitations in claims 2, 3, and 5. However, as to claim 5, since we found that Dobson did not describe “pumping the bonding material through the casing portion and through passages in the earth removal member” as recited in claim 4, we reverse the rejection of claim 5, which depends on claim 4. Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 19 Claim 2 Claim 2 is an independent claim directed to a “[r]otary drilling apparatus.” Patent Owner contends that the claim differs from Dobson in that “the rotary drill bit cement is not pumped through the passages in Dobson,” but rather through the liner elements which are not part of the earth removal member. App. Br. 21. This argument is not persuasive. Claim 2 is an apparatus claim, the apparatus comprising “a rotary drill bit having at least one passage for passing the drilling mud from within the hollow drill string to the borehole.” The claim does not require a step in which cement is pumped through passages of the earth removal member because the claim is drawn to the apparatus, not the method of drilling. Patent Owner attempts to distinguish the claim based on method steps, when the claim is directed to an apparatus. We interpret the phrase “passage for passing the drilling mud from within the hollow drill string to the borehole” to encompass not only passages in which the drilling mud is ejected through the drill bit directly into the borehole, but also to include passages which allow the drilling mud to circulate through the bit for ejection elsewhere in the apparatus. Dobson describes allowing the drilling mud (“drilling foam”) to pass through the drill bit, indicating the presence of passageways: This results in drilling foam passing through the drill pipe and the tool to the under reamer 20 and the drill bit 22. No drilling foam passes directly from the drill pipe to the liner assembly 14 without first passing through the under reamer 20 and the drill bit 22. Dobson, col. 5, ll. 35-40 (emphasis added). Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 20 To the extent the narrower interpretation is warranted where the passages are openings in the drill bit that facilitate ejection of a fluid directly into the borehole, we note that the ‘710 Patent admits that a typical prior art drill bit comprised mud passages. ‘710 Patent, col. 4, ll. 22—24; Fig. 1F; col. 11, ll. 37. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the rejection of claim 2. Claim 3 Claim 3 is an independent claim to a method of drilling comprising the use of a “bit having at least one mud passage to convey drilling mud from the interior of the drill string to the wellbore. ” As with the apparatus claim 2, Patent Owner distinguishes the claim from Dobson by arguing that “the rotary drill bit cement is not pumped through the passages in Dobson. Instead, cement is introduced into the annulus through ports 224 located above the drill bit which are in the radial port collar 222, and are not in the earth removal member 18.” App. Br. 21. However, Patent Owner has not identified where this limitation appears in the claim. Patent Owner is thus attempting to distinguish the claim from the prior art based on a limitation that does not appear in the claim. We thus affirm the rejection of claim 3. 10. OBVIOUS: CLAIM 6 OVER MULTIPLE REFERENCES Claim 6 stands rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over any of Dismukes '856, Dismukes '719, Dobson or WO ‘211 in view of the Admitted Prior Art disclosed in steps (12) and (13) in column 17, line 50 - Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 21 column 18, line 9 of Vail '710. Answer 14. Claim 6 depends on claim 4, and incorporates all its limitations. The Examiner found that claim 6 differs from [ ] Dismukes '856, Dismukes '719, Dobson or WO 82/01211 only in the commonplace steps of applying pressure to the physically alterable bonding material for substantially displacing the physically alterable bonding material from the interior passageway through the one-way valve and into the annulus and thereafter reducing pressure from the interior passageway and allowing the one-way valve to close. Id. The Examiner found these steps disclosed in Vail ‘710 and concluded it “would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to have utilized these steps to cure the cement under ambient hydrostatic pressure.” Id. As we reversed all rejections of claim 4 over Dismukes '856, Dismukes ‘719, Dobson or WO ‘211, and the admitted prior art was not said by the Examiner to remedy the deficiencies, we are compelled to reverse the rejection of claim 6, as well. SUMMARY The rejections of claims 1, 4, 5, and 6 are reversed. The rejections of claims 2 and 3 are affirmed. Appeal 2012-008948 Reexamination Control 95/001,118 Patent 7,100,710 B2 22 TIME PERIOD FOR RESPONSE Requests for extensions of time in this inter partes reexamination proceeding are governed by 37 C.F.R. § 1.956. See also 37 C.F.R. § 41.79 AFFIRMED-IN-PART ack cc: Patent Owner: Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP (WA) 1111 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, DC 20004 Third Party Requester: Bracewell & Guiliani LLP P.O. Box 61389 Houston, TX 77208-1389 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation