Ex Parte 7680256 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardNov 13, 201395001409 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 13, 2013) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARKOFFICE 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. 95/001,409 08/13/2010 7680256 51783-2 (256) 6267 52450 7590 11/14/2013 KRIEG DEVAULT LLP ONE INDIANA SQUARE SUITE 2800 INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46204-2079 EXAMINER ESCALANTE, OVIDIO ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3992 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 11/14/2013 PAPERPAPER 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 ____________ GOOGLE, INC. Requester and Appellant v. ONE NUMBER CORPORATION Patent Owner and Respondent ____________ Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 Technology Center 3900 ____________ Before JOHN A. JEFFERY, KARL D. EASTHOM, and STEPHEN C. SIU, Administrative Patent Judges. SIU, Administrative Patent Judge DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 2 Requester/Google, Inc. appeals under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134 and 315 the Examiner’s refusal to adopt the proposed rejections of claims 1-4, 10, 12-14, 16-19, and 21-43. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134 and 315. An Oral Hearing was conducted on July 24, 2013. STATEMENT OF THE CASE This proceeding arose from a request by Google, Inc. for an inter partes reexamination of U.S. Patent 7,680,256 B2, titled “Contact Number Encapsulation System” and issued to Brandon D. McLarty and Frederick Wittekind IV on March 16, 2010 (the ’256 patent). The ’256 patent describes a method and system for allowing telephone users to cause multiple phone lines to ring when a calling party dials a single primary contact number (col. 1, ll. 8-10). Claim 1 reads as follows: 1. A system, comprising: a web browser based control panel allowing a user to designate a plurality of contact numbers correlated to a primary contact number assigned to said user, said web browser based control panel including means for allowing said user to enter a plurality of contact numbers that are linked to said primary contact number and temporarily activate and deactivate select contact numbers contained in said plurality of contact numbers to identify each of said contact numbers as an activated contact number or a deactivated contact number; a database for storing said plurality of contact numbers linked to said primary contact number in memory; a call routing server operable to receive a call to said primary contact number, wherein said call routing server is in Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 3 communication with an Internet based communication network and said call routing server is configured to receive said call from said Internet based communication network and route said call; a call processing server connected with said call routing server by said Internet based communication network, wherein said call processing server is configured to receive said call from a calling terminal designating said primary contact number that is routed to said call processing server from said call routing server; a lookup application executable by said call processing server configured to query said database to retrieve said activated contact numbers from said plurality of contact numbers as a function of said primary contact number; a calling application executable by said call processing server configured to forward said call to a plurality of call reception terminals that are each associated with a respective one of said activated contact numbers thereby simultaneously notifying said call reception terminals of said call, said calling application being operable to generate calling commands sent via said Internet based communication network to at least a public switched telephone communication network, and a wireless communication network, wherein said plurality of contact numbers are associated with respective call reception terminals that are operable to communicate using at least a respective one of said communication networks; and a connection application executable by said call processing server for establishing a voice based communication session between said calling terminal and a respective one of said plurality of call reception terminals via said Internet based communication network if said user accepts said call. The cited references are as follows: Ram US 6,625,258 B1 Sep. 23, 2003 Straub US 7,194,079 B1 Mar. 20, 2007 Hakusui US 7,248,577 B2 Jul. 24, 2007 Singh US 7,257,201 B2 Aug. 14, 2007 Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 4 Hariri US 7,379,543 B2 May 27, 2008 Kundan Singh, et al., Columbia University, CINEMA: Columbia InterNet Extensible Multimedia Architecture (May 2002) (“Cinema”); Tekelec, Inc., System Applications and Description, 620- 05600010A, Software Release 5.6, 2000-2003 (“Tekelec”); and airBand Configuration of Find-Me Feature Version 3 (May 11, 2005) (“airBand”). Requester appeals the Examiner’s refusal to adopt the following proposed rejections:1 Claims 10 and 12 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as anticipated by Hariri (3PR App. Br. 25-27);2 Claims 1 and 4 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as anticipated by Hakusui (3PR App. Br. 35);3 1 A proposed rejection of claim 15 under U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Hakusui, and Ram was not made by Requester or considered by the Examiner during Reexamination and is therefore not subject to appeal (RAN 6-9). 2 The ’256 patent was filed August 18, 2005 and has an issue date of March 16, 2010. The Hariri reference was filed June 5, 2001, published September 12, 2002, and issued May 27, 2008. Hariri published after the filing date of the ’256 patent. Therefore, we assume that the Examiner refuses to adopt the rejection of claims 10 and 12 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as anticipated by Hariri. 3 The ’256 patent was filed August 18, 2005 and has an issue date of March 16, 2010. The Hakusui reference was filed December 5, 2003, published September 2, 2004, and issued July 24, 2007. Hakusui published after the filing date of the ’256 patent. Therefore, we assume the Examiner refuses to Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 5 Claims 1-4, 10, 14, 28-35, and 41 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Cinema (3PR App. Br. 27, 38-44);4 Claims 21-27, 36, 37, 39, and 40 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and Hakusui (3PR App. Br. 37);5 Claim 38 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Hakusui and Singh (3PR App. Br. 46);6 Claims 16-19 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and Ram (3PR App. Br. 29-31); Claim 12 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Ram and Straub (3PR App. Br. 31); Claim 43 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over the Cinema and one of Tekelec or AirBand (3PR App. Br. 31-33); Claims 1, 2, and 4 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Tekelec and AirBand (3PR App. Br. 46);7 adopt the rejection of claims 1 and 4 as anticipated by Hariri under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e). 4 A proposed rejection of claims 13, 15, 36-40, and 43 under U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Cinema was not made by Requester or considered by the Examiner during Reexamination and is therefore not subject to appeal (RAN 6). 5 A proposed rejection of claims 1-4 and 14 under U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and Hakusui was not made by Requester or considered by the Examiner during Reexamination and is therefore not subject to appeal (RAN 7). 6 A proposed rejection of claim 3 under U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Hakusui, and Singh ’201 was not made by Requester or considered by the Examiner during Reexamination and is therefore not subject to appeal (RAN 6, 7, and 9). 7 A proposed rejection of claims 3, 14, 36, 37, 39, or 40 under U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Tekelec, and airBand was not made Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 6 Claim 42 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and airBand (3PR App. Br. 47-48); and Claim 13 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Hariri, Cinema, and Straub (3PR App. Br. 44-45). ISSUE Did the Examiner err in refusing to reject claims 1-4, 10, 12-14, 16- 19, and 21-43? PRINCIPLES OF LAW The question of obviousness is resolved on the basis of underlying factual determinations including (1) the scope and content of the prior art, (2) any differences between the claimed subject matter and the prior art, and (3) the level of skill in the art. Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 17- 18 (1966). “The combination of familiar elements according to known methods is likely to be obvious when it does no more than yield predictable results.” KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 416 (2007). ANALYSIS Hariri - Claims 10 and 12 by Requester or considered by the Examiner during Reexamination and is therefore not subject to appeal (RAN 8). Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 7 Claim 10, which depends from claim 5, recites a web based control panel that is configured to allow a user to temporarily activate and deactivate one or more numbers contained in the plurality of contact numbers. The Examiner states that Hariri discloses profiles that include “a list of various destinations to which incoming calls may be routed” but does not disclose “whether any number within that profile is activated or deactivated” (RAN 89). We disagree with the Examiner for at least the reasons set forth by the Requester (3PR App. Br. 26). As the Requester points out, Hariri discloses that a subscriber indicates a “preferred point of contact” (col. 5, ll. 60-61; Fig. 4). For example, in one embodiment, the subscriber “has designated his or her first business telephone line as the telephone number at which the subscriber prefers to be called” (col. 7, ll. 54-56) and the system “uses the preferred contact information . . . to establish a connection” (col. 7, l. 67 – col. 8, l. 1). Hariri discloses that “if three telephone numbers are returned as the preferred contact points, the requestor unit . . . can initiate three telephone calls at the same time” (col. 10, ll. 21-24). In other words, Hariri discloses a system in which a user selects preferred points of contact (and does not select non-preferred points of contact) and the system establishes a connection with the selected preferred points of contact (and does not establish a connection with the non-selected points of contact that are non- preferred). The Examiner does not persuasively demonstrate a difference between activating and deactivating contact numbers, as recited in claim 10, for example, and Hariri’s disclosure of a user selecting points of contact for use in establishing a connection (and not selecting points of contact such that Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 8 non-selected points of contact are not used to establish a connection). In both cases, certain selected points of contact are “activated” for use in establishing a connection while certain non-selected points of contact are “deactivated” such that the non-selected (or deactivated) points of contact are not used in establishing a connection. Claim 12 depends from claim 10 and the Examiner does not provide additional findings with respect to claim 12 and the Hariri reference. The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 10 and 12 as anticipated by Hariri. Hakusui - Claims 1 and 4 Claim 1 recites a web browser based control panel including means for allowing said user to enter a plurality of contact numbers and temporarily activate and deactivate select contact numbers contained in the plurality of contact numbers to identify each of the contact numbers as an activated or a deactivated contact number. The Examiner states that Hakusui fails to disclose this feature (RAN 98). In particular, the Examiner indicates that Hakusui discloses that “the user selects numbers that will be called” but does not disclose “that non-selected numbers are identified by the user as being deactivated” (RAN 98). We disagree with the Examiner for at least the reasons set forth by the Requester (3PR App. Br. 35-37). As the Requester explains, Hakusui discloses a “central line setup screen” (col. 7, l. 37, Fig. 3) with “extension phone numbers 104 to be called simultaneously” (col. 7, ll. 41-42). One of ordinary skill in the art would have understood that the call line setup screen contains a pull-down menu Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 9 (Fig. 3, element 104) that may be used to select a telephone extension number or may be set to “none” (as illustrated in Fig. 3). We agree with the Requester that when a user selects “none” for a telephone extension to be dialed, no telephone extension corresponding to the “none” selection will be dialed because no telephone number was selected. In other words, telephone numbers that were not selected would not be dialed and would therefore be “deactivated.” The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 1 and 4 as anticipated by Hakusui. Cinema - Claims 1-4, 10, 14, 28-35, and 41 Claim 41 Claim 41 recites a call routing server connected with an Internet based communication network that is configured to receive a call and a call processing server connected with the Internet based communication network. The Examiner states that Cinema fails to disclose this feature (RAN 18-20). In particular, the Examiner finds that “[t]he call processing server is also connected to the call router via the same Internet based communication network” (RAN 20). However, the Examiner does not sufficiently demonstrate that claim 41 requires a call processing server that is connected to a call router “via the same” communication network. Rather, claim 41 merely requires that the call routing server and the call processing server are connected to the network. Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 10 Cinema discloses a system in which a caller (i.e., “Alice”) “sends the call to its ‘outbound’ server” (p. 5) that “handles all calls destined for addresses outside” the caller’s network (id.). The “outbound” server of Cinema is connected to the Internet (p. 5, Fig. 1) because the “outbound” server contacts the “server acme.com” (id.) via the Internet. Likewise, the “server acme.com” is connected to the Internet (id.). The Examiner does not persuasively demonstrate a difference between the system of Cinema in which an “outbound” server receives a call from a caller and is connected to the Internet and a “server acme.com” that is also connected to the Internet and the recited claim feature of claim 41 of a call routing server connected with an Internet based communication network that is configured to receive a call and a call processing server connected with the Internet based communication network. In both cases, both servers are connected to the Internet and one of the servers receives a call from a caller. The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claim 41 as anticipated by Cinema. Claims 1-4, 14, and 28 Claim 28, for example, recites a call router that receives an incoming call through an Internet based network and a server that receives the incoming call from via the Internet based network routed from the call router. Claim 1 recites a similar feature. The Examiner states that Cinema fails to disclose this feature (RAN 18-23). In particular, the Examiner finds that Cinema fails to disclose “that the gateway determines to use TRIP Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 11 routing to connect to the sipd via an Internet based communication network” (RAN 20). We agree with the Examiner. Requester argues that Cinema discloses “three ‘legs’ of the call are transmitted over the public Internet” (3PR App. Br. 43, citing Cinema, Fig. 1, p. 5). Cinema discloses a system in which a caller (i.e., “Alice” who is within the “Wonderland” network) places a call to a callee (i.e., “Bob” who is “located on the Internet” at “acme.com” – see p. 5 and Fig. 1). In the Cinema embodiment, the caller (i.e., “Alice”) “sends the call to its ‘outbound’ server . . . that handles all calls destined for addresses outside wonderland.com” (p. 5). In other words, in Cinema, a component (i.e., “call router”) receives a call (from the caller) over a network (i.e., “wonderland.com”) and is connected to the “server” (or the “acme.com” server) via the Internet (i.e., a network that differs from the “wonderland.com” network). The “wonderland.com” server (or “call router”) is connected to the “acme.com” server via the Internet but the “wonderland.com” server receives the call from the caller via a different network, namely, the “wonderland.com” network. As the Examiner points out, this is contrary to the claim requirement of a call router connected to the server and receiving a call from a caller over the (same) Internet based network. Requester also argues that Cinema discloses a “public-Internet based routing system in its TRIP embodiment” (3PR App. Br. 44) in which “calls can . . . propagate from gateway (router) to call processing server” (id., citing Cinema at pp. 24-25). In this embodiment, Cinema discloses an “external telephone user” placing a call (i.e., “9397134”) to a PBX, which Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 12 forwards the call to a corresponding gateway (which Requester equates with the claimed “call router”). The gateway (or “call router”) forwards the call to the IP address of the “sipd,” which Requester presumably equates with the claimed “server” (see Cinema at 24-25; Fig. 11). We agree with Requester that Cinema discloses calls that can “propagate from gateway (router) to call processing server” (3PR App. Br. 44) because Cinema discloses that a call can be forwarded from the gateway (or “call router”) to the “sipd” (or “server”). However, claim 28 requires that the call router receives a call from a communication network and a server connected to the call router by the communication network. As the Examiner points out, Cinema discloses that the gateway (or “call router”) receives a call from an “internal T1/CAS” network but does not disclose that the server (i.e., sipd) is connected to the call router by the “internal T1/CAS” network. Rather, Cinema discloses that the sipd (i.e., “server”) is connected to the gateway (or “call router”) via an “Ethernet” network. Claim 1 recites a similar feature as claim 28. Claims 2-4 and 14 depend from claim 1. The Examiner did not err in refusing to reject claims 1-4, 14, and 28 over Cinema. Claim 10 Claim 10 recites a call answering application associated with the call processing server configured to establish an initial communication session between the calling terminal and the server. The Examiner states that establishing an “initial communication session” as recited in claim 10 requires that the server answer the call and that Cinema fails to disclose that Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 13 the server answers the call (RAN 15). We disagree with the Examiner for at least the reasons set forth by the Requester (3PR App. Br. 27-29). As Requester explains, claim 10 recites a call answering application configured to establish an initial communication session between the calling terminal and the server. Claim 10 does not recite an application that answers a call. Therefore, even assuming that Cinema fails to disclose answering a telephone call as the Examiner states, we disagree with the Examiner that Cinema fails to disclose the features of claim 10. The ’256 patent Specification discloses that “an answering module may answer the incoming call thereby establishing a communication session between the calling terminal and the call processor server” (col. 3, ll. 6-9). Hence, the Specification discloses establishing a communication session but does not disclose establishing an “initial” communication session, as recited in claim 10. Even assuming the Specification discloses an answering module may answer the incoming call thereby establishing “an initial communication session” between the calling terminal and the call processor server” (the Specification does not provides such a disclosure, however), the Specification would still not require that establishing an “initial communication session” would require “answering a call.” Rather, the Specification would merely disclose that establishing a communication session may be accomplished by answering the incoming call and would not require that the incoming call be answered in order to establish the “initial” communication session. As the Requester also points out, Cinema discloses an embodiment in which a callee “sends the call to its ‘outbound’ server” and the server Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 14 “handles all calls” (p. 5; Fig. 1). We agree with the Requester that when a callee “sends the call” to the server, an “initial communication session” is established because the callee (or the “calling terminal”) would be in “communication” with the server in order to send a call to the server. Hence, we agree with the Requester that Cinema discloses establishing an initial communication session between the calling terminal and the server. The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claim 10 as anticipated by Cinema. Claims 29-35 The Requester argues that the Examiner refuses to adopt the proposed rejection of claim 29 (and dependent claims 30-35) because Cinema allegedly fails to disclose “selecting a particular call processing server based on the primary contact number” and “a plurality of call processing servers that the call router selects among” (3PR App. Br. 39). Claim 29, for example, recites that the call routing server uses the primary contact number to retrieve an address associated with the call processing server and routes the call to the call processing server as a function of the primary contact number. The Examiner states that Cinema fails to disclose “that the server is determined and selected based on the primary contact number” (RAN 22). As the Requester points out, claim 29 does not recite that the server is “determined and selected based on the primary contact number.” In any event, Cinema discloses that a caller “calls” a number (e.g., “9397134”) and the call is forwarded to the gateway connected to an internal T1 line that Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 15 carries the extension (p. 24). The gateway then forwards the call “to the preconfigured IP address of the sipd (the SIP proxy server)” (id.). An example of such a configuration in Cinema is as follows: dial-peer voice 1 voip preference 1 destination-pattern 713[0-9] voice-class codec 1 session protocol sipv2 session target ipv4:128.59.19.62 Cinema, p. 24-25. The Examiner finds that Cinema fails to disclose a user temporarily activating and deactivating one or more numbers contained in the plurality of contact numbers, thereby identifying each of the plurality of contact numbers as an activated contact number or a deactivated contact number, as recited in claim 29. The Requester argues that Cinema discloses “q values . . . [that] indicate the order in which contact numbers are called” and that “q values . . . activate (if the q values are the same) or deactivate (if the q values are different or nonexistent) each contact number for simultaneous calling” (3PR App. Br. 40, citing Cinema at 20). We agree with the Requester that Cinema discloses “q-values” that indicate the “preference values” of contacts (p. 20). Cinema discloses, for example, if “multiple contacts have the same or similar q values,” then the call is forwarded to each of the contacts having the same or similar q values (id.). However, we agree with the Examiner that Cinema fails to disclose that any of the contacts are deactivated. In fact, Cinema explicitly discloses Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 16 that the call is forwarded to each of the contacts (i.e., each of the contacts are “activated”).8 The Examiner did not err in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 29-35 as anticipated by Cinema. Cinema and Hakusui - Claims 21-27, 36, 37, 39, and 40 Cinema, Hakusui, and Singh – Claim 38 Claims 21-27 Claim 21, for example, recites a control panel that allows a user to temporarily activate and deactivate select contact numbers contained in a plurality of contact numbers by way of a selection item, thereby identifying each of the plurality of contact numbers as an activated contact number or a deactivated contact number. The Examiner states that the combination of Cinema and Hakusui fails to disclose or suggest this feature. In particular, the Examiner finds that while Cinema “discloses that the user can designate specific numbers to be ‘activated’ . . . [t]he user simply does not indicate or identify or have the ability to ‘temporarily deactivate’ a contact number as claimed” (RAN 65-66). As indicated above and by the Requester, however, the proposed rejection of claims 21-27 is obviousness over the combination of Cinema and Hakusui as opposed to the Cinema reference in isolation. The Examiner 8 Cinema discloses an example in which 5 locations (rep1, rep2, rep3, senior-rep, and manager) have “preferences” or “q values” of 1.0, 1.0, 0.8, 0.3, and 0.3, respectively, and a call that is forwarded to rep1 and rep2, then rep3, then to senior-rep and manager simultaneously. In other words, Cinema discloses forwarding the call to each of the locations (i.e., each of the locations are “activated” and none are “deactivated” (Cinema at 20-21). Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 17 has not persuasively demonstrated that Hakusui also fails to disclose or suggest deactivating a contact number (3PR Ap. Br. 37). One cannot show nonobviousness by attacking references individual where the proposed rejections are based on combination of references. In re Keller, 642 F.2d 413 (CCPA 1981). The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 21-27 as obvious over the combination of Cinema and Hakusui. Claims 36, 37, 39, and 40 (and claim 38) Claim 36, for example, recites a call router that receives an incoming call via an Internet based network and a call processing server that receives the incoming call routed from the call router over the Internet based network. The Examiner states that the combination of Cinema and Hakusui fails to disclose or suggest this feature (RAN 66-68). Requester argues that Cinema discloses this feature. As noted above, however, we disagree with the Requester. Claim 38 depends from claim 37. The Requester does not persuasively demonstrate that Singh cures the deficiencies of Cinema and Hakusui with respect to claim 38. The Examiner did not err in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 36, 37, 39, and 40 over Cinema and Hakusui or the rejection of claim 38 over Cinema, Hakusui, and Singh. Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 18 Cinema and Ram - Claims 16-19 Claims 16 and 19 depend from claim 10 (discussed above). The Examiner states that the combination of Cinema and Ram fails to disclose or suggest that the server answers the call (see discussion above) (RAN 54). As described above, we disagree with the Examiner that claims 16-19, which depend from claim 10, recite a server that answers a call. Rather, claim 10 (and claims 16-19) recites an application configured to establish an initial communication session between the calling terminal and server. Also as noted above, the Specification fails to disclose that establishing an initial communication session must include answering a call. The Examiner also states that Cinema and Ram fail to disclose or suggest claims 16-19 because, according to the Examiner, Ram “does not specifically disclose which specific device queries the caller for their name” (RAN 55). We disagree with the Examiner for at least the reasons set forth by the Requester (3PR App. Br. 30). The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 16-19 as obvious over Cinema and Ram. Cinema, Ram and Straub - Claim 12 Claim 12 depends from claim 5 and recites a control panel that is configured to allow the user to temporarily activate and deactivate one or more numbers contained in the plurality of contact numbers. The Examiner states that the combination of Cinema, Ram, and Straub fails to disclose or suggest this feature (RAN). Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 19 Requester argues that “Ram and CINEMA both teach SIP-based one number systems” and that “[i]t would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to combine Ram with CINEMA and Straub” (3PR App. Br. 31). However, Requester does not persuasively demonstrate error in the Examiner’s finding that Ram, Cinema, and/or Straub fails to disclose or suggest temporarily activating and deactivating one or more numbers contained in the plurality of contact numbers. The Examiner did not err in refusing to adopt the rejection of claim 12 as obvious over Cinema, Ram, and Straub. Cinema and airBand – Claims 42 and 43 Claim 43 The Examiner states that Requester has failed to demonstrate “how airBand met the limitations set forth in [claim 5] as a primary reference” and that it “would not have been proper to propose a rejection to claim 5 over airBand since this would be a new ground of rejection” (RAN 113). The Examiner adopts the rejection of claim 5 (from which claim 43 depends) as anticipated by Cinema (ACP 9, 12, 15-18). Patent Owner does not provide persuasive arguments in support of claim 5 over Cinema. Instead, Patent Owner cancels claim 5 (Patent Owner Response to Action Closing Prosecution, dated April 11, 2011, at 1 and 4). Hence, the Examiner finds (and Patent Owner does not refute) that Cinema discloses each and every limitation of claim 5 (from which claim 43 depends). Therefore, we disagree that Requester’s alleged failure to demonstrate how airBand discloses each of the limitations of claim 5 bears relevance to the question of Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 20 whether the combination of Cinema and airBand discloses or suggests the features recited in claim 5 (or claim 43, which depends from claim 5). To the extent that the Examiner refuses to adopt the rejection of claim 43 as obvious over airBand and Cinema (but would adopt the rejection of claim 43 as obvious over Cinema and airBand), the Requester argues that the order in which the references are listed in a stated rejection “is irrelevant when evaluating a utility patent” (3PR App. Br. 34, citing In re Bush, 296 F.2d 491, 496 (CCPA 1961) and In re Keller, 642 F.2d 413, 425 (CCPA 1981). The Examiner and Patent Owner do not persuasively refute Requester’s contention. Therefore, we agree with the Requester. The Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection of claim 43 as obvious over the combination of Cinema and airBand. Reversal of the Examiner’s confirmation of claim 43 based on Cinema and airBand renders it unnecessary to reach the propriety of the Examiner’s decision not to reject claim 43 on a different basis. Cf. In re Gleave, 560 F.3d 1331, 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2009). As such, we need not reach the propriety of the Examiner’s confirmation of claim 43 over Cinema and Tekelec. Claim 42 Claim 42 depends from claim 1 and recites a call routing server that receives a call via an Internet based network and a call processing server that is connected with the call routing server by the Internet based network and receives the call from the call routing server. As described above and by the Examiner, Requester has not adequately demonstrated that Cinema discloses Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 21 this feature or that airBand cures the deficiencies of Cinema (3PR App. Br. 47-48). The Examiner did not err in refusing to adopt the rejection of claim 42 over Cinema and airBand. Cinema, Tekelec, and airBand - Claims 1, 2, and 4 The Examiner states that the combination of Cinema, Tekelec, and airBand fails to disclose or suggest “a plurality of contact numbers that can be identified as being deactivated or activated” (RAN 109). For at least the previously stated reasons, we agree with the Examiner that Cinema fails to disclose or suggest deactivated contact numbers. The Requester does not sufficiently demonstrate that Tekelec and/or airBand cure the deficiencies of Cinema (3PR App. Br. 46-47). The Examiner did not err in refusing to adopt the rejection of claims 1, 2, and 4 as obvious over Cinema, Tekelec, and airBand. Hariri, Cinema, and Straub - Claim 13 Claim 13 recites a call routing server receiving an incoming call over an Internet-based network and a server receiving the incoming call forwarded by the call routing server over the Internet-based network. As described above and by the Examiner (RAN 93-94), Cinema fails to disclose this feature. Requester does not sufficiently demonstrate that Hariri and/or Straub cure the deficiencies of Cinema (3PR App. Br. 44-45). The Examiner did not err in refusing to adopt the rejection of claim 13 as obvious over Cinema, Hariri, and Straub. Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 22 CONCLUSION The Examiner did not err in refusing to reject claims 2, 3, 13, 14, 28- 40, and 42. The Examiner erred in refusing to reject claims 1, 4, 10, 12, 16- 19, 21-27, 41, and 43. DECISION We affirm the Examiner’s decision not to reject claims 1-4, 14, and 28-35 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Cinema; claim 12 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Ram, and Straub; claim 42 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and airBand; claims 36, 37, 39, and 40 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and Hakusui; claim 38 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Hakusui, and Singh; and claim 13 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema, Hariri, and Straub. We reverse the Examiner’s decision not to reject claims 10 and 12 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Hariri; claims 1 and 4 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Hakusui; claims 10 and 41 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Cinema; claims 16-19 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and Ram; claim 43 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and airBand; and claims 21-27 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Cinema and Hakusui. Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 41.77(a), the above-noted reversal constitutes a new ground of rejection. Section 41.77(b) provides that “a new ground of rejection . . . shall not be considered final for judicial review.” That section also provides that Patent Owner, WITHIN ONE MONTH FROM THE Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 23 DATE OF THE DECISION, must exercise one of the following two options with respect to the new grounds of rejection to avoid termination of the appeal proceeding as to the rejected claims: (1) Reopen prosecution. The owner may file a response requesting reopening of prosecution before the examiner. Such a response must be either an amendment of the claims so rejected or new evidence relating to the claims so rejected, or both. (2) Request rehearing. The owner may request that the proceeding be reheard under § 41.79 by the Board upon the same record. The request for rehearing must address any new ground of rejection and state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked in entering the new ground of rejection and also state all other grounds upon which rehearing is sought. In accordance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(a)(1), the “[p]arties to the appeal may file a request for rehearing of the decision within one month of the date of: . . . [t]he original decision of the Board under § 41.77(a).” A request for rehearing must be in compliance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(b). Comments in opposition to the request and additional requests for rehearing must be in accordance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(c)-(d), respectively. Under 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(e), the times for requesting rehearing under paragraph (a) of this section, for requesting further rehearing under paragraph (c) of this section, and for submitting comments under paragraph (b) of this section may not be extended. An appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit under 35 U.S.C. §§ 141-144 and 315 and 37 C.F.R. § 1.983 for an inter partes reexamination proceeding “commenced” on or after November Appeal 2013-005028 Reexamination Control 95/001,409 Patent 7,680,256 B2 24 2, 2002 may not be taken “until all parties’ rights to request rehearing have been exhausted, at which time the decision of the Board is final and appealable by any party to the appeal to the Board.” 37 C.F.R. § 41.81. See also MPEP § 2682 (8th ed., Rev. 8, July 2010). No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). Requests for extensions of time in this inter partes reexamination proceeding are governed by 37 C.F.R. § 1.956. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.79. AFFIRMED-IN-PART 37 C.F.R. 41.77 peb THIRD PARTY REQUESTER: Christine H. Mccarthy Richard B. Lazarus Barnes & Thornburg LLP 1717 Pennsylvania Ave NW. Suite 500 Washington, Dc 20006-4623 PATENT OWNER: Dean E. Mcconnell, Esquire Krieg DeVault One Indiana Square, Suite 2800 Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-2079 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation