Ex Parte ClarkeDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 25, 201814480625 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 25, 2018) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. 14/480,625 93049 7590 Axiom Global Inc. 84 Terrace Rd FILING DATE 09/08/2014 10/29/2018 Walnut Creek, CA 94597 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Raymond Clarke 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 ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 13282-5 2849 EXAMINER SMITH, PRESTON ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1792 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/29/2018 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address(es): jmcdonald@mcdonaldj.com jmcdonald@axiomlaw.net thprichardson @comcast.net PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte RAYMOND CLARKE Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 Technology Center 1700 Before CATHERINE Q. TIMM, DONNA M. PRAISS, and JANEE. INGLESE, Administrative Patent Judges. TIMM, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL 1 1 In explaining our Decision, we cite to the Specification of September 8, 2014, as amended on July 10, 2015 (Spec.), Final Office Action of December 10, 2015 (Final), Appeal Brief of July 11, 2016 (Appeal Br.), Examiner's Answer of July 27, 2017 (Ans.), and Reply Brief of September 27, 2017 (Reply Br.). Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), Appellant2 appeals from the Examiner's decision to reject claims 1-8, 10-16, and 18-21. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b ). We AFFIRM-IN-PART. The claims are directed to a sealed container (see, e.g., claim 1 ), a method of ripening fruits in a sealed container (see, e.g., claim 12), and a method of storing and/or ripening a respiring biological material in a sealed package (see, e.g., claim 16). Claim 1 illustrates the sealed container: 1. A sealed container which comprises (a) at least 4 kg of a respiring biological material, and (b) a packaging atmosphere around the respiring biological material, and ( c) an atmosphere control member which (i) provides a pathway for oxygen, carbon dioxide and ethylene to enter or leave the packaging atmosphere, (ii) consists of a membrane which comprises a microporous film and a polymeric coating on the microporous film, and (iii) has an OTR of at least 50,000 ml/I 00 inch2 .atm.24hrs; the sealed container having (i) an oxygen permeability at 13 °C per kilogram of the respiring biological material in the container ( 0 P 13 /kg) of at least 7 00, and (ii) an ethylene 2 According to the Application Data Sheet, Appellant is the applicant, Apio, Inc. Application Data Sheet of Sept. 8, 2014. The Appeal Brief lists Landec Corporation as the real party in interest. Appeal Br. 1. 2 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 permeability at 13 °C per kilogram of the respiring biological material in the container (EtPI3/kg) which is at least 2 times the OPI3/kg, and the respiring biological material being a fruit selected from the group consisting of apples, apricots, avocados, blackberries, blueberries, cherimoyas, dates, figs, mangos, melons, peaches, papayas, pears, pineapples, peppers, persimmons, plums, cherries, grapes, lemons, oranges, tomatoes, raspberries, strawberries, nectarines, kiwis and tomatoes. Appeal Br. 23 ( claims appendix). The Examiner maintains, and Appellant appeals, the following rejections made under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a): A. The rejection of claims 1--4, 6, and 8 as obvious over De Moor3 in view of Schreiber, 4 Curtis, 5 and Nakata; 6 B. The rejection of claims 5, 10-12, and 14 as obvious over De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, 7 Nakata, and Sisler; 8 C. The rejection of claim 7 as obvious over De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, and Sisler; D. The rejection of claim 13 as obvious over De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, Nakata, and Sisler; 3 De Moor, US 6,013,293, issued Jan. 11, 2000. The Examiner refers to this patent as Moor. 4 Schreiber, US 5,332,088, issued July 26, 1994. 5 Curtis, US 6,085,930, issued July 11, 2000. 6 Nakata et al., US 6,348,271 Bl, issued Feb. 19, 2002. 7 Herdeman, US 5,460,841, issued Oct. 24, 1995. 8 Sisler et al., US 5,518,988, issued May 21, 1996. 3 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 E. The rejection of claim 15 as obvious over De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, Nakata, Reilly,9 and Sisler; and F. The rejection of claims 16 and 18-21 as obvious over De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, Nakata, Sisler, and Orman. 10 OPINION Appellant begins by arguing claims 1-8, 10-15, and 21 as a group and then presents further arguments for each rejection with selected claims argued separately. Appeal Br. 9-22. We address each of the issues arising as follows. Re} ections A-E Turning first to Appellant's argument directed to the grouping of claims 1-8, 10-15, and 21, we will treat claims 1-8 and 10-15, which are the subject of Rejections A-E listed above, together, but treat claim 21 separately in our discussion of Rejection F. Each of the rejected claims 1-8 and 10-15 requires the use of an atmosphere control member that "consists of a membrane which comprises a microporous film and a polymeric coating on the microporous film" ( claims 1 and 12 (emphasis added)). The Examiner finds De Moor teaches the required atmosphere control member (gas permeable membrane) having a microporous film and a polymeric coating on the microporous film. See, e.g., Final 3. 9 Reilly et al., US 2,226,480, issued Dec. 24, 1940. 10 Orman et al., US 4,990,351, issued Feb. 5, 1991. 4 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 Appellant contends that the Examiner erred in failing to give effect to the "consisting of' language in the claims. Appeal Br. 9-10. According to Appellant, De Moor requires an apertured cover member and, thus, De Moor's atmosphere control member does not "consist of' the recited membrane. Id. Appellant has not identified a reversible error in the Examiner's finding that De Moor teaches an atmosphere control member of the structure required by claims 1-8 and 10-15. Although De Moor teaches a structure that De Moor calls a cover member, the cover member can be an integral part of the barrier sections surrounding the control member as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2. De Moor col. 5, 11. 27-34; Figs. 1-2. As shown in Figure 2, in this embodiment, there are two structures: (1) The barrier section 11 containing the apertured cover member 122 and (2) the gas permeable membrane 121. For instance, the barrier section containing the apertured cover member may be a bag with apertures and the atmosphere control member may be a gas permeable membrane covering the aperture. De Moor col. 4, 11. 60-64. This structure is no different than what Appellant describes in the Specification as his invention, i.e., a gas permeable membrane control member secured over one or more holes in a bag. Spec. ,r 87. Any difference resides merely in the language De Moor uses to describe the structure rather than in the structure itself. Appellant has not identified a reversible error in Rejections A-E based on the Examiner's finding that De Moor teaches an atmosphere control member having the "consisting of' structure required by claims 1-8 and 10-15. 5 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 Rejection A Turning to the rejection of claims 1--4, 6, and 8 as obvious over De Moor in view of Schreiber, Curtis, and Nakata, we note that Appellant confines the arguments to claims 1 and 2. Appeal Br. 11. Claims 3, 4, 6, and 8 stand or fall with claim 1. Claim 1 For the rejection of claim 1, the issue is: Has Appellant identified a reversible error in the Examiner's finding of suggestions within the prior art and ordinary skill of the artisan for selecting a coated membrane with the oxygen and ethylene permeability recited in claim 1 for use as the coated membrane of De Moor and including at least 4 kg of respiring material in De Moor's container? Compare Final 3--4, and Ans. 8-10, with Appeal Br. 11- 16, and Reply Br. 1-3. Appellant has not identified such an error. De Moor, Curtis, and Nakata are all concerned with packaging that will inhibit the spoilage of respiring fruits and vegetables during transport and storage. De Moor col. 1, 11. 6-7; Curtis col. 3, 11. 7-11; Nakata col. 1, 11. 4--9. All teach using gas permeable membranes to control the concentrations of various gases within the package. De Moor col. 5, 11. 1- 15; Curtis col. 5, 11. 23-55; Nakata col. 2, 11. 6-19. The prior art indicates that it was known that respiring fruits and vegetables not only consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide, they also give off water vapor and, at least occasionally, ethylene. De Moor col. 1, 11. 9-16; Curtis col. 1, 11. 45-54; Nakata col. 1, 11. 32-37. According to Nakata, ethylene gas generated by fresh produce causes them to respire. Nakata col. 1, 11. 32-37. 6 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 As we stated above, De Moor teaches a bag with apertures and gas- permeab le membranes secured over the apertures. De Moor col. 5, 11. 27- 34; Figs. 1-2. The container may also be made from two preformed, relatively rigid, polymeric members that have been heat-sealed together and contain apertures with the gas permeable membrane secured over the apertures. De Moor col. 4, 11. 60-67. De Moor controls the concentration of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the package atmosphere using the combination of the apertures and the membrane. De Moor col. 2, 11. 45-56. The membrane is a microporous polymeric film and polymeric coating with an oxygen permeability (OTR), at all temperatures between 20° and 25° C., of at least 775,000 ml/m2•atm•24 hr (50,000 cc/I 00 inch2•atm•24 hr), preferably at least 1,550,000 ml/m2•atm•24 hr (100,000 cc/100 in2•atm•24 hr). De Moor col. 6, 11. 5-27. Thus, De Moor discloses an OTR in the range of the claim. Although De Moor does not disclose an oxygen permeability at 13 °C per kilogram of the respiring biological material or the ethylene permeability at 13°C per kilogram of the respiring biological material in the container (EtP13/kg), as found by the Examiner, Curtis and Nakata provide evidence that ethylene permeability as well as oxygen permeability were known result-effective variables that those of ordinary skill in the art would have optimized. Final 4. When optimizing, the ordinary artisan would have optimized the permeability in the membrane in the context of its use with the apertures of De Moor. That Nakata discloses some membranes that do not have the oxygen permeability required by claim 1 does not overcome the fact that the prior art as a whole supports a determination that optimizing the permeability of the membrane for use over the apertures of De Moor's 7 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 container would have led the ordinary artisan to permeability values with the ranges of the claim. Appellant does not provide convincing evidence to the contrary or rely on any evidence of unexpected results. As to the weight of the respiring biological material included in the containers, De Moor speaks of containers of conventional size, De Moor col. 2, 11. 20-27, and Schreiber discloses a shipping container packed with 40 lbs. ( 18 kg) of bananas, Schreiber abstract. Thus, the prior art suggests sizing De Moor's container in the sizes conventionally used to ship respiring fruits and vegetables such as bananas, i.e., in containers that can hold 18 kg of the fruits and vegetables. Appellant's arguments concentrate on what each of the references do not teach, but in so doing the arguments overlook what the references teach as a whole was known in the prior art and what was suggested to the ordinary artisan. Thus, Appellant's arguments are not persuasive. A preponderance of the evidence supports the Examiner's conclusion of obviousness. Claim 2 Claim 2 further limits the oxygen and ethylene permeability values, but, again, a preponderance of the evidence supports the Examiner's determination that the values of the claims would have been arrived at through routine experimentation. Appellant provides no evidence of unexpected results. Rejection B To reject claims 5, 10-12, and 14, the Examiner adds Herdeman and Sisler. Final 4--5. Appellant argues for the separate patentability of claims 10, 11, and 12. 8 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 Claim 12 We begin with claim 12, which is an independent claim. Claim 12 is directed to a method of ripening fruits by placing the sealed container in an atmosphere containing ethylene. The Examiner applies Herdeman as evidence that it was known in the art to rapidly ripen fruits, such as bananas, to produce a desired ripeness for delivery within a range of timing schedules using ethylene in a ripening room. Final 5. Appellant contends that the Examiner's rejection is based on improper hindsight reasoning. Appeal Br. 17-18. According to Appellant, Herdeman' s fruits and vegetables are not in a sealed container when exposed to ethylene and, thus, there is no suggestion to treat fruits and vegetables in a sealed container with ethylene. Id. Appellant does not cite to any particular portion of Herdeman to support a finding that Herdeman does not suggest placing the fruits and vegetables in sealed containers. Id. Appellant has not identified a reversible error in the Examiner's finding of a reason to place the sealed containers of De Moor in an atmosphere containing ethylene to ripen the fruit within the containers. Herdeman discloses ripening perishable products, such as bananas, while the fruit is in containers, e.g., "product-filled boxes 17." Herdeman col. 4, 11. 27-33. The fruit is loaded into the boxes upon harvesting and loaded into a combination shipping and ripening container as soon as possible after harvest. Herdeman col. 6, 11. 10-29. After loading and stabilizing the temperature so the product is cooled, a controlled low oxygen atmosphere may be provided to suppress ripening and then ethylene added to initiate ripening. Herdeman col. 7, 11. 13-33. Once ripening has been 9 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 uniformly commenced, it is preferred that the ethylene gas concentration be displaced with a low oxygen inert atmosphere to minimize further ripening during shipping. Id. If the delivery date changes, one can raise or lower the temperature and oxygen level as necessary to speed or slow ripening as desired. Herdeman col. 7, 1. 51-col. 8, 1. 5. Although Herdeman does not specify the structure of the boxes in which the fruit is stored, a preponderance of the evidence indicates that using sealed containers having gas permeable membranes was known in the art to store fruit and vegetables after picking. This is clear from the teachings of both De Moor and Herdeman, which provide evidence of the conventional methods used in picking, storing, shipping, and ripening of respiring fruit. The fruit is often picked when green, cooled, and packaged in sealed polymeric containers. De Moor col. 1, 1. 60-col. 2, 1. 2; Herdeman col. 1, 11. 18-52. It was known to use membranes that control the atmosphere within the container such that it delays ripening. De Moor col. 2, 11. 1-19; Herdeman col. 2, 11. 2-13. And after initial shipping, it was known to ripen the fruit in ripening rooms to complete the ripening process prior to final shipment to the retail market. Herdeman col. 1, 11. 37--42. The fact that Herdeman does not specifically disclose that the boxes 17 include gas permeable membranes does not negate the suggestion within the prior art as a whole for using such containers. Appellant has not identified a reversible error in the Examiner's rejection of claim 12. Claim 10 Appellant's argument against the rejection of claim 10 parallels the argument against the rejection of claim 12: That Herdeman's perishable 10 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 product is not in a sealed container when they are exposed to ethylene. Appeal Br. 19. For the reasons we state above, this argument does not identify a reversible error in the Examiner's rejection, which relies on De Moor as teaching a sealed container. Claim 11 Claim 11 requires the packaging atmosphere of the sealed container of claim 1 to contain exogenous ethylene, i.e., ethylene that is "not derived from the fruits which are being ripened." Spec. ,r 13. Appellant contends "[n]one of the references used in the first rejection (DeMoor, Schreiber, Curtis and Nakata) has any disclosure about a packaging atmosphere that contains exogenous ethylene." Appeal Br. 19. This argument does not take into account the suggestions within the prior art as a whole and the skill of the ordinary artisan. As found by the Examiner, Herdeman teaches using exogenous ethylene when ripening and De Moor teaches the basic container structure of Appellant's claim. Ans. 10. Curtis and Nakata suggest using a gas permeable membrane that permits ethylene to permeate. Curtis col. 4, 11. 45---60; Nakata col. 2, 11. 6-19. Although Curtis and Nakata disclose using the membrane to allow ethylene to escape the container, this is because Curtis and Nakata are concerned with delaying ripening during storage. Herdeman makes clear that adding ethylene will result in ripening. Herdeman col. 2, 11. 13-17. The prior art provides evidence that those of ordinary skill in the art understood that a film that is permeable to ethylene not only allows ethylene to escape, it allows ethylene to enter when the concentration of ethylene is higher in the atmosphere outside the container than in the container. See, 11 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 e.g., De Moor col. 1, 11. 9-24 ( discussing the correlation of oxygen and carbon dioxide concentration within the package with the concentration of the gases outside the package); Curtis col. 2, 11. 4--21 (stating that "the rate at which a specific gas permeates through a membrane is proportional to the difference between the concentrations of that specific gas on both sides of the permeable membrane"). The prior art as a whole provides a preponderance of evidence supporting obviousness. Appellant has not identified a reversible error in the Examiner's rejection of claim 11. Rejections C-E To reject claim 7, the Examiner relies on De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, and Sisler. Final 5---6. To reject claim 13, the Examiner relies on De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, Nakata, and Sisler. Final 6. To reject claim 15, the Examiner relies on De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, Nakata, Reilly, and Sisler. Final 6-7. Appellant does not argue the separate patentability of claims 7, 13, and 15. Appeal Br. 19-20. Thus, Appellant has not identified a reversible error in the Examiner's rejection of these claims. Rejection F Turning to the rejection of claims 16 and 18-21 as obvious over De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Herdeman, Nakata, Sisler, and Orman, Appellant focuses on the rejection of claim 16 and argues for the separate patentability of claim 21. Because we do not sustain the rejection of independent claim 16, we need only address the rejection of claim 16. Claim 16 is directed to a method of storing and/ or ripening a respiring biological material. Step (A) of the method requires providing a sealed 12 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 package containing a sealed container and, within the sealed container, at least 4 kg of a respiring biological material surrounded by a packaging atmosphere. Appeal Br. 26 ( claims appendix). The sealed container includes a pathway for oxygen and carbon dioxide to enter and leave the packaging atmosphere. Id. Claim 16 includes two steps of exposing the exterior of the atmosphere control member to atmospheres. Claim 16, steps (B) (first atmosphere) and (C) (second atmosphere). Id. The first and second atmospheres contain oxygen. For instance, the first atmosphere can have a lower oxygen content that retards ripening while the second atmosphere can have more oxygen and, optionally, ethylene to speed ripening. Spec. ,r,r 25- 26. Claim 16 requires the first and second atmosphere to differ from one another by at least 1 % in their content of at least one gas that will pass through the atmosphere control member. This "at least one gas" is an insecticide, a fungicide, or a mold-inhibiting compound. Claim 16. The Examiner relies on a finding that Orman teaches that it was known to protect fruits with fungicides. Final 7. The problem is that Orman fails to provide a suggestion for adding a fungicidal gas that will pass through an atmosphere control member as Orman teaches drenching fruit with a falling liquid fungicide. Orman col. 2, 11. 52-54. We agree with Appellant that the Examiner has failed to provide evidence supporting a reason to add a gaseous fungicide to the exterior atmospheres of claim 16. Appellant has identified a reversible error in the Examiner's rejection of claims 16 and 18-21. 13 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 In summary: 1--4, 6, 8 § 103(a) 5, 10-12, § 103(a) 14 7 § 103(a) 13 § 103(a) 15 § 103(a) 16, 18-21 § 103(a) Summa CONCLUSION De Moor, 1--4,6,8 Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata De Moor, 5, 10-12, 14 Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, Herdeman, Sisler De Moor, 7 Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, Sisler De Moor, 13 Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, Herdeman, Sisler De Moor, 15 Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, Herdeman, Sisler, Reill De Moor, Schreiber, Curtis, Nakata, Herdeman, Sisler, Orman 1-8, 10-15 DECISION The Examiner's decision is affirmed-in-part. 14 16, 18-21 16, 18-21 Appeal2018-000213 Application 14/480,625 TIME PERIOD FOR RESPONSE No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.I36(a)(l). AFFIRMED-IN-PART 15 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation