Ex Parte JarvisDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMar 10, 201712433109 (P.T.A.B. Mar. 10, 2017) 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. 12/433,109 04/30/2009 Kelly B. Jarvis 005127.01242/08-1980 8431 115726 7590 03/14/2017 BANNER & WITCOFF, LTD & attorneys for client 005127 1100 13th STREET NW SUITE 1200 WASHINGTON, DC 20005 EXAMINER TEFERA, HIWOT E ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3637 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 03/14/2017 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): PTO-115726@bannerwitcoff.com nike_docketing @ cardinal-ip. com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte KELLY B. JARVIS Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 Technology Center 3600 Before LINDA E. HORNER, MICHAEL L. HOELTER, and FREDERICK C. LANEY, Administrative Patent Judges. HOELTER, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Kelly B. Jarvis (Appellant)1 seeks our review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 of the Examiner’s decision, as set forth in the Final Office Action, dated December 17, 2013 (“Final Act.”), rejecting claims 19, 22, 25—27, and 40- 47. Br. 2. Claims 1—18, 20, 21, 23, 24, and 28—39 have been canceled. See Amendment (dated November 27, 2013). Appellant’s representative participated in an oral hearing on February 28, 2017. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We REVERSE. 1 Appellant identifies NIKE, Inc. as the real party in interest. Br. 2. Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 RELATED APPEALS The application that is the subject of the present appeal is related to the following three applications, which are the subject of co-pending appeals, also argued at the oral hearing on February 28, 2017: (1) Appeal 2014-009814, Application 13/357,766; (2) Appeal 2014-009853, Application 12/433,097; and (3) Appeal 2014-009838, Application 13/357,727. Br. 2. Appellant also identifies the following additional related appeals: Appeal 2014-001216, Application 12/255,496 and Appeal 2015- 002833, Application 13/357,682. Br. 2-3. CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Appellant’s claimed subject matter relates to methods of manufacturing articles of footwear using rapid manufacturing technology. Spec. 12. Claims 19, 25, and 43 are independent. Claim 19 is illustrative of the subject matter on appeal and is reproduced below. 19. An article of footwear, comprising: an upper configured to receive a foot of a wearer, the upper including: (a) a first portion formed from a thermoplastic elastomer material and formed as multiple, successive layers of fuse bonded particles of the thermoplastic elastomer material in a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique with a laser at a first laser intensity, (b) a second portion formed from the thermoplastic elastomer material and formed as multiple, successive layers of fuse bonded particles of the thermoplastic elastomer material in the rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique with the laser at a second laser intensity, the second laser intensity being different from the first laser intensity, wherein the first portion of the upper includes a first set of mechanical properties and the second portion of the upper 2 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 includes a second set of mechanical properties, the second set of mechanical properties being different from the first set of mechanical properties due to use of the first laser intensity and the second laser intensity in the rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique, and wherein the first portion and the second portion of the upper are formed using a single rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique; and (c) a third portion formed from the thermoplastic elastomer material and formed as multiple, successive layers of fuse bonded particles of the thermoplastic elastomer material in the rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique with the laser at a third laser intensity, the third laser intensity being different from the first laser intensity and the second laser intensity, and wherein the third portion includes a third set of mechanical properties different from the first set of mechanical properties and the second set of mechanical properties due to use of the third laser intensity in the rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique; and a sole structure connected to the upper and including a midsole and an outsole. EVIDENCE The Examiner relies upon the following evidence in the Final Action: Clausen US 6,110,411 Aug. 29, 2000 Soon US 2003/0233771 A1 Dec. 25,2003 Duncan Graham-Rowe, Tailor-printed shoes will offer a perfect fit, 189 New Scientist iss. 2538, at 30 (2006) (“Graham-Rowe”). Appellant relies on the following evidence (Br. 11—12, 20—21, 28): Frank T. Piller, Prior 2 Lever: Footwear Customization with Rapid Manufacturing, Mass Customization & Open Innovation News (Apr. 20, 2006), http://mass- customization.de/2006/04/prior_2_lever_f.html (hereinafter “P2L 3 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 article”).2 * 4 REJECTION The Final Action rejects claims 19, 22, 25—27, and 40-47 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen. ANALYSIS We address independent claims 19, 25, and 43 separately. Claim 19 Claim 19 includes the limitations of “a first laser intensity,” “a second laser intensity,” “a first set of mechanical properties,” and, “a second set of mechanical properties.” Claim 19 also recites, “the second set of mechanical properties being different from the first set of mechanical properties due to use of the first laser intensity and the second laser intensity” in a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique. The Examiner relies on Soon for disclosing the limitations directed to different first and second sets of mechanical properties. Final Act. 2 (“the first portion (26) includes a first set of mechanical properties (wear resistance) and the second portion (20) has a second set of mechanical properties (soft flexible support)”); see also Ans. 2—3. However, the Examiner acknowledges that “Soon doesn’t teach . . . using different laser intensities to form the first, second, and third [sets of] mechanical properties.” Final Act. 3. On this point, the Examiner relies on Clausen’s 2 Appellant introduced this evidence into the Record by filing it in an Information Disclosure Statement on July 5, 2013. See also Br. 11, 20, 28. 4 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 discussion of “using [a] wide range of laser intensities” and “using laser sintering to enhance various properties such as stiffness.” Final Act. 3-4; see also Ans. 4. In summation, the Examiner finds that “by using a wide range of laser intensities, the mechanical properties were changed.” Final Act. 3-4 (referencing Clausen 9:14—19; 9:30-35, 10:21—24); see also Ans. 4. Accordingly, as per the Examiner, it would have been obvious “to use laser sintering at different laser intensities for the first, second, and third portion[s], in order to save time and money by reducing the time required to produce the upper portions compared to traditional footwear manufacturing techniques.”3 * 5Final Act. 4; see also Ans. 3. Appellant contends, “Clausen does not describe or suggest making an upper for an article of footwear having different portions with different mechanical properties due to use of different laser intensities during a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication process.” Br. 13; see also Br. 14. Appellant further contends, “Clausen’s discussion of laser intensities at column 9, lines 14-18 indicates that varying the laser intensities resulted in products with the same mechanical properties.” Br. 15. 3 The Examiner relies on Graham-Rowe for teaching “manufacturing shoes using selective laser sintering, which is a rapid manufacturing additive technique” and further on Clausen that “teaches manufacturing flexible articles from a thermoplastic elastomer comprising fusing the thermoplastic elastomer to form an integral layer and using a selective laser sintering process.” Final Act. 3; see also Ans. 3. 5 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 Regarding Appellant’s contention that “Clausen does not describe or suggest making an upper for an article of footwear,” the Examiner does not rely on Clausen for such teaching. See Final Act. 2-4. Hence, this portion of Appellant’s contention is not persuasive of Examiner error, and is not unlike arguing the art individually. However, we agree with Appellant that Clausen’s disclosure does not support the Examiner’s finding that Clausen teaches using a wide range of laser intensities to change the mechanical properties of a laser-sintered article. Br. 13; Final Act. 4. With regard to the Examiner’s reference to Clausen’s Example 1 (Final Act. 3 (referencing Clausen 9:14—19)), Clausen states, “[t]he sinterable powder was fused into articles using a wide range of laser intensities, and in all cases the articles had good physical integrity and could not be divided into separate layers by pulling or other types of deformations with force applied directly by hand.” This disclosure demonstrates only that varying laser intensity did not compromise the quality of the fused article. Clausen does not suggest in this passage a reason to vary laser intensities to form different portions of a fused article or to achieve different mechanical properties for these different portions (i.e., all intensities achieved the same “good physical integrity” property and Clausen does not indicate that a change in laser intensity resulted in a change in such properties). Likewise, with reference to Examples 3 and 9 relied upon by the Examiner (Final Act. 4 (referencing Clausen, 9:30-35, 10:18-24)), Clausen makes no specific mention of laser intensities. Clausen discloses only that the article of Example 3 was made using “[t]he powder of Example 1 [that] was sintered 6 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 under the conditions of Example 1, except an article having 36 layers . . . was formed” and that the article of Example 9 “was processed under the conditions described in Example 1 except that the laser was passed over the target 36 times.” Clausen, 9:30-35, 10:18-24. As understood, the number of passes of the laser over the target relates to the number of fused layers formed during creation of the article, and does not pertain to laser intensity. See also Final Act. 4 (“the laser was passed over the target 36 times”); Ans. 4-5. In view of the above, the Examiner’s reason to modify Soon and Graham-Rowe to use different laser intensities based on an asserted disclosure in Clausen of using different laser intensities to change mechanical properties of a laser-sintered article is not based on rational underpinnings. As such, we do not sustain the Examiner’s rejection of independent claim 19, or of its dependent claims 22, 41, and 42, under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen. While the above is dispositive, we elect to address additional arguments presented by Appellant. For example, Appellant contends that Soon does not disclose structure “formed as multiple, successive layers of fuse bonded particles of thermoplastic elastomer material in a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique.” Br. 9. Appellant further contends, “Soon makes absolutely no mention of creating any footwear parts using a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique.” Br. 9-10. Regarding the use of a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique, the Examiner relies on the teachings of Graham-Rowe and 7 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 Clausen for such teaching, not Soon. Final Act. 3; Ans. 3. The Examiner even states, “one cannot show nonobviousness by attacking references individually where the rejections are based on combinations of references.” Ans. 3. More specifically, and regarding that part of Appellant’s contention concerning “multiple, successive layers of fuse bonded particles” in a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique, the Examiner acknowledges that Soon fails to teach this limitation, but, as above, relies on Graham-Rowe and Clausen for such teaching. Final Act. 3. Nevertheless, Soon does teach the fabrication of footwear from thermoplastic elastomer material. Final Act. 2 (referencing Soon 134). Accordingly, Appellant’s focus on Soon for disclosing this limitation (and not the combination of Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen) is not persuasive of Examiner error. Appellant also argues, “Graham-Rowe does not even mention the footwear uppers, much less any process for making them.”4 Br. 11. However, in the Final Office Action, the Examiner relied upon Soon for teaching “an upper (15).” Final Act. 2; see also Soon 128, Figs. 1, 3 A. As stated in the Final Office Action, the Examiner relied on Graham-Rowe for teaching “manufacturing shoes using selective laser sintering, which is a rapid manufacturing additive technique.”5 * * 8Final Act. 3; see also Ans. 4. 4 Appellant reiterates, “[t]o the extent Graham-Rowe describes details of any shoe making process, Graham-Rowe only describes formation of the footwear sole structure.” Br. 11. 5 In the Examiner’s Answer, the Examiner further stated, “Graham-Rowe discloses the shoes (which broadly encompasses both upper and sole structure of the shoes).” Ans. 4. However, Appellant does not explain how 8 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 Regarding the method of manufacturing, Appellant does not dispute that selective laser sintering is a rapid manufacturing additive technique.* 6 * * 9 A further argument presented by Appellant is that “Clausen has absolutely no mention of footwear, shoes, or the upper and/or sole components thereof.” Br. 12—13. There is general agreement that Clausen itself does not mention footwear, shoes, uppers, or soles. However, Clausen was not relied on by the Examiner for such teachings, instead, Clausen was relied on for teaching the manufacture of “flexible articles from a thermoplastic elastomer” involving fusing layers thereof, and further (incorrectly as noted above) for “using a wide range of laser intensities” to change mechanical properties. Final Act. 3^4. Thus, Appellant’s contention regarding Clausen’s failure to mention footwear (and the like) is not, of itself, persuasive of Examiner error. In summation, and as repeated supra, we do not sustain the rejection of independent claim 19, or of its dependent claims 22, 41, and 42, under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen. Claim 25 Like claim 19 above, claim 25 includes limitations directed to “a first laser intensity,” “a second laser intensity,” “a first set of mechanical Soon fails to expressly disclose and depict a shoe upper. 6 Appellant’s Specification states, “[i]n at least some examples, the upper and/or sole structure may be formed using rapid manufacturing techniques, such as laser sintering, solid deposition modeling, stereolithography, and the like.” Spec. 120 (emphasis added). 9 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 properties,” and “a second set of mechanical properties.” Also as above, claim 25 recites, “the second set of mechanical properties being different from the first set of mechanical properties due to use of the first laser intensity and the second laser intensity” in a rapid manufacturing additive fabrication technique. As with claim 19, the Examiner improperly relies on Clausen for teaching the use of different laser intensities to change mechanical properties of a laser-sintered article. Final Act. 3^4. Appellant disputes this finding as indicated supra, and, as above, we agree with Appellant that such teaching is not based on rational underpinnings. Consequently, we do not sustain the rejection of independent claim 25, or of its dependent claims 26, 27, and 40, under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen. We further wish to address language specific to claim 25, i.e., a “third portion of the upper is a collar region of the upper.” On this point, the Examiner identifies Soon’s rib 23 as corresponding to this claimed third portion and finds that Soon’s rib 23 is “in the collar region of the upper.”7 * * 10 Final Act. 3. Appellant disagrees with the Examiner stating, “ribs 23 of the Soon structure do not make up a ‘collar region’ of an upper.” Br. 17. The 7 In the Examiner’s Answer, the Examiner states, “[t]he ribs 23 are located around the area/region surrounding the collar, it extends from the lateral side of the shoe to the top of the collar as shown in figure 2C and this is a collar region of the footwear.” Ans. 6 (emphasis added). As understood, the “this” the Examiner references is the top shoe region into which the rib extends, not that rib 23 is itself the collar region. 10 Appeal 2014-009689 Application 12/433,109 claim language in question is not “in” or “make up,” but instead is “is.” The Examiner is not persuasive that Soon’s rib 23, as depicted and described in Soon, is anything more than just a small part of what may possibly encompass (“make up”) a broad understanding of a collar region of Soon’s shoe. Accordingly, it is unreasonable to equate (“is”) Soon’s rib 23 with Soon’s collar region. Consequently, the Examiner’s findings are not based on rational underpinnings and as such (including our discussion of laser intensity above), we do not sustain the rejection of independent claim 25, or of its dependent claims 26, 27, and 40, under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen. Claim 43 Claim 43, like claims 19 and 25 above, also includes limitations directed to the use of different laser intensities resulting in different mechanical properties. For similar reasons previously expressed, we do not sustain the rejection of independent claim 43, or of its dependent claims 44— 47, under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Soon, Graham-Rowe, and Clausen. DECISION The decision of the Examiner to reject claims 19, 22, 25—27, and 40— 47 is REVERSED. REVERSED 11 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation