Ex Parte MayerDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 22, 201212543580 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 22, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ Ex parte WILLIAM N. MAYER ____________________ Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 Technology Center 3700 ____________________ Before NEAL E. ABRAMS, LINDA E. HORNER, and KEN B. BARRETT, Administrative Patent Judges. BARRETT, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE William N. Mayer (Appellant) seeks our review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 of the Examiner’s rejection of claims 19-36 in reissue application 12/543,580, filed August 19, 2009. The reissue application seeks to reissue U.S. Patent 7,257,963 B2 (‘963 patent), issued August 21, 2007, based on application 10/440,859. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 2 THE INVENTION Appellant’s claimed invention pertains to a temperature controlled container, such as a shipping container. ‘963 patent, col. 1, ll. 38-52. Claim 19, reproduced below, is representative of the subject matter on appeal. 19. An apparatus defining a retention chamber and having sequential layers of (i) an inner phase change material having a melting point, (ii) an outer phase change material having a melting point which is different from the melting point of the inner phase change material, and (iii) a layer of thermal insulation. THE REJECTIONS The following Examiner’s rejections are before us for review: 1. Claims 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, and 35 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 251 as being an improper recapture of broadened claimed subject matter surrendered in the application for the patent upon which the present reissue is based1; 2. Claims 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, and 35 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 251 as being based upon a defective reissue declaration; 3. Claims 31 and 32 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph2, as being indefinite; and 1 The rejections of claims 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34, and 36 under 35 U.S.C. § 251 have been withdrawn. Ans. 4. 2 The Examiner’s Ground of Rejection refers to and quotes from the first paragraph of § 112. Ans. 7. However, the ground is articulated as one based upon indefiniteness (id. at 7-8; see also id. at 14) which falls under the second paragraph of § 112. Appellant recognizes that the rejection is based Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 3 4. Claims 19-36 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Roth (US 6,761,041 B2, iss. July 13, 2004) and Der Ovanesian (US 5,840,080, iss. Nov. 24, 1998). OPINION The Recapture and Defective Reissue Declaration Rejections Appellant argues the rejected claims as a group. App. Br. 8-9. We select claim 19 as representative, and claims 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, and 35 stand or fall with claim 19. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1)(vii) (2011). There is no dispute that independent reissue claim 19 is broader than the patent claims. Appellant acknowledges that reissue claim 19 lacks a limitation requiring a thermal insulation layer between the two layers of phase change materials, see App. Br. 8, but argues that he never relied upon the presence of the feature as a patentable distinction over the prior art. See App. Br. 8-9; Reply Br. 1-3. The Examiner maintains that Appellant, during the prosecution that led to the issuance of the ‘963 patent, amended claims or presented arguments directed to the sequential layering of the layers, including the insulation layer. See Ans. 5-6 (citing the Amendment of August 6, 2004, and the Appeal Brief of March 29, 2005). Thus, according to the Examiner, the insulation layer and the “sequential layering as a whole” relate to surrendered subject matter and their omission from the reissue claims constitutes impermissible recapture. See id. on indefiniteness. App. Br. 9-10. Therefore, the Examiner’s reference to the wrong paragraph of § 112 is harmless error. Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 4 We disagree with the Examiner. Reissue claim 19 retains, with the exception of the insulation layer between the two phase change material layers, the sequential layering aspect of issued patent claim 1. Therefore, we are not persuaded that “sequential layering as a whole” constitutes impermissibly broadened subject matter. As to the insulation layer itself, the Examiner has not adequately explained how Appellant surrendered that feature by amendment. See Ans. 5-6. As to the possible surrender by argument, we have reviewed the Appellant’s arguments relied upon by the Examiner – those in the Amendment and the Appeal Brief – but are not persuaded that Appellant presented arguments concerning the insulation layer that rise to the level of surrendering a claimed invention lacking that feature. However, the Examiner also points to another omitted feature as constituting improper recapture of surrendered subject matter. Ans. 13-14. Issued claim 1 of the ‘963 patent recites “wherein the retention chamber is fully encompassed by the inner phase change material.” This limitation is not included in reissue claim 19, and the Examiner persuasively explains how this represents improper recapture of subject matter surrendered by amendment. Id. Appellant does not address the Examiner’s findings or conclusion in this regard. Cf. App. Br. 8-9 (Appellant addressing only the elimination of the limitation of a thermal insulating layer between the layers of phase change material); Reply Br. 1-3 (Appellant focusing arguments on the eliminated insulation layer). Rather, Appellant addresses the elimination of the insulation layer by reference to an argument made during the prosecution of the parent application, and reiterates that the invention’s Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 5 ability to control the payload retention chamber temperature exclusively by the temperature of the inner phase change material is “achieved because only the inner phase change material is in direct contact with the payload retention chamber.” Reply Br. 2 (responding to the Examiner’s position regarding an argument made in the Appeal Brief dated Mar. 29, 2005, at 4- 5). The essence of that referenced argument made during the prior prosecution is that the exclusive control by the inner phase change material is due to the then-claimed arrangement where the retention chamber is fully encompassed by the inner phase change material. See App. Br. dated Mar. 29, 2005, filed in Appeal No. 10/440,859, at 4-5. As such, we see no error in the Examiner’s determination that the “fully encompassed” feature relates to surrendered subject matter. See Ans. 13-14. As noted by the Examiner, id., this “fully encompassed” feature has been entirely omitted from reissue claim 19. In light of the above, we affirm the Examiner’s rejection of claims 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, and 35 under § 251 for improper recapture of surrendered subject matter. The Examiner also rejected those same claims under § 251 as being based on a defective reissue declaration. Ans. 7. The underlying basis of the defective declaration rejection is, effectively, the same as that for the recapture rejection – that the narrow scope of the issued patent claims was not an error upon which a reissue can be based. Id. at 7, 14. Appellant does not offer separate arguments directed to this rejection but relies on the arguments made for the recapture rejection. App. Br. 9. As such, we affirm Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 6 also the Examiner’s rejection of claims 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, and 35 under § 251 as being based upon a defective reissue declaration. The Indefiniteness Rejection Claims 31 and 32 call for the difference between the melting points of the two phase change materials to be “several degrees Celsius.” The Examiner concluded that these claims are indefinite in that the boundaries of the claims are unclear due to this quoted phrase, particularly with regard to the upper limit of the temperature difference. Ans. 7-8, 14. Appellant contends that the term “several” means more than two (2) but “fewer than many,” and therefore is a term of degree. App. Br. 9-10. (citing WEBSTER’S AMERICAN DICTIONARY – COLLEGE EDITION, 2000). As an initial matter, we agree with the Examiner that construing the upper boundary as “fewer than many” is not helpful in ascertaining whether the scope of each of the claims is definite. See Ans. 14. Nonetheless, the pertinent issue raised by Appellant’s arguments is whether the Specification discloses to one of ordinary skill in the art adequate standards for determining the upper boundary of the scope the claim term of degree “several.” See App. Br. 9-10. We agree with the Examiner’s finding that the Specification does not provide such a standard. Ans. 7. Appellant points to the disclosure of an embodiment where the melting point difference is 4° C, and argues that this constitutes a standard for measuring the degree of flexibility provided by the term “several.” App. Br. 9-10 (citing Spec., col. 5, ll. 30-34). We do not find Appellant’s argument persuasive. The disclosed embodiment is merely one example, not a standard for evaluating whether a given melting point difference has a Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 7 magnitude of “several degrees Celsius.” We affirm the Examiner’s rejection of claims 31 and 32 as being indefinite. The Obviousness Rejection Appellant argues the rejected claims as a group. App. Br. 10-13. We select claim 19 as representative, and claims 20-36 stand or fall with claim 19. The Examiner found that Roth discloses Appellant’s claimed apparatus, including layers of inner and outer phase change materials and insulation, except that Roth does not disclose that the two phase change materials have different melting points. Ans. 8-9. The Examiner further found that Der Ovanesian teaches: a heat transfer device with two layers of high thermal capacity phase changing materials; that the two materials may be different; and that one material may act as a partial insulator prolonging the cooling effect while maintaining a relatively uniform surface temperature. Ans. 9. The Examiner reasons that it would have been obvious to modify Roth’s phase change materials to have different melting points “in order to prolong the cooling or heating effect while maintaining a relatively uniform surface temperature for a more even heat exchange in view of the teaching by Der Ovanesian.” Ans. 9. Appellant does not dispute the Examiner’s findings underlying the conclusion of obviousness. See App. Br. 10-12. Rather, Appellant asserts that neither reference provides a motivation to combine the references and that one of ordinary skill in the art would not have applied the teaching of Der Ovanesian to Roth. Id. at 12-13. We do not find Appellant’s arguments persuasive for the reasons set forth by the Examiner in the response to Appeal 2012-008458 Application 12/543,580 Patent 7,257,963 B2 8 argument section of the Answer. Ans. 14-17. We determine that the Examiner’s conclusion of obviousness is supported by adequate articulated reasoning with rational underpinning. The rejection of claims 19-36 as being unpatentable over Roth and Der Ovanesian is affirmed. DECISION The decision of the Examiner to reject claims 19-36 is affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv). AFFIRMED Klh Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation