Ex Parte MolaDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 28, 201713231299 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 28, 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. 13/231,299 09/13/2011 Michele Mola BAT //PI 1600US00 2559 22885 7590 08/30/2017 MCKEE, VOORHEES & SEASE, P.L.C. 801 GRAND AVENUE SUITE 3200 DES MOINES, IA 50309-2721 EXAMINER YAARY, ERIC ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1747 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/30/2017 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): patatty@ipmvs.com michelle. woods @ ipmvs. com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte MICHELE MOLA Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,2991 Technology Center 1700 Before ADRIENE LEPIANE HANLON, CHUNG K. PAK, and SHELDON M. McGEE, Administrative Patent Judges. McGEE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134, Appellant appeals from the Examiner’s rejections under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) of claims 1 and 5—19. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6. We AFFIRM. 1 Appellant identifies the real party in interest as British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited. App. Br. 1. Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 BACKGROUND The subject matter on appeal is directed to a smokeless oral product comprising a pouch made of a permeable material, and a smokeless oral material such as tobacco contained within said pouch. Spec. 1 8. Claim 1 is illustrative, is taken from the Claims Appendix of the Appeal Brief, and appears below. 1. A smokeless oral product, comprising: a woven permeable pouch composed of a woven polylactide material having a porosity greater than 5% and less than 45%, and smokeless oral material disposed within an interior of the woven permeable pouch, the woven permeable pouch being configured to allow passage of saliva into and out of the woven permeable pouch when the woven permeable pouch is in a user’s oral cavity. REFERENCES The Examiner relies on the following references as evidence of unpatentability: Summers US 4,817,640 Apr. 4, 1989 Robertson US 5,300,319 Apr. 5, 1994 Suzuki US 2003/0099791 A1 May 29, 2003 Engstrom US 2008/0302682 A1 Dec. 11,2008 Bayon US 2009/0036907 A1 Feb. 5, 2009 Gerardi US 2010/0018541 A1 Jan. 28, 2010 Zhuang US 2010/0218779 A1 Sept. 2,2010 Mitsukawa JP 2010-150688 July 08, 2010 (machine and formal translations) 2 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 REJECTIONS ON APPEAL I. Claims 1, 5, 8—13, and 16—18 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Zhuang in view of Mitsukawa and Engstrom (Final Act. 2—3); II. Claim 6 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Zhuang in view of Mitsukawa, Engstrom, and Gerardi (Final Act. 3 4); III. Claim 7 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Zhuang in view of Mitsukawa, Engstrom, and Summers (Final Act. 4); IV. Claims 14 and 15 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Zhuang in view of Mitsukawa, Engstrom, and Suzuki (Final Act. 4); and V. Claim 19 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Zhuang in view of Mitsukawa, Engstrom, and Robertson or Bayon (Final Act. 4—5). STATEMENT OF THE CASE The Examiner finds that Zhuang teaches all of the limitations of claim 1, except for the recitation that the pouch is composed of a woven polylactide material having a porosity greater than 5% and less than 45%. Final Act. 2—3. The Examiner relies on the disclosure of Mitsukawa and Engstrom for these limitations, and concludes that the skilled artisan would have found it obvious “to use the polylactide fibers for the woven pouch material taught by Zhuang to yield the same, predictable result of a conventional permeable woven fabric, as well as a material that is suitable for tea bags and coffee filters.” Id. at 3. Regarding the recited porosity limitation, the Examiner concludes that [i]t would have been obvious to use this porosity in modified Zhuang to yield the same, predictable result of a conventional porosity for a tobacco pouch, such that saliva can pass through the pouch and the flavors and juices from the filling material 3 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 contained within [the] pouch can be drawn out and into the user’s mouth, as desired by Zhuang [0016]. Id. Appellant presents specific arguments against Rejection I as a group. App. Br. 7—16; Reply Br. 2—7. Therefore, we select claim 1 as representative and decide the propriety of this rejection based on this claim. 37C.F.R. §41.37(c)(i)(iv). OPINION Rejection I We are not persuaded that Appellant’s arguments identify reversible error. In re Jung, 637 F.3d 1356, 1365—66 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (explaining the Board’s long-held practice of requiring Appellants to identify the alleged error in the Examiner’s rejection). We, therefore, sustain the § 103 rejections advanced in this appeal based on the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and rebuttals to arguments well-expressed by the Examiner in the Final Action and in the Answer. We add the following comments for emphasis and completeness. Appellant’s arguments fail for several key reasons. First, we observe that Appellant does not address, and thus does not reveal error in, the Examiner’s rationale that the skilled artisan would have been motivated to employ the polylactide woven fibers disclosed in Mitsukawa into Zhuang’s oral pouch “to yield the same, predictable result of a conventional permeable woven fabric.” Final Act. 3. Moreover, many of the arguments presented by Appellant (App. Br. 9—12; Reply Br. 2—5) rest on a flawed reading of Zhuang. Namely, Appellant asserts that “Zhuang does not disclose that a tobacco pouch is 4 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 made from just any tea bag materials, but rather that the outer web of the multi-web pouch is made from a cellulose fiber material like the type of cellulose fiber used for tea bag paper.” App. Br. 9. Thus, Appellant contends that “only use of paper materials is suggested by Zhuang as a suitable material to be selected from tea bags and/or coffee filters as candidates for tobacco pouch outer web materials.” Id. at 11. Zhuang, however, broadly discloses that “the web 12 comprises an outer web 20 that is formed of a permeable or semi-permeable material.'1'’ Zhuang 116 (emphasis added). Zhuang then goes on to discuss several preferred embodiments wherein the outer web 20 comprises paper, and exemplifies cellulose fiber materials such as tea bag material. Id. at 117. Zhuang also states that the outer web 20 is “[djesirably” made from materials that are “suitable for contact with food,” and lists several of such preferred materials including films, food casings, biopolymers, woven and non-woven fabrics, and paper such as filter paper used in tea bags and coffee filters. Id. (emphasis added). Then, Zhuang discloses that it is desirable for the outer web to have properties such as water permeability and/or porosity. Id. (emphasis added). Therefore, while Zhuang may express a preference for paper products in some embodiments, Zhuang also identifies woven and non-woven fabrics as preferred porous materials that are used in the packaging and handling of foods, and further expresses the overall desirability to use a material that is water-permeable and/or porous. In view of this teaching, we agree with the Examiner that the skilled artisan would have understood that any of the disclosed preferred porous materials for the outer web 20, such as a woven fabric, would be suitable to achieve Zhuang’s purpose of preparing an oral smokeless tobacco product, and that the skilled artisan would have been 5 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 motivated to use known porous woven fabrics suitable for contact with food, including the polylactide fabric taught by Mitsukawa. Ans. 6. Thus, Appellant’s arguments attempting to limit Zhuang’s disclosure to a preferred embodiment employing cellulose or paper products are not persuasive of reversible error. We also find Appellant’s arguments (App. Br. 12—13; Reply Br. 5—6) that polylactide fibers are unsuitable for uses at high temperatures unpersuasive. Appellant has pointed to no objective evidence to support this contention, and “[ajttorney’s argument in a brief cannot take the place of evidence.” In re Pearson, 494 F.2d 1399, 1405 (CCPA 1974). Moreover, this argument ignores that Mitsukawa teaches that its polylactide fibers are used in the manufacture of articles that are heat resistant, such as extraction vessels for tea or coffee. Mitsukawa Tflf 3, 5, 10, 23. Appellant’s arguments regarding the alleged impact of heat treatment on the polylactide fibers (App. Br. 13—14) are likewise unpersuasive. Before we discuss the substance of this argument, however, we observe that Appellant makes a misleading statement regarding the Examiner’s failure to provide a formal translation of the Mitsukawa reference. Id. at 14. Based on this erroneous assertion, Appellant contends that the Examiner “failed to counter the evidence of non-obviousness provided by Appellant.” Id. The record, however, clearly indicates that the Examiner provided Appellant with a formal translation of the Mitsukawa reference with the Advisory Action dated August 20, 2015, and that Appellant even acknowledged receipt of such formal translation in their “Pre-Appeal Brief Request for Review” dated September 28, 2015. Accordingly, because Appellant was in possession of the formal translation of the Mitsukawa reference before the filing of the Appeal Brief, and because Appellant fails to explain why their 6 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 arguments regarding the formal translation (Reply Br. 6) could not have been raised in the Appeal Brief, we consider the arguments made in the Reply Brief regarding the formal translation untimely and decline to consider them. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(l)(iv) (explaining that “[ejxcept as provided for in §§ 41.41, 41.47 and 41.52, any arguments or authorities not included in the appeal brief will be refused consideration by the Board for purposes of the present appeal.”); see also Ex parte Borden, 93 USPQ2d 1473, 1474 (BPAI2010) (Informative) (explaining that under the previous rules, which are similar to the current rules, “the reply brief [is not] an opportunity to make arguments that could have been made in the principal brief on appeal to rebut the Examiner’s rejections, but were not.”). Turning now to the substance of the argument, Appellant contends that the disclosure of Mitsukawa is inconsistent with that of Zhuang in that Mitsukawa teaches that the fabric structure hardens during the calendaring process, while Zhuang teaches that the pouch products are treated to soften the web during use. App. Br. 13—14. Thus, Appellant argues that Mitsukawa teaches away from using polylactide fibers in an oral tobacco product. Id. at 13. This argument does not reveal reversible error. As correctly found by the Examiner and further supported by the formal translation of Mitsukawa, the portion of Mitsukawa relied on by Appellant (Mitsukawa 114) relates to the curing of the fibers, not their hardening. Ans. 7. Also, as correctly found by the Examiner, paragraphs 19 and 20 of the formal translation of Mitsukawa discusses the softness of the fiber structure. Id. at 7—8. Moreover, even if we were to consider Appellant’s argument that “Mitsukawa is designed to prevent softening of the container” because it leads to clogging (Reply Br. 6) as timely, it would be unpersuasive because 7 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 Appellant fails to point to any disclosure in Mitsukawa or provide any evidence that demonstrates that Mitsukawa’s pouch fibers cannot be “soft” while also being functional for its intended purpose. In this regard, Mitsukawa expresses a preference for denier sizes between 15.0—84.0 dtex, with denier sizes below 15.0 dtex exhibiting “good softness,” but being “prone to” fibers loosening, while denier sizes over 84 dtex “may” lead to clogging. Mitsukawa 120. Such statements of possible considerations the skilled artisan may face when employing polylactide fibers do not evince that Mitsukawa’s polylactide fibers would render Zhuang’s pouch unsatisfactory for its intended use. We also discern no persuasive merit in Appellant’s argument (App. Br. 15; Reply Br. 7) that the skilled artisan would not have been motivated to consult Engstrom’s disclosure regarding porosity because Engstrom is directed to non-woven pouches. Appellant’s argument amounts to no more than a conclusory assertion that, because Engstrom fails to teach woven tobacco pouches, it would not have been predictable to use the porosities disclosed therein. Such unembellished assertions do not identity reversible error. Appellant has not shown how Engstrom’s disclosure regarding acceptable porosity values could not have been predictably implemented in the modified Zhuang pouch. Specifically, Zhuang teaches that the pouch should be “formed of a permeable or semi-permeable material, such that saliva can pass through the outer web” and the “filling material contained within the interior of the pouch product [] can be drawn out of the pouch and into the user’s mouth.” Zhuang 116. Zhuang discloses preferred porous materials including both woven and non-woven fabrics. Id. at 117. Thus, we agree with the Examiner that, because Engstrom teaches conventional porosity values in a tobacco pouch “for the proper balance between solid 8 Appeal 2016-006028 Application 13/231,299 particles escaping and free exchange of water soluble substances[, one] of ordinary skill in the art would have found this teaching to be relevant to [Zhuang’s] tobacco pouches that are both woven and non-woven.” Ans. 8. Finally, we observe that Appellant’s arguments (Reply Br. 4) regarding the safety of polylactide fabrics are untimely because Appellant fails to explain why such arguments could not have been raised in the Appeal Brief. We, therefore, decline to consider them. 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(l)(iv); Ex parte Borden, 93 USPQ2d at 1474. Thus, for the reasons expressed by the Examiner and above, we sustain Rejection I. Rejections II—V For these rejections, Appellant appears to rely on substantially the same arguments as those presented for Rejection I, because Appellant restates the rejections and makes conclusory assertions that the additional references relied upon “fail[] to make up for the deficiencies” of Zhuang, Mitsukawa and Engstrom cited in Rejection I. App. Br. 16—20. We have found no such deficiencies. Therefore, for the same reasons expressed with respect to Rejection I, we sustain Rejections II—V. SUMMARY The Examiner’s final decision to reject claims 1 and 5—19 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)(1). AFFIRMED 9 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation