Ex Parte 5664110 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 28, 201790013591 (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. 90/013,591 09/18/2015 5664110 138507.00013 9949 64713 7590 08/29/2017 CAPITAL LEGAL GROUP, PLLC 1455 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20004 EXAMINER TARAE, CATHERINE MICHELLE ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3992 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/29/2017 PAPER 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 ____________________ Ex parte Cronos Technologies LLC ____________________ Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,1101 Technology Center 3900 ____________________ Before JAMES T. MOORE, BRETT C. MARTIN, and JAMES B. ARPIN, Administrative Patent Judges. MARTIN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL 1 Issued to Jonathan B. Green and William R. Pope on September 2, 1997 (hereinafter the ’110 patent). Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 2 STATEMENT OF CASE The Patent Owner appeals under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134(b) and 306 from the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1–3, 8–12, and 14–18. Claims 22, 24, 26–28, 30–32, 34, 41, 42, 44–46, 49, 50, 52–55, 57–66, 71–73, and 75 have been allowed during the reexamination. App. Br. 3. The aforementioned claims are the only claims pending in this reexamination. Id. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134(b) and 306. We are informed that the present appeal is related to three litigations that have concluded in U.S. District Court and are now pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, a list of which can be found in the Patent Owner’s Appeal Brief. App. Br. 2. We REVERSE. THE INVENTION The Patent Owner’s claims are directed “to a remote ordering system [that] enables the building of a database of user-discernable product or service identification information within a user-accessible device.” Spec. col. 1, ll. 6-9. Claim 1, reproduced below, is illustrative of the claimed subject matter: 1. A remote ordering terminal for providing at least one list of at least one item or group of items to a remotely located order processing system associated with one or more merchants on each of a plurality of occasions, each item or group of items having an item code associated therewith, said remote ordering terminal comprising: Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 3 user and/or merchant identifier means; at least one data entry device for providing said terminal with said item associated item codes and with data from said user and/or merchant identifier means; a database unit providing a user-specific database including user-discernable item data associated with item codes for user-selected items or groups of items; memory to provide storage for said user-specific database, said memory in communication with said at least one data entry device for storing said at least one list; communication means for associating said memory and said order processing system upon user command for remotely accessing said order processing system over a multi-user network, for transmitting said at least one list to said order processing system using said data from said user and/or merchant identifier means, and for receiving new and/or replacement user- discernable item data from said order processing system during association of said memory and said order processing system, said new and/or replacement user-discernable item data corresponding only to said at least one item or group of items of said at least one list; a message display portion in communication with said memory and said user-specific database for displaying order pertinent information including said user-discernable item data from said memory; and at least one command entry device responsive to user selection of items from said order pertinent information for assembling said at least one list and for enabling said user command, resulting in said transmitting of said at least one list to said order processing system, wherein said at least one list is comprised of an order to be processed by said order processing system, or a provisional order list transmitted to said order processing system, transmission of either resulting in on-demand receipt of said new and/or replacement user-discernable item data within said user-specific database for said at least one item or group of items. Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 4 REFERENCES The prior art relied upon by the Examiner in rejecting the claims on appeal is: Yourick US 4,775,935 Oct. 4, 1988 “Peapod User Manual Version 3.10” August 7, 1992 by Peapod, Inc. (hereinafter “Peapod”). “HP 150 Programmer’s Reference Manual,” June, 1984 by Hewlett Packard (hereinafter “HP 150”). REJECTIONS The Examiner made the following rejections: Claims 1–3, 8–12, 15, 17, and 18 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as being anticipated by Peapod. Ans. 6. Claim 14 stands rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Peapod and Yourick. Ans. 11. Claim 16 stands rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Peapod and HP 150. Ans. 13. ANALYSIS The Patent Owner “submits that Claims 1–3, 8–12, and 14–18 stand or fall together, so [Patent Owner’s] remarks will focus on independent claim 1.” App. Br. 9. We likewise will address only claim 1 and the remaining claims will stand or fall with our disposition of claim 1. The Patent Owner makes numerous arguments pointing to errors in the Examiner’s rejection of claim 1. On the whole, these arguments essentially relate to the Examiner’s interpretation of the term “user-specific Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 5 database” in claim 1 and how various limitations of the recited terminal then interact with the user-specific database. We will focus our analysis on this term. The Examiner has taken the position that the Personal List in Peapod meets the definition of a user-specific database. See, e.g., Ans. 20. The Examiner finds that the Personal list is merely a two-column array that includes an index and the item name for each item on the user’s personal list, but nonetheless asserts that this is sufficient to be considered a database, as claimed. Id. The Patent Owner argues that this use of Peapod’s Personal List is insufficient because the Personal List does not store all of the data that is displayed to the user, but that such data is merely retrieved from the main server for display. App. Br. 31. Despite the aforementioned finding that the Personal List stores only an index and an item name, the Examiner goes on to assert that “[e]ven if data such as price in the Personal Shopping List is pulled from a server when a user loads their saved Personal Shopping List, this is merely updating the data in the database.” Ans. 20. This assertion reveals the flaw in the Examiner’s interpretation of the user-specific database. The Examiner finds that the Personal List has only two fields for each item, but asserts that pulling additional information “is merely updating the data in the database.” Id. The database at issue in that statement must be the recited “user-specific database” to meet the language of claim 1, and, if that database, i.e., the Personal List, has only two fields, it is not possible for the recited “user-specific database” to be updated with price or any other information as would be required by the claim. Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 6 The claims do not merely require a “user-specific database” of any structure. As recited in claim 1, this user-specific database must be “for receiving new and/or replacement user-discernable item data from said order processing system” and must allow for “receipt of said new and/or replacement user-discernable data within said user-specific database.” The Patent Owner is correct that whatever is being displayed to the user in Peapod, such data is not stored in the “user-specific” database as recited in claim 1, which the Examiner equates to Peapod’s Personal List. At best, the Examiner’s use of the Personal List equates to the “at least one list” in claim 1, but fails to meet the additional features of the “user-specific database” as claimed. This can best be understood by comparing what we know about each of the two systems. As seen in Figure 2 of the ’110 patent, there are three databases – two merchant databases 14 at the host computer and RAM 34 at the user’s computer. This configuration makes clear that information can be stored in RAM 34, as well as in merchant databases 14. Furthermore, the effect of having both a local/user database and a merchant database may be seen in Figure 3. Below the list, the screen displays that “these prices may be out of date.” From this and the related disclosure, we can easily ascertain that all of the displayed information must be stored in RAM 34 for display to the user in an off-line setting or at least at a time before an update has occurred, which explains why the prices may be out of date. The next time the user logs into the system or requests an update, RAM 34 will then be updated with the most recent information from merchant databases 14. Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 7 Contrary to this configuration, all we know about Peapod is that it stores two items of information in its Personal List data file, which is on the user’s computer. While it is true that Peapod displays similar information as is shown in Figure 3 of the ’110 patent, such display is only described as being related to a point in time where the user is connected to the main database. See, e.g., Peapod 19–21. All of the disclosure in this portion of the reference relates to the user shopping for groceries, which is done when the user is connected to the host system. Absent some disclosure that specifically enables Peapod to display all of the information in that host- connected display by accessing data only from the Personal List, we cannot sustain the Examiner’s interpretation. The Patent Owner points out that the “Examiner is simply grasping with aim to equate the reference with her belief of how the Peapod system may have worked.” Reply Br. 8. The Patent Owner is correct that it “is the Examiner’s burden to identify the specific disclosure of the reference that discloses [the] claim element and it is NOT the Appellant’s burden to prove otherwise.” Id. at 9. We further agree with the Patent Owner that there is apparently “no evidence in Peapod that the Personal List stores any product related data other than information sufficient to identify the items.” Id. at 15. Because this additional data in the form of “user-discernable data,” as claimed, is not disclosed in Peapod as being stored in the Personal List, which the Examiner identifies as the “user-specific database,” we cannot sustain the Examiner’s rejection. The additional references do not cure this defect and so the rejections of all other claims fall with that of claim 1. Appeal 2017-009756 Reexamination Control 90/013,591 Patent US 5,664,110 8 DECISION For the above reasons, we REVERSE the Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1–3, 8–12, and 14–18. REVERSED Cu PATENT OWNER: CAPITAL LEGAL GROUP, PLLC 1455 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20004 THIRD PARTY REQUESTER: JACKSON WALKER LLP ATTN: Christopher J. Rourk 2323 Ross Avenue, Suite 600 Dallas, TX 75201 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation