Ex Parte EmmertDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardJul 21, 201613900336 (P.T.A.B. Jul. 21, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 13/900,336 05/22/2013 34431 7590 07/25/2016 HANLEY, FLIGHT & ZIMMERMAN, LLC 150 S. WACKER DRIVE SUITE 2200 CHICAGO, IL 60606 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR David R. Emmert 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. 2009811002-2 8526 EXAMINER NORDMEYER, PATRICIA L ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1788 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 07/25/2016 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): mailroom@hfzlaw.com jflight@hfzlaw.com mhanley@hfzlaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte DAVID R. EMMERT Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 Technology Center 1700 Before KAREN M. HASTINGS, JEFFREY R. SNAY, and LILAN REN, Administrative Patent Judges. REN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellant1 appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from a rejection2 of claims 1-30. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm. 1 The Real Party in Interest is identified as R.R. Donnelly & Sons. (Appeal Brief, filed July 02 2014 ("App. Br."), 2.) 2 Final Office Action mailed March 06 2014 ("Final Rejection"; cited as "FR."). 100~ r 2.A Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 A. Introduction3 OPINION The subject matter on appeal relates to "forms that include ... removal hang tags." (Spec. ii 14.) Figures 1 and 6 of the '336 Specification are reproduced below: 128·· 132 112/ 140-· 4A~ 116 142 ~~[PO[R;~~ [©~~] 150-, ·20 1"18-' J .... _1 . 12£>< -122 142 1:m:>;,s02) o rr;g~~ 11ofr©!l.lil®] ---... -108 i---- -- --- - ~ ------- --- -- --- -----: 100--. 102· 116- ~120 118-' 136 128 122 142 134 [gj;~~DW':?.~~ ~b:~lP-'01%~~ ~14 -140 140·- -~- [!])~\t:>] .-110[©~@] '·-140 106 108 -- 150'\ -- --- -- -- -- ' rJ.._____:::_:L_ ........... _mJ_-148 ---JI ,l 48 ,.___J FIG. 1 of the '336 Specification illustrating a plan view of an example removable hang tag. (Spec. ii 6.) FIG. 6 of the '336 Specification illustrating a plan view of an alternative example removable hang tag. (Spec. ii 11.) Figure 1 of the '336 Specification illustrates "an example substrate 100 having a first face 102 and a second face 104." (Spec. ii 18.) Substrate 100 includes "a first line of weakness 106 and a second line of weakness 3 Application 13/900,336, Forms Containing a Removable Hang Tag and Methods of Producing the Same, filed May 22 2013. We refer to the '"336 Specification," which we cite as "Spec." 2 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 108, which is formed in the substrate 100 adjacent to the first line of weakness 106 and coupled to the first line of weakness 106 at a first junction 110." (Id.) Figure 1 illustrates "a third line of weakness 112 that is coupled to the first line of weakness 106 and a fourth line of weakness 114 that is coupled to the second line of weakness 108." (Id.) "A fifth line of weakness 116 is formed in the example substrate 100 distal to the first line of weakness 106, and a sixth line of weakness 118 is formed in the example substrate 100 distal to the second line of weakness 108." (Id.) "The fifth line of weakness 116 and the sixth line of weakness 118 are coupled at a second junction 120." (Id.) Substrate 100 further includes "a fold line 122 . . . between the first junction 110 and the second junction 120." (Id.) In the example illustrated in Figure 1, the "seventh line of weakness 124 is adjacent the third line of weakness 112 and the fifth line of weakness 116." (Id.) "The eighth line of weakness 126 is adjacent the fourth line of weakness 114 and the sixth line of weakness 118." (Id.) As "a removable portion" is removed from "[t]he seventh line of weakness 124 and the eighth line of weakness 126," substrate 100 may therefore be suspended from "an interior rear view mirror of a vehicle" through an opening created by the removal. (Id. iJ 27.) The alternative embodiment illustrated in Figure 6 is similar to that of Figure. 1. In the alternative embodiment, however, "[t]he seventh line of 3 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 weakness 600 and the eighth line of weakness 602 are not directly coupled to any of the first through sixth lines of weakness." (Id. iJ 29.) Independent claims 1, 15, and 19, respectively reproduced below, are illustrative of the claimed subject matter: Claim 1 recites: 1. A form comprising: a substrate having a first face and a second face, the substrate comprising a central area and a perimeter matrix that surrounds the central area; a first line of weakness formed in the substrate; a second line of weakness formed in the substrate adjacent to the first line of weakness and coupled to the first line of weakness at a first junction; a third line of weakness formed in the substrate and coupled to the first line of weakness; a fourth line of weakness formed in the substrate and coupled to the second line of weakness; a fifth line of weakness formed in the substrate distal to the first line of weakness; a sixth line of \"1eakness formed in the substrate distal to the second line of weakness and coupled to the fifth line of weakness at a second junction; a fold line formed on the substrate between the first junction and the second junction, wherein the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth lines of weakness define the central area and the perimeter matrix and the fold line divides the central area into a first side and a second side; and a seventh line of weakness and an eighth line of weakness, wherein the seventh and eighth lines of weakness are coupled to the fold line, and form a removable portion to be removed to create an opening for suspending the form. Claim 15 recites: 15. A form comprising: 4 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 a substrate having a first face and a second face, the substrate compnsmg: a first line of weakness formed on the substrate to separate a central area and a perimeter matrix, the perimeter matrix at least partially surrounding the central area; a fold line formed on the central area to divide the central area into a first side and a second side; and a second line of weakness and a third line of weakness at least partially formed within the central area, the second and third lines of weakness being coupled to the first line of weakness, the second and third lines of weakness form opposing removable portions that are symmetric about the fold line, wherein, when the central area is folded about the fold line and the opposing removable portions are removed, the second and third lines of weakness substantially align to create an opening for suspending the form. Claim 19 recites: 19. An apparatus comprising: a substrate having a first face and a second face, the substrate comprising: a first line of weakness formed on the substrate to separate a central area and a perimeter matrix, the perimeter matrix at least partially surrounding the central area; a fold line formed on the central area to divide the central area into a first side and a second side; and a second line of weakness and a third line of weakness at least partially formed within the central area, the second and third lines of weakness being symmetric about a lateral axis of the substrate and a longitudinal axis of the substrate, the second and third lines of weakness being coupled to the first line of weakness or the fold line, wherein, when the central area is folded about the fold line and the removable portions are removed, the second and third lines of weakness substantially align to create an opening for suspending the form. 5 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 (Claims Appendix, App. Br. 27, 30 (emphases added to highlight key limitations).) The Examiner maintains the following grounds of rejection: 4 A. Claims 1-25 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Haas et al., (U.S. Patent No. 6,197,396 Bl, issued March 6, 2001 ). Al. Claims 26 and 28 (dependent from claim 1) stand rejected under 35 U.S.C § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Haas and Kernan (U.S. Patent No. 2,076,149) (issued April 6, 1937). A2. Claims 29 and 30 (dependent from claim 1) stand rejected under 35 U.S.C § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Haas and Banks et al., (U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2004/0091659 Al, published May 13, 2004). A3. Claim 2 7 (dependent from claim 1) stands rejected under 35 U.S.C § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Haas, Kernan, and Hawes (U.S. Patent No. 4,508,365, issued April 2, 1985). B. Claims 1-25 stand rejected on the ground of non-statutory double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-32 of Emmert (U.S. Patent No. 8,455,074 B2, issued June 4, 2013). B. Discussion Findings of fact throughout this Opinion are supported by a preponderance of the evidence of record. 4 Examiner's Answer mailed July 25, 2014 ("Ans."). 6 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 Rejection A: Claim 15 With regard to the obviousness rejection of claim 1 based on Haas, the dispositive issue is whether the Examiner has shown that a form having "seventh and eighth lines of weakness [that] are coupled to the fold line" is present in or would have been obvious in view of the applied prior art. The cited reference Haas discloses an "identification card strip assembly" that may "pass through ... a laser printer." (Haas, 3, 11. 13, 19- 20.) This particular assembly includes "a support strip" and "a plurality of identification card blanks removably and adhesively adhered to the support strip." (Id. at 3, 11. 17-18.) "The card blank includes a first sheet and a second sheet foldably connected to each other along a fold line." (Id. at 3, 11. 25-27.) Haas discloses that each sheet also includes an "identically shaped aperture": so that when the card blank is removed from the support strip and the sheets are folded along the fold line upon each other \"1ith the adhesive surfaces joined to each other, the first sheet and second sheets are substantially superimposed upon each other and substantially coextensive with each other and the apertures in each sheet overlay each other to form a mounting means for mounting the card on an object. (Id. at 3, 11. 30-37.) 5 Appellant does not contest Rejection A as applied to any of claims 15, 17 and 18, (see App. Br. 10), which therefore we summarily sustain. With regard to Rejection A, appellant argues only claims 1, 16 (which depends from claim 15), 19 and 20. (App. Br. 11-20). We decide the propriety of Rejection A as applied to claims 2-14 based on representative claim 1. Claims 16, 19 and 20 are separately addressed, with claims 21-25 standing or falling with claim 19 from which they depend. Rejections Al and A2 are not separately contested (see generally App. Br.), and therefore stand or fall with Rejection A of claim 1. 7 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 In particular, figures 5 and 6 of Haas (reproduced below) illustrate "an identification card strip assembly 20" which includes "support strip 22" having "perforations 44 along the longitudinal edges of the strip 22 to permit driving the strip through an associated printer device 46." (Id. at 5, 11. 3-8.) "[E]ach identification card blank 24 has a front printing surface 26 for printing indicia 28 thereon[.]" (Id. at 5, 11. 17-19.) Haas further discloses: Each sheet 34, 36 is of a size and shape and each aperture 40 is located in each sheet 34, 36 so that when the card blank 24 is removed from the support strip 22 and the sheets are folded along the fold line 38 upon each other with the adhesive surfaces 30 [not shown] joined to each other, the first sheet 34 and second sheet 3 6 are substantially superimposed upon each other and substantially coextensive with each other and the apertures 40 in each sheet 34, 36 overlay each other to form a mounting means for mounting the card 24 on an object, for example a rear view mirror. (Id. at 5, 11. 26-35 (cited in FR. 5).) 8 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 FIG. 5 FIG. 5 of Haas illustrating "a plurality of the card badges ... being printed." (Haas, 4, 11. 20-21.) FIG. 6 FIG. 6 of Haas illustrating a plurality of card badges being printed. (Haas, 4' 11. 18-21.) In addition to these figures, Haas provides multiple alternative embodiments showing that "apertures 40 may be located at any appropriate place in the card blank 24." (Haas, 5, 11. 36-39 (cited in FR. 5).) For example, figures 12 andl3 (reproduced below) illustrate sheets 34 and 36 each having "a fold line 3 8" and "at least one substantially identically shaped aperture area 50 therein in the shape of an aperture 52, the aperture area 50 being defined by a continuous slit 54 ... severable from the sheet[ s] 34, 36." (Haas, 5, 11. 42--47, 51.) 9 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 FIG. 12 FIG. 12 of Haas illustrates a perspective view of a parking permit on a rear view mirror of a car. (Haas, 4, 11. 36-39.) FIG. 13 -"" 20·_/ r-:~·:·~·-·:-:-:-~··.--.--] 54 I ,___...... . /. i Lj i ·-}:,;:..:. ~·.>":=:~::·:. .' , .. j ~.% ! " ~. ~ ~ >A ! l :!$$ L-~----~----~----~---------~--::.,--.-·----·----·-----·----·-J $*"···· '·"· $'!G ~ Appellant's annotated figure based on FIG. 1 of the '336 Specification (App. Br. 21.) Similar to the arguments for claim 1, Appellant again argues that there is no motivation to modify Haas. (App. Br. 21.) For the reasons discussed with regard to claim 1, we find that a skilled artisan would have found the limitation "second and third lines of weakness being coupled ... the fold line" obvious. For the limitation of the "second and third lines of weakness being coupled to [a] first line of weakness," we find that based on Haas' teaching that the "aperture 40" shown in figure 5 "may be located at any appropriate place" (Haas, 5, 11. 36-37) and that the aperture may intersect one of the two vertical edges of the form, a skilled artisan would have had the skill to implement the aperture at a different one of the two edges to arrive at an 14 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 apparatus encompassed by claim 19. The rejection of claim 19 is therefore affirmed. 9 Rejection A: Claim 20 Claim 20, which depends from claim 19 additionally recites "wherein the second and third lines of weakness intersect at the fold line." (Claims Appendix, App. Br. 30.) Because we find that a skilled artisan would have found the limitation that the "lines of weakness are coupled to the fold line" obvious in light of Haas, we find that the skilled artisan would have known how to implement a predictable variation such that - when lines of weakness are both coupled to a fold line - the lines of weakness may intersect at the fold line to which they are coupled. See KSR, 550 U.S. at 417. Rejection A3: Claim 27 Claim 27 depends from claim 26 which is a dependent claim of claim 2 which depends from claim 1. The dispositive issue is whether the Examiner has shown that a form having a tab that "is folded and coupled to the second side to couple the first side and the second side in an opposed configuration" and also "comprising a line of weakness between [a] tab and [a] first side" is present in or would have been obvious in view of the combined teachings of Haas, Kernan, and Hawes. Kernan teaches a tag having two panels that may be closed using a tab as shown in the reproduced figures below: 9 We note that, similar to claim 16 (based on its dependency from claim 15), the limitation of the "second and third lines of weakness being coupled to [a] first line of weakness" is also recited in claim 19. Our discussion in fn. 8 is therefore also applicable to claim 19. 15 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 (:~.l -«'"-·, \,~i'c.vr t) .- .... --~ _.-·· -..... ._., .. '>..·-...._ '·-..,_. ~ .... -',.~, •• /· ~ -· i" . ~/ ...... · ., \ '\ l ,1 \ ~ ,, ' 1' ', .J.~~:~--···,_ ('· . . i . .... ./ i \ -..,,~ :>:__,,,...- # ~~~/;--J ..... --r~- (.-·/ .. ~···· . ·.----- :; ...... ..... .~ ... ~ ......... . ,/''/' ! '\ FIGs. 2 & 3 of Kernan showing an open and a closed tag 5 respectively. (Kernan, 1, 11. 29-31.) These figures in Kernan illustrate that tag 5 may be applied to "an article of jewelry such as the ring 12" and that "the finger 10 of panel 6 is looped over the article and then downwardly against the panel 6." (Kernan, 1, 11. 36, 50-53.) Panel 6 and panel 6' are connected via "a connecting portion 7." (Id. at 1, 1. 44.) When closing tag 5, the "short tabs 8 and 9 of panel 6 are clinched over panel 6', thus effectively closing the tag." (Id. at 1. 1, 55-1. 2, 1-2.) Hawes teaches "a stack of continuous form paper" having a pull tab as shown in the reproduced figure below: 16 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 FIG. 4 FIG. 4 of Hawes illustrating a layout of a separable continuous sheet. (Hawes, 1, 11. 50, 56.) Illustrated in figure 4 of Hawes is "a stack of continuous form paper 35 that is bifolded along the fold line 3." (Hawes, 2, 11. 40--43.) By using "pull tabs 21," "the tope membrane 29" may be separated from "the bottom membrane 31" exposing "a carbon film 27." (Id. at 2, 11. 15-17, 45-48.) By "pulling" the pull tabs 21, "the individual sheets" may be separated along perforated lines. (Id. at 2, 11. 3-5.) Based on the combined teachings of the references, we find that it would have been obvious to a skilled artisan to use the tabs taught in Kernan instead of the adhesive (Haas, FIG. 3, component 32) used in Haas for coupling the front and back sides of a form. (See Ans. 16.) Based on Hawes' teaching that a perforation line may be located between a tab and a sheet, and its teaching that the sheet remains intact before and after the perforation line is removed, the skilled artisan would have known to place the tab without injuring the parking permit in Haas to which it may be attached. (See id; see also Hawes, 1, 11. 42-44 (providing that one of the 17 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 objectives of Hawes is "to provide continuous form paper having paper handling means to facilitate the rapid printing thereon").) Appellant argues that because the pull tabs 21 in Hawes are used to separate the sheets and that the tabs 8 and 9 in Kernan are used to couple two panels of an article, the Examiner's modification defeats the intended purpose of each reference. (App. Br. 25; Reply Br. 6-8.) In support, Appellant provides an annotated figure which is reproduced below: :::n0- ..... \. -.----.... ............ ~ ............ --~~~~--~ ~· ! -~~~~~$:~~~~~ ~ f~~~'~ ·: > ~,~4"+1;;:- . ~~~V-"" I : ~\;··"'" ~~v •.• _~~.:t;r--·-· "-"'· "..,,._.,. ,-~~j::, .. ~_:_:·~·~( ''.;F:R,,._.,..,,~,-· ,-) I~ '"" .... ! i· I Appellant's annotated figure based on FIG. 8 of the '336 Specification (App. Br. 23.) Appellant indicates 802 as the "tab" recited in claim 27, and 132 as the "first side" recited. (App. Br. 9, 23.) Appellant, however, does not show whether "a line of weakness" recited in claim 27 is one of the eight "lines of 18 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 weakness" or a new, ninth line ofweakness. 10 The annotated figure based on figure 8 provided by Appellant apparently indicates that tab 802 is the same as "a line of weakness" recited in claim 27-although Appellant does not explain how to have "a line of weakness" overlapping tab 802 as illustrated. Based on the record before us, we are not persuaded that claim 27 is patentably distinguished over the combined teachings of the prior art because "[t]he test for obviousness is not whether the features of a secondary reference may be bodily incorporated into the structure of the primary reference. . . . Rather, the test is what the combined teachings of those references would have suggested to those of ordinary skill in the art." In re Keller, 642 F.2d 413, 425 (CCPA 1981) (citations omitted). Appellant has not shown that a skilled artisan would have been dissuaded from combining the teachings of Haas, Kernan, and Hawes to arrive at a form as recited in claim 27 and we find no harmful error in the Examiner's findings. Rejection B: Double Patenting Appellant requests that we hold the Examiner's provisional double patenting rejections in abeyance pending the identification of allowable subject matter. (App. Br. 4.) However, "[i]f a ground of rejection stated by the examiner is not addressed in the appellant's brief, that ground of rejection will be summarily sustained by the Board." MPEP § 1205.02 (8th ed., July 2010); see also MPEP § 1205.02 (9th ed., March 2014). To hold the double patenting in abeyance, as Appellant requests, could result in inefficient piecemeal examination and delay. We summarily affirm 10 It is not clear, based on the record before us, whether the '336 Specification supports a new, ninth line of weakness. 19 Appeal2015-000958 Application 13/900,336 the Examiner's provisional double patenting rejections of claims 1-25 because Appellant does not present arguments or evidence showing error in those rejections. C. Order It is ORDERED that the rejections of claims 1-30 are affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § l.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § l.136(a)(l )(iv). AFFIRMED 20 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation