Ex Parte FitzpatrickDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMar 28, 201311627792 (P.T.A.B. Mar. 28, 2013) 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. 11/627,792 01/26/2007 Michael J. Fitzpatrick MJF.1.0 2606 7590 03/29/2013 Michael J. Fitzpatrick 9033 S. Hamilton Ave. Chicago, IL 60620 EXAMINER ANDERSON, AMBER R ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3765 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 03/29/2013 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 MICHAEL J. FITZPATRICK ____________ Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 Technology Center 3700 ____________ Before JOHN C. KERINS, NEIL T. POWELL and BEVERLY M. BUNTING, Administrative Patent Judges. PER CURIAM. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Michael J. Fitzpatrick (Appellant) seeks our review under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) of the Examiner’s final rejection of claims 1-6 and 9-18. Claims 20 and 21 are canceled and claims 7, 8, 19 and 22 are withdrawn. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM-IN-PART. THE INVENTION Appellant’s invention is directed to a reversible bicycle jacket or garment. Independent claim 1, reproduced below, is representative of the claimed subject matter: 1. A jacket, comprising a first surface that is ordinary in appearance and a said second surface that is highly visible, said jacket being a reversible bicycle jacket that is reversible between an ordinary configuration wherein said first surface is exposed as an outer surface of said jacket and a high-visibility configuration wherein said second surface is exposed as an outer surface of said jacket, at least a portion of said second surface being one of reflective and luminescent. THE REJECTIONS Appellant appeals the following rejections: (i) claims 1-4, 6 and 11-16 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Speh (US 1,773,442, issued Aug. 19, 1930) in view of Nesse (US 4,569,089, issued Feb. 11, 1986); and (ii) claims 5, 9, 10, 17 and 18 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Speh in view of Nesse and Schweer (US 2004/0163156 A1, published Aug. 26, 2004). Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 3 ANALYSIS Claims 1-4, 6 and 11-16--Obviousness--Speh/Nesse Appellant presents separate arguments for the patentability of claims 1, 2, 4, 6, 11-13 and 14-16. Claim 3 depends from claim 1 and will stand or fall therewith. Claim 1 The Examiner found that Speh teaches all limitations found in claim 1, with the exception of a portion of the second, highly visible, surface being either reflective or luminescent. Ans. 4. The Examiner cited to Nesse for a disclosure of a safety panel employed with a jacket that is brightly colored and includes reflective material, which allows the wearer to be readily seen in multiple environments. Id. The Examiner concluded that it would have been obvious to provide the highly visible side of the reversible jacket of Speh with reflective material, in order that a wearer of the Speh jacket may be readily seen in multiple environments. Id. Appellant criticizes the Examiner’s grounds for this rejection as being nothing more than conclusory statements. Appeal Br. 10. We disagree. The Examiner applied the teaching of Nesse that the use of both brightly colored material and reflective material provides increased visibility in varying environments, and proposed a modification to the Speh jacket to provide the same advantage. The Examiner’s reason to combine the teachings is expressly articulated and is supported by rational underpinnings, which is what is required in making a rejection based on obviousness. In re Kahn, 441 F.3d 977, 988 (Fed. Cir. 2006), cited with approval in KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007). Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 4 Appellant further argues that the Speh and Nesse references do not disclose a portion of a second, high visibility, surface that is either reflective or luminescent. Appeal Br. 11-12. In support of this, Appellant points out that Nesse discloses a separate element, namely a safety panel, attached to the jacket which is brightly colored and has reflective panels, and thus Nesse does not disclose the claim limitation at issue. Appeal Br. 11. The argument fails to address the Examiner’s proposed modification to the Speh jacket, which does not rely on a bodily incorporation of the Nesse safety panel into the Speh jacket. As such, the argument does not apprise us of error on the Examiner’s part. Appellant further maintains that Speh is non-analogous art, because Speh is in a different field (hunting) than is Appellant’s invention (bicycling) and addresses a different need than Appellant’s invention. Appeal Br. 13- 14. Initially, we agree with the Examiner (Ans. 13) that both the claimed invention and Speh are in the field of coats and jackets that allow for high visibility at times. However, even if we were to accept Appellant’s position that the two are from different fields, the test for non-analogous art includes a second prong, namely that even if the reference is from a different field of endeavor, if a reference is reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which the inventor was involved, it qualifies as analogous art. In re Deminski, 796 F.2d 436, 442 (Fed. Cir. 1986). Appellant’s argument fails to address this aspect of the test, and thus we are not persuaded that Speh constitutes non-analogous art. Appellant also asserts that Nesse “expressly teaches away from using reversibility to make a garment convertible between light reflective and non- light reflective.” Appeal Br. 15. Appellant posits that “Nesse rejects the Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 5 reversibility feature of Speh.” Id. Appellant has not pointed to any specific part of Nesse that expressly rejects the concept of reversibility, and Nesse appears to simply adopt an alternative approach to converting its jacket from being highly visible to less highly visible. Appellant has not shown how Nesse criticizes, discredits or otherwise discourages the application of reflective material directly to a highly visible surface of a jacket. See In re Fulton, 391 F.3d 1195, 1201 (Fed. Cir. 2004); In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994). The rejection of claim 1 over Speh in view of Nesse is sustained. Claim 2 Appellant argues, as above, that Nesse does not disclose that a portion of a second surface is reflective or luminescent. Appeal Br. 16. This argument is unpersuasive, also as noted above, in that it does not address the Examiner’s proposed modification of the Speh jacket. Appellant further argues that Nesse is not convertible between a reflective and non-reflective condition by pulling the inside out and the outside in, because Nesse makes this conversion by pulling a retractable panel out of a storage compartment. Appeal Br. 16. As with the above argument, this is nothing more than an individual attack on the Nesse reference, and/or an argument based on a bodily incorporation of the teachings of Nesse into the jacket of Speh. As to the former, the rejection is based upon a combination of teachings, and as to the latter, the Examiner’s proposed modification is not based on a bodily incorporation of the reflective panel of Nesse into the Speh jacket. The rejection of claim 2 is sustained. Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 6 Claim 4 The Examiner takes the position that the Speh patent discloses the limitation calling for the first surface of the jacket to be configured to be loose-fitting and the second surface of the jacket to be configured to be close-fitting, in that when the second surface of Speh (31, 32, 33, 34) is facing to the inside, it is worn close to the body and “would be closer fitting than the outer most layer.” Ans. 5. Appellant maintains that the Examiner’s interpretation of the term close-fitting is unreasonably broad when viewed in the context of what a person of ordinary skill in the art would understand upon reading Appellant’s Specification. Reply Br. 8-9. We agree. As pointed out by Appellant, the Specification describes the characteristic of the second surface being close-fitting as “compress[ing] the entire bicycle jacket 10 to form a close fit on the bicyclist” and “offer[ing] the bicyclist reduced wind-resistance and increased comfort during bicycling.” Spec., p. 6, para. [0025]. While this is not an absolute definition of the term, it does connote to the person of ordinary skill in the art that close-fitting is not so broad as to include a second surface that is deemed to be close-fitting merely because, in one jacket configuration, it happens to be on the inside, closer to the body of the person than the first surface. The rejection of claim 4 is not sustained. Claim 6 Claim 6 calls for the second surface to comprise one of a reflective or luminescent stripe, symbol, or sign. Appellant maintains that Nesse does not disclose any of a stripe symbol or sign for its reflective material. Appeal Br. 18. Appellant further objects to the Examiner’s reliance on a common and ordinary meaning of the term “sign” as connoting “‘any object that conveys Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 7 a meaning,’” and the position that Nesse discloses a reflector which is an object that conveys a meaning of caution. Reply Br. 10; Ans. 14. Appellant does not specifically contest that the meaning accorded to the term “sign” is not a common and ordinary meaning of the term. Rather, Appellant points to the example of a sign, i.e., a slow-moving sign, given in the Specification, and further argues that the Examiner’s position renders the claim term “reflective” as superfluous, as well as runs afoul of the doctrine of claim differentiation. Reply Br. 10-11. The citation to an example provided in the Specification is not probative that Appellant has provided a particular definition of, or has ascribed a particular meaning to, the term “sign” that is contrary to, or more specific than, the common and ordinary meaning as stated by the Examiner. As such, we are not apprised of error on this front. The Examiner’s position that the Nesse use of reflective material operates as a sign (caution sign) further does not render the term “reflective” as superfluous, nor does it violate the doctrine of claim differentiation. Assuming that the term “reflective sign” in claim 6 is further limiting of the term “reflective” in claim 1, the Examiner’s position is that the manner in which Nesse uses the reflective material in connection with the jacket therein is in the form of a sign conveying a meaning of caution. The rejection of claim 6 is sustained. Claims 11-13 Claims 11-13 each depend from claim 1, and include limitations requiring that the second surface of the jacket meet Class 1, 2 and 3 standards of ANSI 107, respectively. Appellant argues that the Examiner summarily concluded, without any analysis, that the subject matter of these Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 8 claims would have been obvious, and that the Examiner’s conclusion relies improperly on hindsight in view of Appellant’s disclosure. Appeal Br. 18- 19. Appellant maintains that “[t]he Examiner does not explain why someone setting out to build a hunting coat would want to make the coat useful for construction, utility, police, emergency medical services, fire fighters and airport ramp workers.” Reply Br. 13. The Examiner notes that the jacket with safety panels disclosed in Nesse is noted as being suitable for use in emergency situations as well as for hunting, and that it thus would have been obvious, in view of the ANSI standards, which are directed to attire for emergency personnel and the like, to make the highly visible side of the Speh jacket in compliance with the claimed standards, in order to be able to use the jacket in situations other than hunting, as suggested by Nesse. Ans. 14.1 We find this to be an articulated reason to combine the teachings that is supported by rational underpinnings. Appellant further argues that the ANSI standards are non-analogous art. Appeal Br. 20; Reply Br. 12-13. Appellant contends that a person of ordinary skill in the art of designing bicycle jackets “would not look to either the hunting coat of Speh or the ANSI 107 standards for hazardous occupation workers, and would certainly not look to both.” Appeal Br. 20. In attempting to rebut the Examiner’s citation to Nesse as disclosing a jacket that is useful for both emergency situations and hunting, Appellant maintains 1 We additionally note that the Schweer patent, cited in rejecting other claims on appeal, evidences that that many aspects of clothing, including the high visibility aspects, which are suitable for hunting are also applicable to other safety garments in, for example, industrial settings. Schweer, p. 5, para. [0090], p. 6, para. [0101]. Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 9 that “the Nesse safety panel that is used for emergency situations or hunting is the panel that is colored international orange; it is not the panel that is reflective.” Reply Br. 12. The latter contention, to the extent that it is even germane to the issue of non-analogous art, fails to take into account that Nesse discloses that, in lieu of employing separate brightly colored and reflective panels, reflectors could be attached to the brightly colored panel. Nesse, col. 4, ll. 61-63. We are also not persuaded that persons of ordinary skill in the art seeking to design a bicycle jacket with a highly visible surface including a reflective aspect would not look to other garments, such as those disclosed in Speh and Nesse, nor to various industry standards for worker safety attire, to inform the design of the bicycle jacket. In other words, Appellant has not persuasively shown that the ANSI 107 standards are not reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which Appellant was concerned. Deminski, 796 F.2d at 442. The rejection of claims 11-13 is sustained. Claims 14-16 Appellant’s arguments for the patentability of claims 14-16 parallel those presented for claims 11-13. Appeal Br. 21-22; Reply Br. 13-14. Appellant principally contends that the ANSI 107 standards would not have been well known in the art, as they relate to a different field (workers in various hazardous occupations), as compared to hunters, to which the Speh jacket is directed. Appeal Br. 21; Reply Br. 14. As discussed above, Appellant has not persuasively shown that the ANSI 107 standards are not reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which Appellant was Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 10 concerned, and to which Speh and Nesse are directed. Deminski, 796 F.2d at 442. The rejection of claims 14-16 is sustained. Claims 5, 9, 10, 17 and 18--Obviousness--Speh/Nesse/Schweer Claim 5 Claim 5 depends from claim 1, and requires that at least a part of the second, highly visible, surface is configured to be elastic. The Examiner found that, which the combination of Speh and Nesse does not disclose this limitation, the Schweer patent discloses a hunting jacket with an outer shell that may be brightly colored, and that may employ draw cords and elastic to provide a more snug fit. Ans. 9, citing Schweer, p. 5, paras. [0092], [0094], and p. 6, para. [0101]. The Examiner concluded that it would have therefore been obvious to have provided the second, highly visible, surface of Speh, as modified by Nesse, with elastic as taught by Schweer, so as to provide a snug fit of the garment on the wearer. Ans. 9. Appellant first argues that the grounds for rejection are merely conclusory statements that fail to articulate the Examiner’s analysis and reasoning. Appeal Br. 22-23. The Examiner’s position in rejecting claim 5 sets forth a factual basis having rational underpinnings, and articulates a reason why a person of ordinary skill in the art would have found it obvious to modify the Speh jacket in view of the teachings of Nesse and Schweer. Ans. 9. We are not apprised of error in the Examiner’s position. Appellant next seizes on the Examiner’s statement that Schweer discloses a “reversible hunting jacket,” and argues that the entire jacket of Schweer is not reversible, but rather only an inner liner of the jacket is Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 11 reversible. Appeal Br. 23. Appellant argues that the inner liner is not a jacket, and that wearing the liner by itself would defeat the purpose of wearing a jacket, and thus it could not have been obvious to combine Schweer with Speh and Nesse as was done in rejecting the claims. Id. Regardless of whether the inner liner of the Schweer garment could properly be regarded as being a jacket, and assuming that Appellant is correct and the Examiner is incorrect on the issue as to whether the entire Schweer jacket is reversible, the Examiner’s findings and conclusions as to the obviousness of the subject matter of claim 5 do not depend on these factors. The Examiner found that the element in Schweer regarded as corresponding to the second surface of the claimed jacket, i.e., outer layer 26, is disclosed as optionally being brightly colored and including elastic to provide for a snug fit. Schweer, p. 5, paras. [0092], [0094], and p. 6, para. [0101]. The Examiner concluded, in light of that disclosure, that it would have been obvious to further modify the jacket resulting from the combination of the teachings of Speh and Nesse, to include elastic in the second, highly visible, surface of Speh, in order to provide a snug fit for the wearer. Appellant has not apprised us of error in the Examiner’s position. The rejection of claim 5 is sustained. Claims 10 and 18 Appellant argues only that the grounds for rejection of these claims are nothing more than conclusory statements which fail to clearly articulate an analysis and reasoning for the rejection. Appeal Br. 22-23. For the reasons noted above directed to the same argument raised with respect to claim 5, we find that the Examiner has adequately articulated a reason to combine the teachings that is supported by rational underpinnings. Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 12 The rejection of claims 10 and 18 is sustained. Claim 9 and 17 Claims 9 and 17 depend from claims 1 and 14, respectively, and further recite that the first surface of the jacket is substantially comprised of a natural material, and the second surface is substantially comprised of a synthetic material. As above, Appellant first argues that the grounds for rejection are merely conclusory statements that fail to articulate the Examiner’s analysis and reasoning. Appeal Br. 22-23. The Examiner’s position in rejecting the claims sets forth a factual basis having rational underpinnings, and articulates a reason why a person of ordinary skill in the art would have found it obvious to modify the Speh jacket in view of the teachings of Nesse and Schweer. Ans. 9-10. We are not apprised of error in the Examiner’s position. Appellant argues that the Schweer jacket is not reversible, and that only the inner liner of the jacket is reversible. Appeal Br. 24. As such, according to Appellant, Schweer does not disclose that the reversible inner liner of Schweer could be made of two different materials. Id. In response, the Examiner points out that the outer jacket of Schweer (corresponding to the claimed second surface) is made of a synthetic material, while the inner liner (corresponding to the claimed first surface) is made of a natural material. Ans. 16, citing to Schweer, p. 5, paras. [0093], [0094]. Appellant counters that “the Examiner cannot combine these two separate components from Schweer . . . to disclose the limitations of claims 9 and 17 without rendering the prior art invention being modified unsatisfactory for its Appeal 2011-001339 Application 11/627,792 13 intended purpose.” Reply Br. 17. Appellant goes on to discuss particular aspects of the Schweer jacket and the lack of reversibility thereof. Id. Appellant’s arguments are in the nature of arguing the Schweer reference individually, rather than addressing the proposed modification to the Speh jacket as a result of the combination of the teachings of Speh, Nesse and Schweer. Accordingly, we are not apprised of Examiner error in the rejection of claims 9 and 17, and the rejection is therefore sustained. DECISION The decision of the Examiner to reject claims 1-3, 5, 6 and 9-18 is affirmed. The decision of the Examiner to reject claim 4 is reversed. 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)(iv). AFFIRMED-IN-PART hh Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation