Ex Parte RothDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardFeb 24, 201412752630 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 24, 2014) 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. 12/752,630 04/01/2010 Kurt H. Roth 31348.00 2874 7590 02/25/2014 KURT ROTH C/O M. SLAVIN 401 W 259 ST. BRONX, NY 10471 EXAMINER BECKER, DREW E ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1792 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 02/25/2014 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 KURT H. ROTH ____________ Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 Technology Center 1700 ____________ Before BRADLEY R. GARRIS, PETER F. KRATZ, and JEFFREY T. SMITH, Administrative Patent Judges. GARRIS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 2 Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134, Appellant appeals from the Examiner's rejection of claims 1, 3-6, 8-10, 24, and 25 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Wiegel (US 2,555,720, issued Jun 5, 1951) in combination with Gisslen (Professional Cooking (1995) ).1 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6. We REVERSE. Appellant claims a method of steam cooking a food item (e.g., a vegetable) comprising the steps of: placing the food item in liquid (e.g., water); "preheating the food item in the liquid, by heating the liquid, until the food attains a preheated condition, wherein the pre-heated condition is defined as the commencement of the liquid boiling while the food is in the liquid; . . . removing the food item from the liquid to ensure no cooking occurs and moving it to a position above the liquid; [and] . . . cooking the food item in steam from the boiling liquid" (independent claim 1; see also the only other independent claim 6). 1 On page 5 of the Reply Brief (i.e., the Brief filed 12 November 2013), Appellant correctly points out that the Examiner lists the applied reference combination as Gisslen in view of Wiegel in the Final Office Action (FOA page 2) and as Wiegel in view of Gisslen in the Answer (Ans. page 2). However, this differing order of the references is not meaningful because in either case the Examiner's rationale for the rejection remains the same. Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 3 A copy of claims 1 and 6, taken from the Claims Appendix (i.e., Appendix A) of the Appeal Brief (i.e., the Brief filed 19 August 2013), appears below (i.e., with underlining and bracketing removed). Claim 1. A method of steam cooking a food item, comprising the steps of: a) placing a food item in liquid water; b) preheating the food item in the liquid water, by heating the liquid water, until the food item attains a preheated condition, wherein the preheated condition is defined as the commencement of the liquid boiling while the food item is in the liquid; c) removing the food item from the liquid to ensure no cooking occurs and moving it to a position above the liquid; d boiling the liquid such that steam from the liquid contacts the food item; and e) cooking the food item in steam from the boiling liquid until the food item attains a cooked condition. Claim 6. A method of steam cooking a food item, comprising the steps of: a) placing liquid in a first container; b) placing a food item in a second container configured to retain the food item, the second container having perforated walls and being sized and shaped to be moveable within the first container between a lower position and an upper position; c) placing the second container, and the food item therein, within the first container in the lower position such that the liquid passes through the perforated walls in the second container so as to contact the food item; d) preheating the food item in the liquid, by heating the liquid, until the food item attains a preheated condition, wherein the preheated condition is defined as the commencement of the liquid boiling while the second container is in the lower position such that the food item is in the liquid; e) after the food item attains the preheated condition, moving the second container to the upper position within the first container and above the liquid; f) boiling the liquid such that steam from the boiling liquid passes Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 4 through the perforated walls in the second container so as to contact the food item; and g) cooking the food item in the steam until the food item attains a cooked condition. The rejection of the independent claims is based on the following findings of fact by the Examiner. The Examiner finds that Wiegel teaches a method wherein food is partially cooked and thereby preheated in boiling water and then fully cooked by steam from the boiling water (FOA page 2 citing Wiegel column 3, lines 10-35). The Examiner also finds that "Wiegel does not specifically recite removing the food immediately after boiling resumes (claim[s] 1, 6)" (FOA page 2). In addition, the Examiner finds that Gisslen teaches a method of cooking food by blanching the food with boiling water and/or steam (FOA page 3). Based on these findings, the Examiner concludes that "[i]t would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to incorporate the claimed . . . immediate removal of the food after resumption of boiling in the method of Wiegel, in view of Gisslen" (FOA page 3). In further support of the rejection, the Examiner states that "the [claim 1] limitation 'removing the food [item] from the liquid to ensure no cooking occurs' . . . is disclosed by Wiegel, in view of Gisslen, since applicant defined the term 'cook' in [Specification] paragraph 0034 as being the same as 'steam cook'" (FOA page 4). In making this statement, the Examiner implicitly interprets the claim phrase "no cooking occurs" as meaning "no steam cooking occurs" and therefore implicitly interprets the claim Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 5 limitation as encompassing the step of cooking food in boiling water disclosed by Wiegel (see, e.g., column 3, lines 17-19 and 31-32) or Gisslen (see, e.g., page 55, item 5 under the heading "Poach, Simmer, and Boil"). Appellant disputes the Examiner's statement by explaining "Inventor does not define 'cook' as being synonymous with 'steam cook'" (Reply Brief 24). We agree with Appellant. Contrary to the Examiner's apparent belief, nothing in paragraph 34 of the Specification defines the term "cook" as limited to "steam cook" only. It follows that the Examiner improperly interprets the above claim 1 limitation as encompassing the Wiegel or Gisslen step of cooking in boiling water. In fact, such an interpretation is unreasonable and inconsistent with the Specification disclosure of a method comprising "two separate and functionally different stages" (Specification paragraph 34), namely, a first preheating (i.e., via boiling water) stage and a second cooking (i.e., via steam) stage (see, e.g., Specification paragraphs 44- 47). See In re Am. Acad. of Sci. Tech. Ctr., 367 F.3d 1359, 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (during examination, claims are to be given their broadest reasonable interpretation consistent with the specification). It is also improper to interpret the preheating steps of independent claims 1 and 6 as encompassing a step of cooking with boiling water. In particular, claim 6, similar to claim 1, recites the steps of preheating in liquid "until the food item attains a preheated condition . . . defined as the Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 6 commencement of the liquid boiling [and] . . . after the food item attains the preheated condition, moving the [food] . . . above the liquid" (claim 6). The Examiner has not established that it would be reasonable and consistent with the Specification disclosure to interpret the claimed preheating step as including the Wiegel or Gisslen step of cooking with boiling water. As explained previously, the Specification teaches that Appellant's preheating and cooking stages are two separate and functionally different stages. The Examiner has not explained how this teaching is compatible with interpreting the claimed preheating step as performing the functions of both preheating and cooking. The Examiner also has not explained how such an interpretation is reasonable and consistent with the Specification definition of the term "cook" as meaning "the food temperature must rise to a cooking temperature which is generally at or near . . . 100°C" (Specification paragraph 34). For example, the Examiner does not identify any Specification teaching that Appellant's preheating step causes the food temperature to rise to a cooking temperature at or near 100°C. We previously quoted the Examiner's conclusion that it would have been obvious "to incorporate the claimed . . . immediate removal of the food after resumption of boiling in the method of Wiegel, in view of Gisslen" (FOA 3). In this obviousness conclusion, the Examiner may be taking the position that it would have been obvious to immediately remove food from the boiling water of Wiegel as soon as the water begins to boil and before the food begins to cook. However, the Examiner has not cited any Appeal 2014-001711 Application 12/752,630 7 disclosure in Wiegel or Gisslen which teaches or would have suggested this immediate removal of food from Wiegel's boiling water. For the above stated reasons, we find convincing merit in Appellant's argument that the Wiegel and Gisslen references would not have suggested the methods defined by independent claims 1 and 6 (see, e.g., Appeal Brief pages 22 and 23 as well as Reply Brief pages 13 and 23). It follows that we will not sustain the Examiner's § 103 rejection of claims 1, 3-6, 8-10, 24, and 25 as unpatentable over Wiegel in combination with Gisslen. The decision of the Examiner is reversed. REVERSED lp Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation