Catapult Innovations Pty Ltd.v.adidas AGDownload PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardJul 18, 201413077510 - (D) (P.T.A.B. Jul. 18, 2014) Copy Citation Trials@uspto.gov Paper 19 571-272-7822 Date: July 18, 2014 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ CATAPULT INNOVATIONS PTY LTD, Application 14/045,954, Petitioner, v. adidas AG, Application 13/077,510, Respondent. ____________ Case DER2014-00006 ____________ Before JAMESON LEE, JONI Y. CHANG, and JUSTIN T. ARBES, Administrative Patent Judges. LEE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION Denying Institution of Derivation Proceeding 35 U.S.C. § 135(a) Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 2 Introduction Petitioner (“Catapult”) filed, on November 4, 2013, a petition under 35 U.S.C. § 135(a) to institute a derivation proceeding directed to claims 1–10, 12– 29, and 31 of Respondent’s (“adidas AG”) Application 13/077,510 (“the adidas AG ’510 application”), and on November 21, 2013, a revised petition (Paper 6, “Rev. Pet.”). The adidas AG ’510 application was published as Pub. No. US 2012/0253484 A1 on October 4, 2012 (Ex. 1011). Catapult is involved on the basis of its Application 14/045,954 (“the Catapult application”). Shaun Holthouse is the sole named inventor on the Catapult application. Catapult moved to be accorded an earlier filing date for its petition. Paper 3. The motion was granted and the Petition was accorded the filing date of October 4, 2013. Paper 9. Catapult has filed two other derivation Petitions based on the same Catapult application, directed to two other applications of adidas AG, in Catapult Innovations Pty Ltd v. adidas AG, DER2014-00002 and Catapult Innovations Pty Ltd v. adidas AG, DER2014-00005. Challenged claims 15, 22, 27, and 28 of the adidas AG ’510 application have been allowed by the Examiner. Paper 17. In an amendment dated December 12, 2012, adidas AG cancelled dependent claim 2 and amended other claims. In an amendment dated August 16, 2013, adidas AG amended claims including claims 20 and 31. In an Order issued April 24, 2014 (Paper 16), we suspended prosecution of both the Catapult application and the adidas AG ’510 application, to consider whether to institute a derivation proceeding. The threshold showing for institution of a derivation proceeding is whether the petition demonstrates substantial evidence, which if unrebutted, would support Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 3 the assertion of derivation. 1 35 U.S.C. § 135(a); 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(c). Once a derivation proceeding has been instituted, the standard of proof for establishing that a challenged claim constitutes a derived invention is by a preponderance of the evidence. 37 C.F.R. § 42.1(d). For reasons discussed below, Catapult’s Petition to institute a derivation proceeding is denied. Discussion A. The Applicable Law Although a derivation proceeding is a creation of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (“AIA”), Public Law No. 112-29, § 3(i), 2 the charge of derivation of invention as a basis for finally refusing application claims and cancelling patent claims had been adjudicated under 35 U.S.C § 135(a) as it existed prior to the enactment of AIA. On the substantive law of derivation of invention, we apply the jurisprudence which developed in that context, including the case law of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and the U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals. Under the AIA, a petitioner must show that the respondent, without authorization, filed an application claiming such derived invention. 35 U.S.C. § 135(a); 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(b)(2). A derivation petition with respect to an invention that is the same or substantially the same as a claim contained in a patent issued on an earlier application, or contained in an earlier application when published or deemed published under section 35 U.S.C. § 122(b), must be filed during the 1-year period following the date on which the patent containing such 1 Substantial evidence is defined as that which a reasonable person might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. Falkner v. Inglis, 448 F.3d 1357, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2006); see also In re Zurko, 258 F.3d 1379, 1384 (Fed. Cir. 2001). 2 Leahy-Smith America Invents Technical Corrections Act, Public Law No. 112- 274, § 1(e)(1), (k)(1). Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 4 claim was granted or earlier application containing such claim was published, whichever is earlier. 3 35 U.S.C. § 135(a). To prove derivation, the party asserting derivation must establish prior conception of the claimed subject matter and communication of that conception to an inventor of the other party. Cooper v. Goldfarb, 154 F.3d 1321, 1332 (Fed. Cir. 1998); Price v. Symsek, 988 F.2d 1187, 1190 (Fed. Cir. 1993); Hedgewick v. Akers, 497 F.2d 905, 908 (CCPA 1974). “‘There can be no derivation without prior conception on the part of the party alleging derivation.’” Davis v. Reddy, 620 F.2d 885, 889 (CCPA 1980) (quoting Egnot v. Looker, 387 F.2d 680, 687 (CCPA 1967)). A charge of derivation addresses originality—who invented the subject matter at issue. Price, 988 F.2d at 1191. Conception is the formation in the mind of the inventor of a definite and permanent idea of the complete and operative invention, as it is therefore to be applied in practice. Kridl v. McCormick, 105 F.3d 1446, 1449 (Fed. Cir. 1997); Burroughs Wellcome Co. v. Barr Labs. Inc., 40 F.3d 1223, 1228 (Fed. Cir. 1994); Coleman v. Dines, 754 F.2d 353, 359 (Fed. Cir. 1985). “Conception must be proved by corroborating evidence which shows that the inventor disclosed to others his completed thought expressed in such clear terms as to enable those skilled in the art to make the invention.” Coleman, 754 F.2d at 359. A rule of reason applies to determining whether the inventor’s testimony has been corroborated. Price, 988 F.2d at 1194. “The rule of reason, however, does not dispense with the requirement for some evidence of independent corroboration.” Coleman, 754 F.2d at 360. 3 Catapult’s derivation Petition was timely filed. It was accorded a filing date of October 4, 2013 (Paper 9), which is within one year of the date of publication of the adidas AG ’510 application on October 4, 2012, as Pub. No. US 2012/0253484 A1. Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 5 Thus, the showing of prior conception and communication need be made for an invention disclosed to an inventor of the other party. Any challenged claim which the petitioner demonstrates is “the same or substantially the same” as the disclosed invention constitutes a derived invention. 4 See 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(b)(3)(i). Proof of conception must encompass all limitations of the disclosed invention. See Singh v. Brake, 222 F.3d 1362, 1367 (Fed. Cir. 2000); Kridl, 105 F.3d at 1449; Sewall v. Walter, 21 F.3d 411, 415 (Fed. Cir. 1994); Coleman, 754 F.2d at 359; Davis, 620 F.2d at 889. If petitioner identifies one of its own claims as defining or representing an invention disclosed to an inventor of the other party, then petitioner has to establish corroborated conception of that claimed invention, as well as corroborated communication of that conception. Assuming that corroborated conception and communication both are established, the petitioner would be able to regard as a derived invention those challenged claims of the respondent which are shown by the petitioner to be drawn to the same or substantially the same invention as the disclosed invention. That question is evaluated in the direction from the disclosed invention to each challenged claim. Per 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(a)(2), a petitioner also has to show that it has at least one claim that is (i) the same or substantially the same as the respondent’s claimed invention, and (ii) the same or substantially the same as the invention disclosed to the respondent. If the petitioner selects one of its own claims as “the invention disclosed to the respondent,” the selection itself can be relied on as satisfying the requirement of 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(a)(2)(ii). 4 “Same or substantially the same” means patentably indistinct, 37 C.F.R. § 42.401, and in this specific context, patentably indistinct is evaluated one-way in the direction from the invention disclosed to the respondent to each challenged claim. Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 6 B. The Allegedly Derived Invention Catapult alleges that claims 1–10, 12–29, and 31 of the adidas AG ’510 application as published are drawn to a derived invention. Independent claims 1, 20, and 31 in the adidas AG ’510 application as published in Pub. No. US 2012/0253484 A1 are reproduced below: 1. A group monitoring device, comprising: a display configured to display, during an athletic activity, a plurality of individual performance metrics relating to a plurality of individuals engaged in the athletic activity, each individual performance metric relating to one of the plurality of individuals; and; an input to manipulate the display. 20. A method for monitoring a plurality of individuals engaged in an athletic activity, the method comprising: displaying during the athletic activity a plurality of individual performance metric information relating to a plurality of individuals engaged in the athletic activity, each performance metric relating to one of the plurality of individuals; providing first and second analysis markers adapted to be manipulated by a user to define a subset of the displayed performance metric information as a function of an interval parameter; and displaying performance metric information corresponding to only the subset of the displayed performance metric information defined by the analysis markers for each of the plurality of individuals. 31. A computer program product comprising computer-useable medium having computer program logic recorded thereon that, when executed by one or more processors, provides to a user performance information related to an athletic activity engaged in by a plurality of individuals, the computer program logic comprising: Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 7 first computer-readable program code that enables a processor to display during the athletic activity a plurality of individual performance metric information relating to a plurality of individuals engaged in the athletic activity, each performance metric relating to one of the plurality of individuals; second computer-readable program code that enables a processor to provide first and second analysis markers adapted to be manipulated by a user to define a subset of the displayed performance metric information as a function of an interval parameter; and third computer readable program code that enables a processor to display performance metric information corresponding to only the subset of the displayed performance metric information defined by the analysis markers for each of the plurality of individuals. Dependent claim 2 is reproduced below: 2. The device of claim 1, wherein the display is further configured to display a group performance metric relating to more than one of the plurality of individuals. Ex. 1011, 18–19. The Field of the Invention portion of the adidas AG ’510 application as published, states that the invention generally relates to an activity monitoring system, and in particular, to an athletic activity monitoring system that facilitates live monitoring of a plurality of individuals. Ex. 1011 ¶ 0002. The Background Art portion of the adidas AG ’510 application, as published, provides that to monitor an athletic activity, a trainer typically gathers information about the participants in the athletic activity by viewing the athletic activity from the sidelines of a sports field, and thus the information gathered is typically limited by what is observed by the trainer from the sidelines. Ex. 1011 ¶ 0005. Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 8 The Summary of the Invention portion of the adidas AG ’510 application, as published, describes gathering information about participants in an athletic activity without observations by a trainer on the sidelines. In part, it states: In one exemplary embodiment, a method for monitoring a plurality of individuals engaged in an athletic activity includes displaying during the athletic activity a plurality of individual performance metric information relating to a plurality of individuals engaged in the athletic activity, each performance metric relating to one of the plurality of individuals, providing first and second analysis markers adapted to be manipulated by a user to define a subset of the displayed performance metric information as a function of an interval parameter, and displaying performance metric information corresponding to only the subset of the displayed performance metric information defined by the analysis markers for each of the plurality of individuals. Ex. 1011 ¶ 0007. Claims 15, 22, 27, and 28, which have been allowed by the Examiner, claim 13 on which claim 15 depends, and claim 12 on which claim 13 depends, are reproduced below: 12. The device of claim 1, wherein the display is configured to display a first plurality of individual metrics relating to a first individual. 13. The device of claim 12, wherein the display is further configured to display a second plurality of individual metrics relating to a second individual. 15. The device of claim 13, wherein one of the second plurality of metrics is displayed with emphasis relative to the balance of the second plurality of individual metrics. 22. The method of claim 20, wherein the interval parameter comprises distance. Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 9 27. The method of claim 20, wherein the displaying is in response to user manipulation during the activity. 28. The method of claim 20, wherein the displaying is in response to user manipulation before the activity. C. Catapult’s Analysis 1. What was disclosed Catapult’s arguments are based on technical disclosure made by Shaun Holthouse, the founder and current Chief Executive Officer of Catapult, to adidas Wearable Sports Electronics of Wilmington, Delaware (“AWSE”), in a two-day presentation and demonstration that occurred on October 19–20, 2010, in Wilmington, Delaware. Rev. Pet. 5–11. Catapult relies on the declaration testimony of Mr. Holthouse (Ex. 1012), as well as the declaration testimony of Luke Millar (Ex. 1020), who accompanied Mr. Holthouse on the trip to Wilmington, Delaware, and who has been Global Manager of Direct and Distributor Sales for Catapult since June 2010 (Ex. 1020 ¶¶ 3, 6). 5 According to the testimony of Mr. Holthouse (Ex. 1012 ¶ 10), AWSE is a wholly owned subsidiary of adidas AG, and in attendance at the two-day presentation and demonstration in Wilmington, Delaware, for AWSE were Qaizar Hassonjee, Meg Susan Burich, Roger Armitage, and Marcus Strecker, whom Mr. Holthouse collectively refers to as “the Adidas Team” (Ex. 1012 ¶ 16). Mr. Holthouse testifies that he gave a live demonstration on the afternoon of October 19, 2010, at the football field of West Chester 5 The declarations of Mr. Holthouse and Mr. Millar refer to Exhibits SH1 through SH19. Pages ii–iv in Catapult’s Revised Petition include a conversion formula to identify Exhibits SH1 through SH19 as Exhibits 1013 through 1019. Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 10 University, and that Qaizar Hassonjee of AWSE arranged for the participation of several athletes at the demonstration. Ex. 1012 ¶ 18. Mr. Holthouse also testifies that he provided two presentations to the Adidas Team. Ex. 1012 ¶ 16. Neither Catapult’s Revised Petition nor the declarations of Mr. Holthouse and Mr. Millar specifically define “an invention” that was disclosed to AWSE. No application claim of Catapult was identified as constituting or representing that disclosed invention, and the Revised Petition does not identify what subset of all the technical information provided to AWSE on October 19–20, 2010, constitutes an “invention” of Mr. Holthouse, the sole named-inventor on the Catapult application. Instead, the Revised Petition and the declarations all focus on the totality of the technical information that was provided to AWSE. The record, therefore, shows that Catapult regards the entire collection of information disclosed to AWSE as its “invention disclosed to the respondent” under 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(b)(3)(i). In particular, Mr. Holthouse testifies that the system he demonstrated at Wilmington, Delaware, to AWSE is referred to by Catapult as the “minimaxX” system, and the software accompanying it is referred to as the “LoganPlus” software. Ex. 1012 ¶ 13. In his declaration, Mr. Holthouse refers to the minimaxX system and the LoganPlus software collectively as the “Catapult System.” Id. Mr. Holthouse testifies that he, along with Mr. Millar, made full disclosure of the Catapult System, including both hardware and software functionality, to the Adidas Team through the presentations and in answering questions during the presentations and demonstrations. Ex. 1012 Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 11 ¶ 17. Mr. Holthouse further testifies that as a part of the demonstration of the Catapult System, individual monitors were assigned to participating athletes, and the Adidas Team saw the function of the software, as illustrated in the presentations, demonstrated during the time at the football field. Ex. 1012 ¶ 18. Mr. Holthouse testifies that the details of the Catapult System demonstrated to the Adidas Team were described in a manual produced in February 2009 for version 4.3 of the LoganPlus software, and in a help supplement for the LoganPlus software produced in November 2008. Ex. 1012 ¶ 19. That, however, does not mean everything in the manual or the help supplement was demonstrated to the Adidas Team. Nonetheless, the testimony of Mr. Holthouse was specific as to what features and functionalities of the Catapult System were disclosed to the Adidas Team. Paragraph 20 of the declaration of Mr. Holthouse (Ex. 1012) describes some of the disclosed features and functionalities and is reproduced below: 20. During the presentations and demonstrations on the 19 th and 20 th October 2010, I, along with Luke Millar, disclosed to the Adidas Team the following features and functionalities of the Catapult System: a) A completely portable system for monitoring a plurality of individuals engaged in a sporting activity. (Ex. SH8, p. 5; Ex. SH10, p. 5) This system included: A portable base station which included a computer and wireless antennae for receiving and transmitting data during the activity; (Ex. SH8, p. 5; Ex. SH10, pp. 56–57) A plurality of individual participant monitors, each carried on the person of each individual and being capable of bi directional wireless communication with Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 12 the base station during the activity; (Ex. SH8, pp. 2, 5; Ex. SH10, pp. 5–10) A plurality of sensors either included in each said participant monitor or on each said individual, and in communication there with, each sensor being capable of sensing a physiological or activity parameter of the individual; (Ex. SH8, pp. 2, 19; Ex. SH10, pp. 5, 10, 89– 94) Each individual monitor transmitting data, relating to parameters sensed by the sensors, to the base station; (Ex. SH10, pp. 56–57) Software in the base station computer programmed to receive data from the individual participant monitors uses algorithms to convert the sensor signals into parameters or metrics relating to physiological measurements of the individual wearing the participant monitors or movements and impacts of the individual wearing the participant monitors; (Ex. SH8, p.5; Ex. SH10, pp. 5, 12– 82) and A group monitoring device communicating wirelessly with the base station to receive and display the parameters and/or metrics during the activity. (Ex. SH10, p. 56; Ex. SH11) b) The participant monitors were the same as those provided by Catapult to its customers, and their design and functionality conformed with the data loggers disclosed in catapult’s U.S. Patent No. 7,715,982 (Ex. SH2) and U.S. Patent No. 8,036,826 (Ex. SH3). the sensors included one or more of 3 dimensional accelerometers, 3 dimensional gyrometers, magnetometers, GPS sensors, heart rate monitors. The participant monitors incorporated a processor which calculated metrics from the sensed data. (Ex. SH8 pp. 2, 5, 19; Ex. SH10, pp. 5–10, 89–94) Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 13 c) The parameters and metrics transmitted to the group monitors relate to one or more of heart rate, location, orientation, speed, distance travelled, acceleration and direction of travel of the individual or to a measurement derived from one or more of said parameters, such as player load which is a measure of energy expended or impacts from player collisions. (Ex. SH8, pp. 10–18, 20– 21; Ex. SH10, pp. 37–40) d) The software was capable of showing graphically the time spent by the participant in moving at slow, moderate, and high speeds, the distance and path travelled on the playing ground during any desired time interval as well as heart rate. (Ex. SH8, pp. 10–18, 20–21; Ex. SH10, pp. 40–45) e) The software enabled a coach (or other person) to set upper and lower limits for one or more parameters or metrics so that an alert is triggered on the group monitoring device if the data transmitted falls outside of the limits. (Ex. SH8, pp. 22–23; Ex. SH10, pp. 52–66) f) The software also enabled video of the playing activity to be synchronized with the parameters and metrics graphically displayed on the base station computer or the group monitoring devices. The video feed could be synchronized on the base station or the group monitoring device and transmitted to the web server from the base station computer. (Ex. SH8, pp. 28–29; Ex. SH10, pp. 80–82) g) The base station computer software and the group monitor software enabled saving of data and accessing of stored data for display on the group monitoring device. This data could be uploaded to or down loaded from a web server running the system software. (Ex. SH10, pp. 7, 19) h) The base station consisted of a laptop or portable computer connected to antenna for wirelessly sending and receiving data to and from the individual monitors and the group monitoring devices. Also connected to the base station computer was a portable docking station able to dock a plurality of individual monitors and enable the base station computer to communicate with the individual monitors and down load data from them. The portable docking station included a Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 14 battery to enable charging of the batteries in the individual monitors. (Ex. SH8, pp. 2, 5; Ex. SH10, pp. 5–10, 56–57) Paragraphs 21 and 22 of the declaration of Mr. Holthouse (Ex. 1012) describe still further additional features and functionalities allegedly disclosed to the Adidas Team on October 19 th and 20 th , 2010, but their contents need not be reproduced here. The above-noted testimony of Mr. Holthouse is corroborated by the testimony of Mr. Millar. Mr. Millar testifies that he and Mr. Holthouse conducted two presentations of the Catapult System, as well as a live demonstration with the participation of several athletes, to the Adidas Team. Ex. 1020 ¶ 6. Moreover, with regard to the features and functionalities of the Catapult System disclosed to the Adidas Team, the testimony of Mr. Millar in paragraphs 9–11 of the Millar declaration (Ex. 1020) is essentially the same as the testimony of Mr. Holthouse in paragraphs 20–22 of the Holthouse declaration (Ex. 1012). 2. Challenged claims being same or substantially the same as a disclosed invention Catapult provides a claim chart identifying, for each feature of every challenged claim, the evidence that it was disclosed by Mr. Holthouse to the Adidas Team on October 19–20, 2010. Rev. Pet. 11–19. Catapult evidently does not rely on an assertion of obviousness of any challenged claim based on what was disclosed to the Adidas Team. Instead, Catapult’s apparent position is that each feature of every challenged claim actually was disclosed to the Adidas Team in the presentation and demonstration that occurred on October 19–20, 2010. We have reviewed the challenged claims, including corresponding amendments made after publication of the adidas AG ’510 application, if any, and the evidence referred to in the claim chart provided by Catapult. Claim 2 has been cancelled and the Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 15 features of claim 2 are substantially incorporated into claim 1. Claim 2 is no longer subject to challenge. With respect to all other challenged claims, however, we determine that substantial evidence supports a conclusion that each challenged claim is directed to an invention that is the same or substantially the same as an invention disclosed by Catapult, through Mr. Holthouse and Mr. Millar, to the Adidas Team on October 19–20, 2010. 3. Catapult’s at least one qualifying claim As noted above, per 37 C.F.R. § 42.405(a)(2), a petitioner has to have at least one claim that is (i) the same or substantially the same as the respondent’s claimed invention, and (ii) the same or substantially the same as the invention disclosed to the respondent. Based on the syntax of the language of the rule, we read both requirements as directed to the same claim of the petitioner. Thus, the one claim of petitioner must be both (i) the same or substantially the same as a claimed invention of the respondent, and (ii) the same or substantially the same as the invention disclosed to the respondent. To ensure that the petitioner and the respondent are claiming patentably indistinct inventions, the determination of “same or substantially the same,” between the at least one claim of the petitioner and a claimed invention of the respondent, is a two-way analysis. That analysis can be performed on a claim of the petitioner and any challenged claim of the respondent. On the other hand, a two-way analysis is not necessary for the determination of “same or substantially the same” between the at least one claim of petitioner and the invention disclosed to the respondent. Instead, that is determined one-way, in the direction from the petitioner’s claim to the invention disclosed to the respondent. In summary, the three “same or substantially the same” inquiries between the petitioner’s claim (“P”), the respondent’s claimed invention (“R”), and the Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 16 invention disclosed to the respondent (“D”) are illustrated by the following diagram: The illustration shows the relationship of P and D and R with each other. The directions of the arrows connecting P and R, P and D, and D and R indicate whether the associated “same or substantially the same” analysis is one-way or two-way, and if one-way, in which direction. Catapult’s claim 69 potentially may serve as a qualifying claim. Substantial evidence supports a determination that it is the same or substantially the same as claim 31 of the adidas AG ’510 application, as amended. The two claims read essentially the same. Moreover, based on the comparisons provided through the claim chart in Catapult’s Revised Petition, focusing on how the disclosed invention meets every feature of challenged claim 31, substantial evidence supports a conclusion that claim 69 of the Catapult application is the same or substantially the same as an invention disclosed to adidas AG. Regardless of which claim serves as Catapult’s qualifying claim, however, Catapult failed to identify and keep a consistent D between the P to D analysis and the D to R analysis. Catapult evidently regards all communicated information as Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 17 the disclosed invention D in the D to R analysis, but has not identified any of its own claims as being the same or substantially the same as all of that communicated information. In this case, the P to D and the D to R analysis are not aligned. 4. Filing of the adidas AG ’510 application not authorized by Holthouse Substantial evidence supports Catapult’s assertion that the filing of the adidas ’510 application was unauthorized by Mr. Holthouse. Mr. Holthouse testifies that he did not authorize filing of the adidas AG ’510 application, published as Pub. No. US 2012/0253484 A1. Ex. 1012 ¶ 34. 5. Arguments and evidence missing from the Revised Petition As we noted in Section A above, to prove derivation, the party asserting derivation must establish prior conception of the claimed subject matter and communication of that conception to an inventor of the other party. Cooper, 154 F.3d at 1332; Price, 988 F.2d at 1190; Hedgewick, 497 F.2d at 908. There can be no derivation without prior conception on the part of the party alleging derivation. Davis, 620 F.2d at 889; Egnot, 387 F.2d at 687. A charge of derivation addresses originality—who invented the subject matter at issue. Price, 988 F.2d at 1191. Derivation is about prior “conception” and communication of the prior “conception,” and not about prior possession and communication of the prior “possession.” Possession indicates little, if anything, about originality of invention. One who possessed the invention might have acquired it from someone else. It is unfounded to assume that one who had an invention in his or her possession must have conceived of the invention and be the source or origin of that invention. Catapult’s Revised Petition presents argument and evidence of prior “possession” and communication of the prior possession, instead of argument and evidence of prior “conception” and communication of that prior conception. The Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 18 latter, not the former, is required for showing derivation of invention. In that regard, note that the Statement of Facts portion of Catapult’s Revised Petition is titled: “Prior Possession and Disclosure of the Invention.” Rev. Pet. 5. The concept of prior “conception” by Mr. Holthouse of the invention disclosed to the Adidas Team is missing entirely from Mr. Holthouse’s testimony and not addressed by the Revised Petition. In his declaration (Ex. 1012), Mr. Holthouse does not assert that he “conceived” of any of the features and functionalities disclosed to the Adidas Team on October 19–20, 2010, much less “conceived” an invention which includes all such disclosed features and functionalities. The testimony of Mr. Holthouse does not support an assertion of invention by Mr. Holthouse with regard to what was disclosed to the Adidas Team. The declaration of Mr. Millar is no different. Mr. Millar’s testimony does not corroborate any “conception” of invention by Mr. Holthouse. The testimony of the two witnesses is concerned only with possession and communication, not “conception” of a disclosed invention. D. Conclusion Based on the evidence and arguments presented by Catapult, and for the reasons discussed above, substantial evidence, unrebutted, does not support a conclusion that any one of the challenged claims of adidas AG constitutes a derived invention. Upon resumption of prosecution, nothing precludes an examiner from considering whether the presentation and demonstration that occurred on October 19–20, 2010, in Wilmington, Delaware, constitute prior art that render any claim of Application 14/045,954 or any claim of Application 13/077,510 unpatentable, because we have not made such a determination. Case DER2014-00006 Applications 14/045,954 and 13/077,510 19 E. Order It is ORDERED that Catapult’s Revised Petition to institute a derivation proceeding directed to claims 1–10, 12–29, and 31 of the adidas AG ’510 application is denied; FURTHER ORDERED that we do not institute a derivation proceeding, for trial, with respect to any claim of the adidas AG ’510 application; FURTHER ORDERED that the suspension of prosecution of Catapult’s Application 14/045,954, and of the adidas AG ’510 application, as ordered on April 24, 2014 (Paper 16), is herein lifted; FURTHER ORDERED that jurisdiction over Application 14/045,954 and jurisdiction over Application 13/077,510 are herein returned to the examiners in charge of examination of the respective applications; and FURTHER ORDERED that a copy of this decision will be placed in the respective files of Application 14/045,954 and Application 13/077,510. For Petitioner: David Morse Brian Belles david.morse@thebellesgroup.com brian.belles@thebellesgroup.com For Respondent: David Cornwell Mark Rygiel davidc-PTAB@skgf.com mrygiel-PTAB@skgf.com Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation