Ex Parte 7854597 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 30, 201695002006 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 30, 2016) 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. 95/002,006 06/01/2012 7854597 144074.00753 9030 26710 7590 08/30/2016 QUARLES & BRADY LLP Attn: IP Docket 411 E. WISCONSIN AVENUE SUITE 2350 MILWAUKEE, WI 53202-4426 EXAMINER DOERRLER, WILLIAM CHARLES ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3993 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/30/2016 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 ____________________ HAYWARD INDUSTRIES, INC., Third Party Requester/Cross-Appellant, v. PENTAIR WATER POOL AND SPA, INC., Patent Owner/Appellant. ____________________ Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B21 Technology Center 3900 ____________________ Before JOHN C. KERINS, DANIEL S. SONG, and BRETT C. MARTIN, Administrative Patent Judges. MARTIN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL 1 Issued to Stiles, Jr. et al. on December 21, 2010 (hereinafter the ’597 patent). Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE The Patent Owner appeals under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134(b) and 315(a) from a rejection of claims 1–16, 18–32, 34–37, 40–43, and 45–57. PO App. Br. 1. Claims 38, 39, and 44 are confirmed, and claims 17, 33, 58, and 59 are objected to. Id. The Third Party Requester (“Requester”) cross-appeals from the non-adoption of rejections of claims 17, 33, 39, 44, 58, and 59. Req. Br. 4. The Requester also cross-appeals from numerous non-adopted rejections of claims presently rejected on other grounds. Req. Br. 5–6. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134(c) and 315(b). Oral arguments were presented in this case on May 17, 2016, a transcript of which was entered in the record on June 20, 2016. We are informed that the ’597 patent is involved in a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina captioned Pentair Water Pool and Spa, Inc. and Danfoss Drives A/S v. Hayward Industries, Inc. and Hayward Pool Products, Inc.¸ Civil Action No. 5:11-cv-459. Req. Br. 1. We are further informed that the aforementioned lawsuit also involves six other patents: US 7,686,587, which is subject to a Board Decision and subsequent Request for Rehearing in Reexamination Control 95/002,008; US 7,857,600 B2, which is subject to a Board Decision in Reexamination Control 95/002,005; US 7,815,420 B2, which is subject to a Board Decision in Reexamination Control 95/002,007; US 8,019,479 B2, which is subject to a Final Written Decision in IPR2013- 00285 and an appeal therefrom in Appeal 2015-1408; US 7,704,051 B2, which is subject to a Final Written Decision in IPR2013-00287 and an appeal therefrom in Appeal 2015-1409; and US 8,043,070 B2. Id. Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 3 We reverse the Examiner’s decision to reject the claims as detailed above, but affirm the Examiner’s non-adoption of the rejections as cross- appealed by the Requester. CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The claims are directed "to control of a pump, and more particularly to control of a variable speed pumping system for a pool." Spec., col. 1, ll. 14–16. Claim 1, reproduced below, is illustrative of the claimed subject matter: 1. A pumping system for at least one aquatic application, the pumping system receiving information from a user, the pumping system comprising: a pump; a motor coupled to the pump; a control system operating as a master controller, the control system including an automation system, the control system including a remote keypad and display connected to the automation system; and a pump controller located remotely from the control system, the pump controller coupled to at least one of the pump and the motor, the pump controller operating as a slave controller when connected to the control system, the pump controller in digital communication with the motor and the control system, the pump controller transmitting information to and receiving information from the control system over at least one communication link, the pump controller operating the motor to substantially optimize energy consumption based on the information entered into the remote keypad by the user and received from the control system, Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 4 the pump controller operating independently to control the motor to optimize energy consumption when disconnected from the control system. REFERENCES The prior art relied upon by the Examiner in rejecting the claims on appeal is: Discenzo Jones Ehlers Koehl US 2003/0061004 A1 US 2003/0196942 A1 US 2004/0117330 A1 US 2005/0123408 A1 Mar. 27, 2003 Oct. 23, 2003 June 17, 2004 June 9, 2005 Compool, Cp3800 Pool-Spa Control System Installation and Operating Instructions, November 7, 1997 (“Compool Manual”). Robert S. Carrow, Electrician’s Technical Reference, Variable Frequency Drives, 2001 (“Carrow”). Owner’s Guide, Hayward Pro-Series High-Rate Sand Filter, Model S310T2, S360T2, 2002 (“Filtering Owner’s Guide”). Pentair RS-485 Pool Controller Adapter Published Advertisement from Pool and Spa News, March 22, 2002 (“Pentair RS-485 Publication”). Product Focus – New AC Drive Series Targets Water, Wastewater Applications, WaterWorld Magazine, Vol. 8, No. 7, July 2002 (“WaterWorld Magazine Publication”). Pentair IntelliTouch Operating Manual, Set-Up and Programming, May 22, 2003 (“Pentair Manual”). Danfoss VLT 8000 AQUA Instruction Manual, April 16, 2004 (“Danfoss”). REJECTIONS The Requester presented 153 rejections to the Examiner for consideration, a listing of which may be found in the RAN at 6–24. The Examiner adopted Rejections 8, 39–50, 66–79, 95–108, and 139–153 in whole or in part. RAN 25–54. The Examiner originally adopted, but Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 5 withdrew, or chose not to adopt, the remaining rejections. RAN 6–22, 54– 159. OPINION Patent Owner’s Appeal As the Patent Owner states, the adopted rejections on appeal deal mainly with two references, Discenzo and Ehlers. PO App. Br. 3. According to the Patent Owner, these references fail to teach or disclose both the claimed elements of optimizing energy consumption and the interrelated master-slave relationship, and if either of these two elements is found to be missing, then the currently pending rejections fall away. Id. While the Requester asserts that Carrow also teaches the claimed master- slave relationship, as the Requester states “the RAN relies on Discenzo for ‘optimize energy consumption’ and master-slave,” so that whether Carrow teaches these concepts is not in a rejection that is before us. Req. Resp. Br. 3. See also RAN 161 (“while it is true that Carrow is not seen to teach the master/slave relationship”). The Requester admits that what Discenzo actually teaches is more of a host-to-peer relationship between various controllers, but nonetheless asserts that this is equivalent to the claimed master-slave relationship. Req. Resp. Br. 6. The Requester provides little explanation as to how a host-to- peer relationship meets the claims other than to state that Discenzo, “after having first discussed that the pump controller of Figure 9 has stand-alone capability, thereafter discloses that the same controller can ‘alternatively or Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 6 in combination’ receive information when ‘operatively’ connected.” Req. Resp. Br. 5 (citing Discenzo ¶ 134). The Requester also relies on the statements of its expert, Dr. Emadi, but as with Requester’s argument, Dr. Emadi does little more than state that “the host computer of Fig. 17 is the ‘master’ and the pump controller of Fig. 9 (MC1) is the ‘slave.’” Emadi Dec. ¶ 34. This is allegedly so because “[t]he setpoint on the flow regulator of the pump controller can be entered at the host computer when connected.” Id. As further explained by the Patent Owner’s expert, Dr. Collins, however, “the optimization component 970 determines an optimized setpoint that varies from a setpoint sent from a host computer.” 3rd Collins Dec. ¶ 28. Dr. Collins also elaborates, “Discenzo describes a distributed control system that relies on controllers that function as local agents that are designed to make local decisions based on local objectives, even when working collaboratively with other controllers.” Id. at ¶ 29. Dr. Collins further explains, “Discenzo does not disclose that if setpoints or desired operating points are received from the host computer 1704, even if optimized by optimization component 1706, the controller 966 and its optimization component 970 would lose independent control.” Id. at ¶ 36. We agree with Dr. Collins’ conclusion that in either the control scheme of Figure 9 or Figure 17 of Discenzo, “the pump control system contains an active optimization component 970 that independently provides a motor speed output signal 964 that commands the motor’s speed.” Id. at ¶ 38. Further, we disagree with the Requester that the mere receiving of information that may then be used to influence local control can properly be Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 7 considered a master-slave configuration. Accordingly, while we agree that Discenzo teaches that the master controller/host may influence and/or provide operating information to the peer, we are persuaded that the peer in Discenzo maintains a significant amount of control so as not properly to be considered a slave. This deficiency is not cured by any of the references used in combination with Discenzo. We, therefore, do not sustain the Examiner’s rejections that rely on Discenzo for teaching the claimed master- slave relationship that is present in all of the pending independent claims.2 Regarding the use of Ehlers as also teaching the claimed master-slave relationship, the Examiner appears only to rely on the fact that the local control node “will continue to perform if the connection to the main controller is severed.” RAN 166. We agree with the Patent Owner, however, that “a device that ‘continues to perform’ does not teach a change of operation from a ‘slave’ device to a master device,” but that Ehlers merely “indicates that the device simply continues to operate as it did when connected to the network.” PO App. Br. 14. As Dr. Collins further points out, “handing over primary control over electrical devices in a home to the utility company, with no ability for the home owner to maintain similar privileges, makes little sense.” First Collins Dec. ¶ 109. We also agree with the Patent Owner that Ehlers deals with a different concept entirely and thus “fails to disclose or teach the claimed optimization of energy consumption as called for” in the claims. PO App. Br. 22. The Examiner accepts that the proper interpretation of “optimize energy 2 Rejections 8, 38–47, 49, 50, 66–76, 78, 79, 95–105, 107, and 108 each rely on Discenzo for this teaching. Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 8 consumption” is “a reduction of energy consumed over time relative to the ultimate pumping application/function.” RAN 160. Ehlers, however, “is not concerned with optimizing energy consumption by reducing energy consumed over time relative to an ultimate pumping application/function,” but only deals with “[m]oving discretionary loads from peak demand periods to off demand periods.” PO App. Br. 22–23, (emphasis added). As the Patent Owner points out, “pool pumps controlled by nodes 1.10B are specifically referred to as ‘dumb devices . . . which simply operate in an on or off state.’” PO Rebuttal Br. 11. It would appear that the Requester simply picks certain language in Ehlers (flow control, ability to intercommunicate with the entire supply chain, etc.) to assemble what looks like the claimed device, but when viewed in context is actually inapplicable. All Ehlers discloses is that an energy consumer may allow the utility to aid in scheduling certain operations and thus receive a discount for participation, but the specifics of the operation, other than their happening or not (i.e., essentially an on/off control), is completely out of the control of the centralized system. Id. at 22. Ehlers has nothing to do with the details of the pump operation at the pool to make it operate more efficiently based on conditions within the pool system other than to move a scheduled operation from a peak time to a non-peak time. As Dr. Collins states, “Ehlers merely functions to either to schedule the pool pump to run [at a] certain time, or alternatively, shut down the pump during peak loads.” 3rd Collins Dec. ¶ 26. The claims require more than load shifting, and must include more detailed Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 9 control of the pump to achieve optimum efficiency within the pool system. As such we do not sustain the Examiner’s rejections that rely on Ehlers.3 Requester’s Cross-Appeal § 112 Rejections The Requester asserts that the Examiner was incorrect in withdrawing the indefiniteness rejection of claim 44. Req. Br. 29. The Requester goes into great detail explaining the history of this rejection, but as the Patent Owner states, the Examiner, in most of that history, “failed to reference the sections of the ’597 Patent cited in PO’s Third Response” that support the claim language. PO Resp. Br. 14. We agree with the Examiner’s finding that “PO’s arguments pointing out the portions of the original specification that support new claims 44, 45, and 56 on pages 38-40 of the July 9, 2014 amendment are persuasive.” RAN 178. As the Patent Owner correctly states, “the portions of the ’597 Patent cited by PO specifically addressed the issues presented by the Examiner, and demonstrated that Claim 44 is fully and properly supported.” PO Resp. Br. 14. Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner’s withdrawal/non-adoption of this rejection. Regarding the rejection of claims 38 and 39, we agree with the Patent Owner that the Examiner properly determined that the claim language “‘an amount of water movement is associated with operation of at least one auxiliary device’ is ‘seen to mean the water flow intended to provide proper operation of the auxiliary device.’” PO Resp. Br. 15. Further, we agree with the Patent Owner that the Requester appears to confuse breadth with 3 Rejections 139–153 rely upon Ehlers as the primary reference and rejections 75 and 104 rely on Ehlers as a secondary reference. Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 10 indefiniteness. Id. The claims clearly state what may or may not be a part of the pumping system and all that is required is that a component thereof do the claimed “considering.” Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner’s non- adoption of the rejection of claims 38 and 39 as indefinite. Art-Based Rejections The majority of the remainder of the Requester’s cross-appeal deals with the disagreement over the proper construction of “optimize energy consumption.” Req. Br. 11 (“but for the Reexamination Examiner’s change in construction…Issues 1-16, 18, 19, 20-34, 36, 37, 51-62, 64, 65, 80-91, 93, 94, 109-120, 122, 123, and 124-135, 137, 138 would not have been withdrawn”). As discussed, supra, we agree with the Examiner’s interpretation of this claim language and thus also agree that the Carrow, Jones, and Koehl references as well as the Danfoss Manual do not meet this limitation as properly construed by the Examiner. See also PO Resp. Br. 3– 8. The rest of the Requester’s arguments deal with dependent claims or other rejections that rely on a rejected construction of “optimize energy consumption.” See Req. Br. 12–27. Having already deemed the base references deficient for not teaching the properly construed “optimize energy consumption” limitation, all rejections using these base references are improper for at least the above-stated reasons. The Examiner also objected to claims 17 and 33 as being dependent upon a rejected base claim but containing allowable subject matter. RAN 179. The Requester argues that these claims as well as independent claims 58 and 59, which contain similar limitations, should also be rejected. Req. Br. 12–18. As the Requester’s counsel stated during oral argument “when a Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 11 pump controller ignores a request for increased flow rate, but doesn’t know that the request was for increased flow rate or doesn’t care, that’s enough.” Hearing Transcript 92. Essentially, Requester’s argument is that not receiving a request is the same as ignoring a request, thus allowing a “lockout” state as in Mehlhorn or shutdown states of other references, to teach the claimed “ignoring.” We agree with the Examiner, however, that “a signal to shut down the motor is not the same as the motor controller ignoring a signal to increase the flow rate.” RAN 78. The Requester’s argument essentially would equate to not receiving a telephone call because the telephone line has been cut or no phones are plugged in as being equivalent to having “ignored” that call. We do not agree that “ignoring” can be so broadly interpreted. As such, we agree with the Examiner’s decision not to reject claims 17, 33, 58, and 59. For the reasons stated above, we sustain the Examiner’s non-adoption of all of the art-based rejections set forth in the Requester’s Cross-Appeal. DECISION The Examiner’s rejection of claims 1–16, 18–32, 34–37, 40–43, and 45–57 is REVERSED and the Examiner’s non-adoption of all other rejections proposed by the Requester is AFFIRMED. 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). In the event neither party files a request for rehearing within the time provided in 37 C.F.R. § 41.79, and this decision becomes final and appealable under 37 C.F.R. § 41.81, a party seeking judicial review must timely serve notice Appeal 2016-002780 Reexamination Control 95/002,006 Patent US 7,854,597 B2 12 on the Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office. See 37 C.F.R. §§ 90.1 and 1.983. AFFIRMED-IN-PART PATENT OWNER: QUARLES & BRADY LLP Attn: IP Docket 411 E. 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