Ex Parte GraffDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardJul 23, 201310885569 (P.T.A.B. Jul. 23, 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. 10/885,569 07/06/2004 Richard A. Graff Graff-P2-04 7887 28710 7590 07/23/2013 PETER K. TRZYNA, ESQ. P O BOX 7131 CHICAGO, IL 60680 EXAMINER MEINECKE DIAZ, SUSANNA M ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3684 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 07/23/2013 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 1 ___________ 2 3 BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD 4 ___________ 5 6 Ex parte RICHARD A. GRAFF 7 ___________ 8 9 Appeal 2012-003941 10 Application 10/885,569 11 Technology Center 3600 12 ___________ 13 14 15 Before MURRIEL E. CRAWFORD, HUBERT C. LORIN, and 16 ANTON W. FETTING, Administrative Patent Judges. 17 18 FETTING, Administrative Patent Judge. 19 20 21 DECISION ON APPEAL22 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE1 1 Richard A. Graff (Appellant) seeks review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 of a 2 final rejection of claims 1-53, the only claims pending in the application on 3 appeal. We have jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). 4 The Appellant invented a form of securitization of property by 5 decomposition into at least two components. One component can be an 6 estate for years and/or an augmented estate for years interest, and a second 7 component can be a remainder and/or a complementary remainder interest. 8 The computer system computes the respective values and investment 9 characteristics of the components, and produces documentation thereof, to 10 facilitate financial transactions involving the separate components. (Spec. 11 2:9-14). 12 An understanding of the invention can be derived from a reading of 13 exemplary claim 1, which is reproduced below [bracketed matter and some 14 paragraphing added]. 15 1. A method to make financial analysis output, the method 16 comprising: 17 [1] receiving input signals at a processor in a computer system 18 comprising an input device and an output device, 19 the input signals representing data received from another 20 computer system via the input device, 21 the data including data 22 associated with a fractional interest in property, 23 wherein the property includes an interest in only one of 24 a contingent equity interest in real estate 25 that is a primary equity interest 26 and 27 1 Our decision will make reference to the Appellant’s Appeal Brief (“App. Br.,” filed Sep. 6, 2011) and Reply Brief (“Reply Br.,” filed Jan. 9, 2012), and the Examiner’s Answer (“Ans.,” mailed Nov. 9, 2011). Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 3 a corresponding contingent equity interest in the 1 real estate 2 that is a secondary equity interest; 3 [2] controlling the processor 4 to manipulate at least some of the input signals 5 to compute a valuation of the fractional interest 6 in consummating 7 a sale 8 and 9 corresponding purchase 10 of the fractional interest 11 at a price corresponding to the valuation; 12 and 13 [3] producing financial analysis output 14 including one of 15 the valuation 16 and 17 the price 18 at the output device. 19 20 The Examiner relies upon the following prior art: 21 22 Eder US 6,393,406 B1 May 21, 2002 23 24 Brad Davidson, Valuation of Fractional Interests in Real Estate 25 Limited Partnerships - Another Approach, 60 The Appraisal Journal, 26 1-8 (Apr. 1992) (hereinafter “Davidson”). 27 28 Claims 1-53 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph, 29 as failing to particularly point out and distinctly claim the invention. 30 Claims 1-53 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable 31 over Davidson and Eder. 32 Claims 1-53 stand rejected on the ground of nonstatutory 33 obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-202 34 of U.S. Patent No. 6,760,709. 35 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 4 Claims 1-53 stand rejected on the ground of nonstatutory 1 obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-17 of 2 U.S. Patent No.6, 167,384. 3 4 ISSUES 5 The issues of indefiniteness turn primarily on whether the claims 6 distinguish between property interests in real estate and property interests in 7 those property interests. The issues of obviousness turn primarily on 8 whether the claims require property that includes an interest in only one of a 9 contingent equity interest in real estate that is a primary equity interest and a 10 corresponding contingent equity interest in the real estate that is a secondary 11 equity interest. The nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting 12 rejections are not argued. 13 14 FACTS PERTINENT TO THE ISSUES 15 The following enumerated Findings of Fact (FF) are believed to be 16 supported by a preponderance of the evidence. 17 Facts Related to Claim Construction 18 01. Claim 1 does not recite using a fractional interest in property or a 19 contingent equity interest in real estate. Claim 1 recites receiving 20 signals that have some unspecified manner of representation 21 toward some data that in turn has some unspecified manner of 22 association with some fractional interest in property. That 23 property, not used as such in claim 1, is then recited as including 24 one of two possible contingent equity interests. 25 02. Property and equity interests are legal abstractions. 26 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 5 03. The claims use the transition “comprising.” 1 04. Claim 1 recites receiving signals. This does not preclude 2 receiving plural such sets of signals. One of those sets is 3 associated in some manner with a nominally fractional interest in 4 only one of a primary and secondary interest. By simple 5 inference, this does not preclude a separate set of signals 6 associated in some manner with a nominally fractional interest in 7 the other of a primary and secondary interest. 8 Facts Related to the Prior Art 9 Davidson 10 05. Davidson is directed to examining the degree to which a fractional 11 interest in a real estate limited partnership should be discounted 12 relative to an otherwise identical fee simple interest. Davidson, 13 Abstr. 14 06. Davidson describes several mathematical algorithms for 15 computing a valuation of a fractional interest for conveyance. As 16 a specific example, conventional financial discounting is used in 17 some methods. Davidson 1-7. 18 07. Davidson describes several parameters that would be input 19 variables to those algorithms for computing a valuation of a 20 fractional interest for conveyance. As a specific example, income 21 is used in some valuation methods. Davidson 1-7. 22 Eder 23 08. Eder is directed to electronic valuations of business. Eder 1:8-11. 24 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 6 ANALYSIS 1 Claims 1-53 rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph, as failing to 2 particularly point out and distinctly claim the invention. 3 We are persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that “the Examiner has 4 simply confused the claimed element property with the claimed element real 5 estate, each of which is positively recited as distinct, as would be understood 6 by one having ordinary skill in the art.” Reply Br. 3. The Examiner found 7 that “[a]ccording to Applicant's cited excerpt from the specification, if a 8 property includes a secondary equity interest, it MUST include a primary 9 equity interest.” Ans. 6. As Appellant points out, the word property in the 10 quoted recitation refers to the real estate in the claim. One of ordinary skill 11 with even freshman level property law knowledge would appreciate the 12 meaning. 13 Nothing in this conclusion is meant to negate the reasonable inference 14 the Examiner drew that the claims are very broad and may read on any 15 imaginable subject of property. Our analysis in this regard is set forth in the 16 obviousness rejection analysis infra. 17 Claims 1-53 rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over 18 Davidson and Eder. 19 Claim 1 receives data, manipulates that data to compute a valuation in 20 consummating a sale and in some manner outputting the valuation or price. 21 It is undisputed that Davidson does so, and the facts we find support this. 22 The arguments go to the nature of the data and property interests employed. 23 To this, the most direct response is that the nature of the data and legal 24 interests are given no patentable weight, and cannot distinguish the claims 25 over the art. The legal interests are abstractions, existing only in the minds 26 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 7 of the beholders, and the only functional requirement of the data is that it be 1 somehow used in a valuation. Clearly, Davidson does so with its data. 2 Non-functional descriptive material cannot render nonobvious an 3 invention that would have otherwise been obvious. In re Ngai, 367 F.3d 4 1336, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2004). Cf. In re Gulack, 703 F.2d 1381, 1385 (Fed. 5 Cir. 1983) (when descriptive material is not functionally related to the 6 substrate, the descriptive material will not distinguish the invention from the 7 prior art in terms of patentability). In a recent non-precedential decision, our 8 reviewing court reminded us of the applicability of the precedential In re 9 Gulack, 703 F.2d 1381 (Fed. Cir. 1983), In re Bernhart, 417 F.2d 1395 10 (CCPA 1969) and In re Lowry, 32 F.3d 1579 (Fed. Cir. 1994) decisions. 11 We have held that patent applicants cannot rely on printed 12 matter to distinguish a claim unless “there exists [a] new and 13 unobvious functional relationship between the printed matter 14 and the substrate.” In re Gulack, 703 F.2d 1381, 1386 15 (Fed.Cir.1983). . . . 16 17 . . . . 18 . . . [T]he Board did not create a new “mental 19 distinctions” rule in denying patentable weight . . . . On the 20 contrary, the Board simply expressed the above-described 21 functional relationship standard in an alternative formulation—22 consistent with our precedents—when it concluded that any 23 given position label’s function . . . is a distinction “discernable 24 only to the human mind.” . . . ; see In re Lowry, 32 F.3d 1579, 25 1583 (Fed.Cir.1994) (describing printed matter as “useful and 26 intelligible only to the human mind”) (quoting In re Bernhart, 27 . . . 417 F.2d 1395, 1399 (CCPA 1969)). 28 29 In re Xiao, 2011-1195 WL 4821929, at *3-4 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (Non-30 precedential). Thus non-functional descriptive material, being useful and 31 intelligible only to the human mind, is given no patentable weight. See 32 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 8 Ngai, 367 F.3d at 1339. ). “The rationale behind this line of cases is 1 preventing the indefinite patenting of known products by the simple 2 inclusion of novel, yet functionally unrelated limitations.” King 3 Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Eon Labs, Inc., 616 F.3d 1267, 1279 (Fed Cir 4 2010). (The relevant inquiry here is whether the additional instructional 5 limitation has a “new and unobvious functional relationship” with the 6 method , that is, whether the limitation in no way depends on the method, 7 and the method does not depend on the limitation). 8 Here, the nature of signals as property interests in no way depends on the 9 steps of receiving, computing a valuation and producing a financial analysis 10 output and none of those steps depend on the nature of the signals being 11 property interests. While the particular computational algorithm and 12 analysis chosen might in some manner be related to the mental interpretation 13 of the signals as property interests, such selection criteria are not recited as 14 functional or structural limitations. Simply performing some unspecified 15 valuation and analysis in itself is not dependent on the nature of the 16 operators. 17 This simple fact that the inputs are simply arbitrary binary data signals 18 that the human mind interprets as to meaning and the output is some number 19 that the human mind interprets as the same number that corresponds to some 20 valuation, distinguishes this case from In re Ochiai, 71 F.3d 1565 (Fed. Cir. 21 1995) cited by Appellant at Reply Brief, page 20. Ochiai was directed 22 toward the generally uncertain technologies of chemistry where unknown 23 substances may exhibit unforeseen properties. Thus, in such a case, the 24 substance is inextricably part of the process it is an input to. In computer 25 technology, signals must conform to rigid predefined protocols to be 26 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 9 processed. There is nothing uncertain about the processing. Indeed it is the 1 very certainty in processing that is the hallmark of automation. In such a 2 case, the input itself does not form part of the process. 3 The Examiner found that the use of the word “property” in the claims 4 was sufficiently broad to encompass Davidson’s property interests within its 5 scope. While the Examiner was relying principally on the indefiniteness 6 rejection to support this finding, we agree with the Examiner that the 7 property interests in the claims are so broad as to encompass Davidson, 8 again because a property interest is a legal abstraction given no patentable 9 weight. This is the essence of the Examiner’s findings at Answer, pages 23-10 25 addressing this issue. The claims do not recite any physical steps that 11 vary based on the nature of the legal interests, as even the actual 12 computation algorithms are not further narrowed dependent upon the nature 13 of the interest. Thus, the basic thrust of the Examiner’s rejection is 14 maintained. 15 We are not persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that the 16 cited art does not disclose the property includes 17 an interest in only one of a contingent equity 18 interest in real estate that is a primary equity 19 interest and a corresponding contingent equity 20 interest in the real estate that is a secondary 21 equity interest as claimed. 22 All claims require this property in connection with, and 23 as a limitation to, each claim as a whole. 24 Appeal Br. 53-54. The claims require receiving input signals, not property. 25 The signals, being arbitrary binary data, may represent whatever the 26 performer imagines, and the claims aspirationally suggest imagining 27 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 10 property interests. The signals must be usable in some fashion in a 1 computation, but that is the extent of what the claims require. 2 We are not persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that Davidson is 3 dealing with the wrong property, and the claimed fractional interest cannot 4 be synonymous with Davidson's fractional interest. Appeal Br. 54-56. 5 Again, the claims recite receiving signals, not property. There is no wrong 6 property. As to whether one owner's fractional interest in an asset as taught 7 in Davidson can never be the whole equity interest in the asset, that is 8 irrelevant because (1) the claim does not require a fractional interest, (2) 9 because the fractional interest recited, though not required, does not specify 10 the fractional portion and in particular does not recite full ownership, and (3) 11 whether the property in Davidson may not encompass full ownership does 12 not diminish its scope of application to full ownership implementations. 13 We are not persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that Davidson 14 “does not disclose the property includes an interest in only one of a 15 contingent equity interest in real estate and a corresponding contingent 16 equity interest in the real estate.” Appeal Br. 57-59. As the claim does 17 not require property, it clearly does not require an interest in a contingent 18 equity interest in real estate, and certainly not exactly one such interest. 19 Again, the claims recite receiving signals. As the Examiner found at 20 Answer, pages 23-25, one can imagine whatever scenario one desires for 21 interpreting the signals. All the signals are used for is some computation 22 and output. One cannot use patents to exclude human thought. Further, the 23 claim does not exclude incorporating both primary and secondary interests 24 because of the “comprising” transition and the non-exclusionary signal 25 reception. FF 03-04. Finally, we note that Examiner is correct that the 26 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 11 attribute of being primary or secondary is dependent on context, and so 1 Davidson clearly encompasses with its scope receiving one of primary or 2 secondary property interest representations. 3 We are not persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that the 4 cited art does not disclose controlling the 5 processor to manipulate at least some of the 6 input signals to computer [sic, compute] a 7 valuation of the fractional interest in 8 consummating a sale and a corresponding 9 purchase of the fractional interest at a price 10 corresponding to the valuation. . . . 11 The Examiner's finding that "the interest may be a 12 contingent equity interest in real estate that is a primary equity 13 interest" is mere Examiner rumination in hindsight. There is no 14 such teaching in the cited art. In fact, neither the word 15 "contingent" nor the word "contingency" is taught or even 16 disclosed in Davidson. 17 Appeal Br. 59-62. As the Examiner found, one is free to imagine 18 Davidson’s signals representing anything. What the signals represent in the 19 claims is given no patentable weight for that very reason. The signals are 20 used in some computation, and so they are in Davidson. The purpose of the 21 computation is simply aspirational rather than functional. Thus, whether the 22 word “contingent” is recited by Davidson is not relevant to patentability. 23 We are not persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that Davidson 24 teaches away from applying its methods to a contingent interest. Appeal Br. 25 62. Simply that there are differences between two references is insufficient 26 to establish that such references "teach away" from any combination thereof. 27 See In re Beattie, 974 F.2d 1309, 1312-13 (Fed. Cir. 1992). 28 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 12 We are not persuaded by the Appellant’s argument that the Examiner 1 misconstrued the claims. Appeal Br. 63-72. We made findings as to this 2 supra. 3 The bulk of Appellant’s arguments with respect to dependent claims 4 at Appeal Brief, pages 73-88 reargue parent claim 1. 5 As to claim 4 reciting consummating a sale at an exchange, again 6 parent claim 1 only recites manipulating signals to compute a valuation. The 7 sale is simply aspirational. Further, the argument as to where controlling 8 takes place is not applicable to the claimed location where the sale took 9 place. Finally, a financial exchange is clearly a predictable forum for 10 financial sales, as that is the exchange’s very purpose. 11 The arguments as to the nature of Davidson’s property with respect to 12 claims 5-9 are misplaced because the nature of the property in the claim is of 13 no patentable weight. 14 The arguments with regard to claim 14 reciting outputting an offering 15 document are unpersuasive because an offering document is non-functional 16 in that it is perceptible only in the mind of the beholder. The offering 17 document is not an input to a functional process or structure recited in the 18 claims. 19 20 CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 21 The rejection of claims 1-53 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second 22 paragraph, as failing to particularly point out and distinctly claim the 23 invention is improper. 24 The rejection of claims 1-53 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable 25 over Davidson and Eder is proper. 26 Appeal 2012-003941 Application 10/885,569 13 The rejection of claims 1-53 on the ground of nonstatutory 1 obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-17 of 2 U.S. Patent No.6, 167,384 is uncontested. 3 4 DECISION 5 The rejection of claims 1-53 is affirmed. 6 No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this 7 appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. 8 § 1.136(a)(1)(iv) (2011). 9 10 AFFIRMED 11 12 13 14 15 hh 16 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation