Ex Parte Hoffman et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 3, 201209815731 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 3, 2012) 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. 09/815,731 03/23/2001 George Harry Hoffman 062834-0179 8181 22428 7590 10/03/2012 FOLEY AND LARDNER LLP SUITE 500 3000 K STREET NW WASHINGTON, DC 20007 EXAMINER GORT, ELAINE L ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3687 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/03/2012 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 GEORGE HARRY HOFFMAN, 7 DANIEL SECHRIST, 8 ANTHONY FRANK MENNINGER, 9 and MICHAEL JAMES BURK 10 ___________ 11 12 Appeal 2011-013120 13 Application 09/815,731 14 Technology Center 3600 15 ___________ 16 17 18 Before TERRY J. OWENS, ANTON W. FETTING, and 19 MICHAEL W. KIM, Administrative Patent Judges. 20 21 FETTING, Administrative Patent Judge. 22 23 24 DECISION ON APPEAL25 Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE1 1 George Harry Hoffman, Daniel Sechrist, Anthony Frank Menninger, 2 and Michael James Burk (Appellants) seek review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 3 (2002) of a final rejection of claims 1, 3-6, 8-11, and 13-15, the only claims 4 pending in the application on appeal. We have jurisdiction over the appeal 5 pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 6(b) (2002). 6 The Appellants invented a form of the management of supply chains 7 (Spec. 1:Field of the Invention). 8 An understanding of the invention can be derived from a reading of 9 exemplary claim 1, which is reproduced below [bracketed matter and some 10 paragraphing added]. 11 1. A method for providing an interface, comprising: 12 a) receiving data, 13 via a receiver unit, 14 from a plurality of stores 15 of a supply chain 16 utilizing a network, 17 the data relating to an amount of goods 18 that are manually produced 19 based on a recipe 20 and 21 sold by the stores; 22 b) aggregating 23 by one or more computers programmed to do so, 24 the data 25 based on one or more supplier and/or distributor 26 parameters; 27 c) receiving a request 28 relating to production of the goods; 29 1 Our decision will make reference to the Appellants’ Appeal Brief (“App. Br.,” filed May 3, 2011) and Reply Brief (“Reply Br.,” filed July 13, 2011), and the Examiner’s Answer (“Ans.,” mailed June 3, 2011). Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 3 d) extracting 1 in response to the request 2 the recipe 3 from the aggregated data 4 relevant to production of the goods 5 and 6 that uses 7 at least one material 8 in the production of the goods 9 and 10 an amount of the material 11 sold to at least one of the stores; 12 e) calculating 13 by one or more computers programmed to do so, 14 based on the recipe 15 an amount of the at least one material 16 that should have been used 17 for the amount of the goods sold by 18 the at least one of the stores; 19 f) calculating 20 by one or more computers programmed to do so, 21 a variance between 22 [f-1] the amount of the material, 23 that was actually used 24 for the amount of goods sold by 25 the at least one of the stores, 26 sold to the at least one of the stores 27 and 28 [f-2] the amount of the material that should have 29 been used 30 based on the recipe for the amount of the 31 goods sold; 32 and 33 g) transmitting information 34 relating to the variance 35 for use by one of 36 a supplier of the material to adjust a supply of the 37 material, 38 Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 4 a distributor of the material to adjust a distribution 1 of the material, 2 a supply chain manager, 3 or 4 at least one of the stores using the material to make 5 the goods. 6 7 The Examiner relies upon the following prior art: 8 Hafner US 5,893,076 Apr. 6, 1999 9 Brown US 6,901,381 B2 May 31, 2005 10 11 Joe Myrick; The Silent Thief, 86 NPN, Nat’l Petroleum News, 56 (Dec. 12 1994) (hereinafter “Myrick”). 13 14 Claims 1, 3-6, 8-11, and 13-15 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 15 103(a) as unpatentable over Brown, Hafner, and Myrick. 16 ISSUES 17 The issues of obviousness turn primarily on whether Myrick is 18 evidence of a notoriously well-known and widespread practice of 19 reconciling inventory. 20 FACTS PERTINENT TO THE ISSUES 21 The following enumerated Findings of Fact (FF) are believed to be 22 supported by a preponderance of the evidence. 23 Facts Related to the Prior Art 24 Brown 25 01. Brown is directed to an inventory control system of salable goods 26 that are being carried on a transport, such as for example a train, 27 that travels from a start location to an end location. Brown 1:8-12. 28 02. A train picks up inventory from a commissary and data relating to 29 the particular type of inventory and the amount of the inventory 30 are recorded. A POS device records items from the inventory that 31 Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 5 are sold to the passengers of the train, and any items of the 1 inventory that conceivably become spoiled or unusable. The 2 ingredients, which may also be referred to as the recipe, that make 3 up each item are also recorded. Brown 5:1-23. 4 03. As the inventory gets depleted, the service agent may notice, by 5 means of a display on the POS device, that his inventory is 6 running low. At that time, he could replenish his inventory by 7 requisitioning additional items from commissary. Brown 5:24-29. 8 04. The inventory adjust module actively monitors the depletion of 9 the inventory stocked, and reports the changes in the available 10 items for sale back to the point of sale module. In addition, the 11 inventory adjust module accounts for the variation in ingredients 12 or recipes when calculating the available items for sale. In 13 addition, all transactions that occur, i.e., entered into the POS 14 device, are monitored. And the ingredients associated with the 15 items that are depleted during the trip are taken into consideration 16 in accordance with the file that contains the recipe for each of 17 those items that are sold. Brown 11:15-40. 18 05. When a sale is made for a particular item, the recipe for that item 19 is compared with the recipe database stored in the POS device. 20 The ingredients that are depleted by the sale of the item are 21 deducted from the menu item. Brown 11:41-59. 22 23 Hafner 24 06. Hafner is directed to supplier driven processing of business 25 transactions and interactive communications between a plurality 26 Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 6 of users within at least one industry including retailers and 1 suppliers. Hafner 1:5-11. 2 Myrick 3 07. Myrick is directed to describing the benefits of statistical 4 inventory reconciliation (SIR). Among those are detecting losses 5 (variances) due to tank integrity, delivery accuracy, pilferage 6 detection, incorrect tank charts, and dispensing meter 7 miscalibrations. Myrick Abstr. 8 08. Statistical inventory reconciliation (SIR) accurately manages fuel 9 inventory by analyzing daily fuel inventory readings (sales, 10 deliveries and product level). Myrick 1. 11 09. SIR is the only technology able to constantly identify meter 12 miscalibrations within a very tight tolerance. Myrick 2. 13 ANALYSIS 14 This is the second time this application has come before the Board. 15 The first time, the panel affirmed the Examiner’s rejection of all claims over 16 Hafner, Yamamoto, and Salvo. Appeal No. 2006-2018, mailed March 22, 17 2007. 18 There is no argument that Brown fully describes limitations (a) 19 through (e). Limitation (f) is the subject of contention. Although limitation 20 (g) depends on limitation (f), the analysis would be essentially similar. 21 The limitation most comparable to current limitation (f) in claim 1 in 22 the earlier appeal was “comparing an amount of raw materials sold to a store 23 and the predicted amount of raw materials for the given level of sales of 24 goods, to thereby provide an indication of a level of discrepancy.” After 25 Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 7 amending the claims, the Examiner retains Hafner, but now applies Brown 1 and Myrick in place of Yamamoto and Salvo. 2 We are not persuaded by the Appellants’ argument that (1) Brown 3 fails to describe limitation (f) of computing a variance and (2) Myrick fails 4 to describe following a recipe. Appeal Br. 12-14. Appellants respond to the 5 rejection by attacking the references separately, even though the rejection is 6 based on the combined teachings of the references. Nonobviousness cannot 7 be established by attacking the references individually when the rejection is 8 predicated upon a combination of prior art disclosures. See In re Merck & 9 Co., Inc., 800 F.2d 1091, 1097 (Fed. Cir. 1986). 10 As to whether either reference describes or otherwise shows to be 11 predictable limitation (f), the Examiner found “Myrick was used to teach the 12 well known concept of calculating a variance, or a product loss, based on an 13 amount that should have been used.” Ans. 10. We agree, as Myrick 14 describes computing just such a variance from losses from various causes. 15 Myrick describes how SIR does so from what should have been sold (sales) 16 and what was used (purchases). 17 Limitation (f) does not specify or otherwise narrow the calculation 18 that is performed, but only indicates that sales, measured usage, and 19 purchases are taken into account. SIR uses all three of these inputs in 20 computing variances. SIR even describes the benefits from doing so as 21 identifying actual losses that can be investigated for amelioration, thus 22 providing the motivation for applying inventory reconciliation to Brown. 23 CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 24 The rejection of claims 1, 3-6, 8-11, and 13-15 under 35 U.S.C. § 25 103(a) as unpatentable over Brown, Hafner, and Myrick is proper. 26 Appeal 2011-013120 Application 09/815,731 8 DECISION 1 The rejection of claims 1, 3-6, 8-11, and 13-15 is affirmed. 2 No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with 3 this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. 4 § 1.136(a)(1)(iv) (2011). 5 AFFIRMED 6 7 8 hh 9 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation