Ex Parte LernerDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesMar 13, 201209907450 (B.P.A.I. Mar. 13, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES ____________ Ex parte JULIE A. LERNER ____________ Appeal 2011-002093 Application 09/907,450 Technology Center 3600 ____________ Before HUBERT C. LORIN, JOSEPH A. FISCHETTI, and BIBHU R. MOHANTY, Administrative Patent Judges. MOHANTY, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2011-002093 Application 09/907,450 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE The Appellant seeks our review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 (2002) of the final rejection of claims 41, 53-56, 60-63, and 90-98 which are all the claims pending in the application. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b) (2002). Oral arguments were presented on March 6, 2012. SUMMARY OF THE DECISION We REVERSE. THE INVENTION The Appellant’s claimed invention is directed to an electronic market place for trading physical commodities (Spec. 1:8-9). Claim 90, reproduced below, is representative of the subject matter on appeal. 90. A computer-implemented system for commodity exchange, comprising: i) a commodity exchange interface configured to display data substantially simultaneously to at least a first customer and a second customer, wherein each of the first and second customers is an end-to- end market player; ii) the commodity exchange interface including at least a first real-time, dynamic trading window associated with the first customer and a second real-time, dynamic trading window associated with the second customer, wherein each of the first and second real-time, dynamic trading windows is configured to display for a specific physical commodity at least the following: a) a negotiable quantity of the physical commodity, wherein the negotiable quantity is an amount of the physical commodity that is tradeable on a domestic, regional or international market and wherein the negotiable quantity is negotiable in amounts that are not limited to a standardized contract size; Appeal 2011-002093 Application 09/907,450 3 b) a negotiable shipment period for the physical commodity, wherein the negotiable shipment period specifies at least the time period at which the physical commodity is available for pick up or delivery and wherein the negotiable shipment period is negotiable in amounts that are not limited to a standardized delivery time period; c) a negotiable quality for the physical commodity; iii) the commodity exchange interface including a system to allow for direct negotiations prior to contract formation between the first and second customers for at least the negotiable quantity, negotiable shipment period and negotiable quality; and iv) a set of program instructions configured to process at least one commodity trade made directly between the first and second customers, the commodity trade being updated in at least the first real-time, dynamic trading window associated with the first customer and the second real-time, dynamic trading window associated with the second customer. THE REJECTIONS The Examiner relies upon the following as evidence in support of the rejections: Gutterman US 5,297,031 Mar. 22, 1994 Ferstenberg US 5,873,071 Feb. 16, 1999 Shepherd US 6,912,510 B1 Jun. 28, 2005 Kimle US 7,124,108 B1 Oct. 17, 2006 The following rejections are before us for review1: 1 The Examiner Answer at page 5 has listed a “Double Patenting” heading but the text of section uses the term “objected to” and does not recite a double patenting rejection. Claims 90-98 have thus substantively been objected to rather than rejected. This objection is not subject matter reviewable by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences but rather petitionable subject matter. See M.P.E.P. 1002 and 1201. Regardless, an examination of the issues presented by the Examiner for claims 90-98 does not warrant a double patenting rejection for these claims with respect to Appeal 2011-002093 Application 09/907,450 4 1. Claims 41, 53-56, 60-63, and 90-98 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Kimle, Shepherd, Ferstenberg, and Gutterman. THE ISSUES With regards to claim 90 the issue turns on whether it would have been obvious to modify Kimle, Shepherd, Ferstenberg, and Gutterman to meet claim limitation “c) iii” listed in the claim above. The remaining claims turn on a similar issue. FINDINGS OF FACT We find the following enumerated findings of fact (FF) are supported at least by a preponderance of the evidence:2 FF1. Kimle discloses a method of contracting agricultural products using the Internet and providing real time information about the products available for contract (Abstract). FF2. Shepard discloses a method of exchanging an obligation (Title) and at Col. 4:17-39 discloses contract formulation including order placement, pricing and matching. FF3. Shepard at Col. 33:14-41 discloses that contract matching occurs. FF4. Shepard at Col.41:55-56 discloses that contracts can be modified and liquidated after their creation. claims 41, 53-56, and 60-63 and we decline to present a new grounds of rejection in that respect. 2 See Ethicon, Inc. v. Quigg, 849 F.2d 1422, 1427 (Fed. Cir. 1988) (explaining the general evidentiary standard for proceedings before the Patent Office). Appeal 2011-002093 Application 09/907,450 5 FF5. Ferstenberg discloses a method for order management by market brokers (Title). FF6. Guttenberg discloses a broker workstation for trading commodities and futures contracts (Abstract). ANALYSIS The Appellant argues that the rejection of claim 90 using the cited combination of Kimle, Shepard, Ferstenberg, and Gutterman is improper. (Br. 18-26, Reply Br. 2-13). In contrast, the Examiner has determined that the cited rejection of record for claim 90 is proper (Ans. 5-15, 18-25). We agree with the Appellant. Claim 90 require in part: iii) the commodity exchange interface including a system to allow for direct negotiations prior to contract formation between the first and second customers for at least the negotiable quantity, negotiable shipment period and negotiable quality; (Claim 90). Thus, the claim requires that on the commodity interface that direct negotiations can take place prior to contract formation for negotiable quantity, negotiable shipment period and negotiable quality. The Examiner has acknowledged that Kimle and Shepard do not teach “direct negotiations prior to contract formation between the first and second customers” but cited instead to Ferstenberg to show this (Ans. 11). The Appellant acknowledge that “direct negotiations prior to contract formation” is well known in the art (Reply Br. 3) but maintains that the cited combination would not be obvious because Shepherd uses a “matching system” (Br. 22). Shepard does show that at least a portion of the system operates on a traditional order “matching” system (FF2-FF3). Here, there is Appeal 2011-002093 Application 09/907,450 6 no articulated reasoning with rational underpinnings for combining the four cited references in the manner of the cited rejection to have the system of Shepard modified to allow negotiations prior to contract formation between the first and second customers as at least portion of Shepard operates on a “matching system” where prior negotiations between the parties necessarily does not take place. The proposed modification to alter Shepard in the manner recited lacks articulated reasoning with rational underpinnings to support a prima facie case of obviousness and the cited rejection of claim 90 and its dependent claims are not sustained. As a prima facie case of obviousness has not been established, we not need considerer the submitted Declarations of record. Claim 41 contains a similar limitation and the rejection of this claim and its dependent claims are not sustained for these same reasons. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW We conclude that Appellant has shown that the Examiner erred in rejecting claims listed in the Rejection Section above. DECISION The Examiner’s rejection of claims 41, 53-56, 60-63, and 90-98 is reversed. REVERSED MP Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation