Ex Parte Stathis et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 17, 201211454466 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 17, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ________________ Ex parte GEORGE L. STATHIS and CU V. TRAN ________________ Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 Technology Center 2800 ________________ Before BRADLEY W. BAUMEISTER, JEFFREY S. SMITH, and JAMES B. ARPIN, Administrative Patent Judges. ARPIN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 2 SUMMARY Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1-9 and 16-24.1 Claims 1-9 and 16-22 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 101 as directed to non-statutory subject matter. (Ans. 2-3.) Claims 1-9 and 16-24 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as being anticipated by Wetzer (US 7,440,906 B1; issued Oct. 21, 2008; filed Sep. 4, 2001). (Ans. 3-7.) We affirm. STATEMENT OF CASE Appellants describe the present invention as relating to methods and systems for receiving data pertaining to unscheduled maintenance performed on components at at least one maintenance facility and for gathering the data from repaired components for subsequent analysis. In particular, according to the methods and systems of the present invention, data is received and gathered to facilitate failure analysis tracking, to determine the root cause of unscheduled maintenance, and to determine corrective action. (App. Br. 2.) Independent claim 1 is illustrative: 1. A method comprising: receiving data pertaining to unscheduled maintenance of a component which results in a repaired component repaired by the unscheduled maintenance; and compiling the data from a multiple of repaired components to obtain compiled data with respect to the component and facilitate failure analysis tracking of the component. 1 Claims 10-15 are cancelled. Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 3 CONTENTIONS2 The Examiner interprets claims 1-9 and 16-22 as not being tied to a particular machine and not performing a transformation of a particular article into a different state or thing, but that, instead, the claimed processes are broad enough so as to describe methods comprising purely mental steps. (Ans. 3; 9-11.) Accordingly, the Examiner finds that claims 1-9 and 16-22 are directed to non-statutory subject matter. (Ans. 3; 9-11.) Appellants argue that the claimed processes transform a particular article to a different state or thing. (App. Br. 4-5.) In addition, the Examiner determines that claims 1-9 and 16-24 are anticipated by Wetzer. (Ans. 3-4; 11-23.) In particular, with respect to claim 1, the Examiner finds that Wetzer discloses a method comprising receiving data pertaining to unscheduled maintenance of a component (Ans. 13-14 (citing col. 2, ll. 55-67; col. 3, ll. 1-27)) and compiling the data from a multiple of repaired components (Ans. 14-17 (citing col. 5, ll. 37-67; col. 6, ll. 22-28)). Appellants argue, however, that Wetzer describes a method of scheduling and directing unplanned maintenance and fails to disclose receiving data which results from a repaired component. (App. Br. 7.) Further, Appellants argue separately that Wetzer fails to disclose each and every additional element of dependent claims 2, 3, and 24. (App. Br. 8-9.) 2 Throughout this Decision, we refer to the following documents for their respective details: the Appeal Brief (App. Br.) filed September 21, 2009; the Examiner’s Answer (Ans.) mailed December 18, 2009; and the Reply Brief (Reply Br.) filed February 18, 2010. Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 4 THE UNPATENTABLE SUBJECT MATTER REJECTION Issue Did the Examiner err in finding that the methods of claims 1-9 and 16-22 fail to describe the transformation of a particular article to a different state or thing? Analysis 1. Claim Construction In response to the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1-9 and 16-22, Appellants argue that the method of claim 1 describes a transformation of a particular article to a different state or thing. (App. Br. 4.) The U.S. Supreme Court acknowledges that the machine-or-transformation test is a “useful and important clue or investigative tool” for determining patent eligibility under § 101. Bilski v. Kappos, 130 S.Ct. 3218, 3221 (2010). Thus, in order to determine whether the claims satisfy the machine-or- transformation test, we begin by construing independent claim 1, which is representative of the other claims subject to this rejection. In claim 1, Appellants describe a method comprising two steps: “receiving data pertaining to unscheduled maintenance of a component” and “compiling the data from a multiple of repaired components.” Initially, claim terms are given their ordinary and customary meaning. “[T]he ordinary and customary meaning of a claim term is the meaning that the term would have to a person of ordinary skill in the art in question at the time of the invention, i.e., as of the effective filing date of the application.” Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc). In construing the claims, however, we also are guided by Appellants’ Specification. See Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1321 (noting that the Specification is Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 5 the single best guide to a disputed term’s meaning and acts as a dictionary when it expressly defines terms recited in the claims). a. Step of “Receiving Data” With respect to the “receiving” step, a general purpose dictionary defines the verb: to receive, as “to acquire or accept or take in (something offered or sent or given).” See OXFORD AMERICAN DICTIONARY 750-51 (Heald Colleges ed. 1980). Appellants do not suggest any other meaning for this term in the Specification. Moreover, in describing the received “data,” Appellants state that Data within the repair facility FTP sites 22a-22n about the repaired components or systems is communicated from each of the aforementioned locations to the aircraft [original equipment manufacturer] OEM 24. . . . The data typically includes information pertaining to component removals or failures that caused an unscheduled maintenance as well as other information as disclosed in the screen shot (Figure 2) of the illustrated embodiment which utilizes a spindle assembly (Figures 3A and 3B) as an example component which has been sent out to a repair facility. (Spec. ¶ [0016]; see also Spec. ¶¶ [0020], [0023].) Thus, we construe this step as describing the receiving of data including information pertaining to component removals or failures that caused an unscheduled maintenance as well as other information, such as that depicted in the data entry screen of Appellants’ Fig. 2. (See Spec. ¶ [0016].) In the “receiving” step, Appellants further describe that the unscheduled maintenance “results in a repaired component repaired by the unscheduled maintenance.” (App. Br. 5 (responding to patent eligibility rejections).) Moreover, Appellants argue that it is the “receiving data which results in a repaired component.” (App. Br. 7 (responding to anticipation rejections).) Nevertheless, we interpret this phrase either as a field of use Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 6 limitation or as a statement of intended use either of the “unscheduled maintenance” or of the “receiving” step. (App. Br. 4-5; see also App. Br. 9 (“Appellant[s] specifically recite[] and claim[] communication with at least one repair facility to receive data from unscheduled maintenance which results in the component being repaired”).) Because this phrase merely describes a field of use or an intended use, the phrase does not recite a limitation capable of making an abstract idea or mental process patent eligible or of distinguishing the claimed method over the prior art. Bilski, 130 S.Ct. at 3231(“Flook established that limiting an abstract idea to one field of use or adding token postsolution components did not make the concept patentable.”); Waite, 158, F.2d 291, 294 (CCPA 1947) (treatment of statements of intended use in method claims). b. Step of “Compiling the Data” As noted above, claim 1 additionally recites “compiling the data from a multiple of repaired components.” A general purpose dictionary defines the verb: to compile, as “to collect and arrange (information) into a list or book.” See OXFORD AMERICAN DICTIONARY 173 (Heald Colleges ed. 1980). Moreover, in claim 1, “the data” compiled is the same as the received “data,” but the compiled data is from “multiple of repaired components,” i.e., a plurality of repaired components that includes, but is not limited to, the “repaired component” described in the first step of the claimed method. In addition, claim 1 describes two fields of use or intended uses for the compiling step: first, “to obtain compiled data with respect to the component” and, second, “[to] facilitate failure analysis tracking of the component.” These uses do not constitute additional affirmative steps of the claimed method. As such, these descriptions of use do not limit the step of Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 7 “compiling the data” beyond merely requiring that the compiled data is merely capable of being used, in some manner and at some future time, to facilitate failure analysis tracking. See Bilski, 130 S.Ct. at 3231; Waite, 158, F.2d at 294. 2. Subject Matter Analysis a. Absence of Specific Machine As noted above, in independent claim 1, Appellants recite two steps: “receiving” data and “compiling” the data. The Examiner concludes that neither of these steps, however, refers to a specific machine by reciting structural limitations to any apparatus, or recites any specific operations that would cause a machine to be the mechanism to perform these steps. (Ans. 3.) Appellants have not provided persuasive evidence or argument to rebut the Examiner’s conclusion. b. Absence of Patent Eligible Transformation Moreover, the Examiner concludes that the steps recited in claim 1 do not “positively recite subject matter that is being transformed, for example by identifying the material that is being changed to a different state.” (Id.) Thus, the Examiner concludes that these two steps recite “purely mental steps” that read on a mental process that could be performed in the human mind, or by a human using a pen and paper. (Ans. 3; see CyberSource Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc., 654 F.3d 1366, 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (holding that a process for verifying the validity of a credit card transaction over the Internet to be nonstatutory as an abstract idea capable of being performed in the human mind or by a human using a pen and paper).) “[M]ental processes–or processes of human thinking–standing alone are not patentable Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 8 even if they have practical application.” In re Comiskey, 554 F.3d 967, 979 (Fed. Cir. 2009). Appellants argue, however, that Appellants[’] data “articles” which represent a component and repaired component are analogous with the data “articles” that represent the “structure of bones, organs, and other body tissues” which were within a patent eligible method of In re Abele. That is, Appellant[s] do[] transform data that represents physical and tangible objects and that data is central to the purpose of the claimed process. (App. Br. 5 (emphasis in the original).) In Abele, the court found that a claim for a process that passed X-rays through bone, organs, and other body tissues to create attenuated X-rays and then displayed the attenuated X-rays described a patent eligible transformation of the data articles representing the X-rays to transformed data articles representing the attenuated X-rays. 684 F.2d 902 (CCPA 1982). We find that Appellants’ claimed process fails to recite a transformation of a particular article into a different state or thing. First, Appellants’ claimed method includes the steps of receiving “data” and compiling “the data,” but does not recite repairing a component. Thus, the claimed method does not include a step, which, alone or in combination with the other of the “receiving” step and “compiling” step, requires such a transformation. Second, as noted above, we construe the received “data” to be “the data” that is compiled. Thus, the claimed method does not recite a transformation of an article into a different state or thing that is comparable Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 9 to the transformation described in Abele.3 (Ans. 10-11; See In re Bilski, 545 F.3d 943, 964 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (en banc) (“[The claim] does not involve the transformation of any physical object or substance, or an electronic signal representative of any physical object or substance.”), aff’d, Bilski v. Kappos, 130 S.Ct. 3218 (2010).) Thus, even if Appellants’ “data” is an electronic signal representing a physical object, i.e., the component, which is transformed within a computer; Appellants’ claimed process does not transform that signal or the underlying object in a manner that is comparable to the way that Abele’s X-rays are transformed into a visual display. Rather, claim 1 merely receives data and compiles it with other data. (Id.; see also App. Br. 4-5.). The transformation of received data into compiled data within a general purpose computer is not the type of transformation that has been determined to render a claimed method statutory by the Supreme Court or by our reviewing court. In view of the Supreme Court’s guidance in Bilski, 130 S. Ct. 3218, as expanded upon by the Federal Circuit in CyberSource, 654 F.3d 1366, we conclude that Appellants fail to demonstrate that the method of independent claim 1 transforms a particular article to a different state or thing. Instead, independent claim 1 may be reasonably interpreted as encompassing an unpatentable abstract idea. For the foregoing reasons, Appellants have not persuaded us of error in the Examiner’s rejection of independent claim 1 as directed to unpatentable subject matter. Accordingly, we sustain the 3 Because the alleged transformation is not present in claim 1, we do not address whether the alleged transformation is central to the purpose of the claimed process or whether the alleged transformation transforms a particular data article. (See App. Br. 4-5.) Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 10 Examiner’s rejection of that claim and of dependent claims 2-9 and 16-22 which fall with claim 1.4 THE ANTICIPATION REJECTION Issues 1. Did the Examiner err in finding that Wetzer discloses each and every element of claims 1, 4-9, and 16-23? 2. With respect to claim 2, did the Examiner err in finding that Wetzer discloses “determining a root cause for the unscheduled maintenance from the data?” 3. With respect to claim 3, did the Examiner err in finding that Wetzer discloses “determining a proposed corrective action from the compiled data?” 4. With respect to claim 24, did the Examiner err in finding that Wetzer discloses that “said computer system communicates with at least one repair facility, each of said repair facilities communicates data which pertains to unscheduled maintenance of each of said component which said repair facility has repaired?” Analysis 1. Claims 1, 4-9, and 16-23. Initially, we note that we here apply the same construction of claim 1 that is set forth above. In claim 1, Appellants describe a process comprising 4 We do not address whether claims 23 and 24 describe patentable subject matter. We note, however, that our reviewing courts recently have addressed the issue of when a system implementing an unpatentable method also fails to describe patentable subject matter. See, e.g., Fort Properties, Inc. v. American Master Lease LLC, 671 F.3d 1317, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2012). Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 11 two steps: receiving “data” and compiling “the data.” In particular, Appellants describe “receiving data pertaining to unscheduled maintenance of a component” and “compiling the data from a multiple of repaired components.” The Examiner contends that Wetzer discloses each of these elements. (Ans. 3; 13-14.) In particular, the Examiner finds that Wetzer discloses discovering a component of a piece of equipment requiring unplanned maintenance and identifying the location of the component, a category of work required, a task description in the work category, and a data code on the component. (Ans. 13-14 (quoting col. 2, ll. 55-67).) The Examiner additionally finds that Wetzer discloses obtaining information from one or more databases associated with the maintenance of the equipment and scheduling the unplanned maintenance of the component with the planned maintenance of the equipment. (Id.) Appellants argue, however, that claim 1 requires “receiving data which results in a repaired component.” (App. Br. 7 (emphasis added).) Appellants further argue that Wetzer only describes a method of scheduling unplanned maintenance, and that, unlike Appellants’ claimed process, “Wetzer is not concerned with receiving data that results from the unplanned [maintenance repair and overhaul] MRO task.” (Id. (emphasis added).) As noted above, we construe the phrase: “which results in a repaired component repaired by the unscheduled maintenance” to be a statement of intended use. (Supra, 5-6.) This phrase does not alter the “receiving data” step or the “unscheduled maintenance,” but merely describes a later occurring repair of a component resulting from receipt of the “data” or the Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 12 completion of the “unscheduled maintenance.” Thus, this phrase does not distinguish the claimed method over Wetzer. Accordingly, we find that Appellants’ argument is not commensurate in scope with the claim language and are, therefore, unpersuasive. Teleflex, Inc. v. Ficosa N. Am. Corp., 299 F.3d 1313, 1324 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (“The claim language defines the bounds of claim scope.”). Consequently, we find that the Examiner demonstrates that Wetzer discloses Appellants’ “receiving” step, as described in claim 1. (Ans. 13-14.) With respect to Appellants’ “compiling” step, the Examiner finds that Wetzer discloses compiling data to create (1) a work description database 120, (2) a standard repair library database 124, and (3) a component part/serial number database 128. (Ans. 17.) According to the Examiner, Wetzer compiles information concerning “categories of MRO work such as mechanical, electrical work for unplanned/unscheduled work category/task type” in work description database 120 and standard repair library database 124. (Id.; see also Ans. 15-16 (quoting col. 5, ll. 58-67).) Moreover, the Examiner concludes that Wetzer establishes a generalized components list including component part/serial numbers stored in component part/serial number database 128. (Ans. 17 (quoting col. 6, ll. 22-28).) The Examiner further concludes that component part/serial number database 128 facilitates failure analysis tracking of the component. (Id.) Appellants argue that Wetzer is concerned only with efficiently scheduling of unplanned maintenance and not with failure analysis tracking. (App. Br. 7.) With respect to Wetzer’s component part/serial number database 128, however, we note that, in Appellants’ Appendix (¶ [0032]), Appellants describe that “Component_Serial_Number” may be part of the Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 13 received data pertaining to the unscheduled maintenance of a component. (¶ [0017] (“The description and data type for each field are provided in the Appendix.”); see also Fig. 2.). Thus, we find that the Examiner demonstrates that a component’s serial number may be included in the received data and the compiled data. Consequently, we conclude that the Examiner demonstrates that at least the compilation of component serial numbers into Wetzer’s component part/serial number database 128 discloses the compiling step of Appellants’ claimed method. (Ans. 17.) For the foregoing reasons, Appellants have not persuaded us of error in the Examiner’s anticipation rejection of claim 1 by Wetzer. Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner’s rejection of that claim and of dependent claims 4- 9 and 16-23, which are not separately argued. 2. Claim 2. With respect to claim 2, the Examiner notes that Wetzer describes [d]efined categories of MRO work, such as mechanical, electrical, software, etc. are specified along with expected types of tasks relative to that category. For example, plumbing could be expected to have leaks of varying severity, including seepage, pooling, heavy volume, burst pipe, etc. As another example, structural failures could include task types such as corrosion, cracking, fastener loss and bending, etc. For each of these categories and tasks types, standard nomenclature is developed and category/task-type pairs are established. The resulting data is stored in the work description library database 120. (Ans. 19 (quoting col. 5, ll. 37-47 (emphasis added)).) Thus, the Examiner concludes that Wetzer describes the identification of unplanned maintenance and possible causes, e.g., plumbing leaks and a burst pipe or structural failure and corrosion. (Id.) That is, the Examiner concludes that Wetzer Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 14 discloses determining a root cause for the unscheduled maintenance from the data. Appellants argue, however, that Wetzer does not mention the term, “root cause,” and that, because Wetzer is not directed to failure analysis tracking, Wetzer is not concerned with the root cause of the unplanned maintenance. (App. Br. 8.) In particular, with respect to the disclosure of Wetzer, quoted above, Appellants argue that Wetzer fails to disclose determining the precise cause of a specific failure. (Id.) Appellants argue instead that Wetzer may link possible problems with known solutions and, thereby, may create a standard repair library, such as standard repair library 124. (Reply Br. 3.) In relation to claim 2, Appellants only argue that Wetzer fails to disclose determining the “root cause” for the unplanned maintenance. (App. Br. 8.) We find that the Examiner demonstrates that, as part of the process of scheduling unplanned maintenance, Wetzer discloses identifying a problem and its cause, e.g., its “root cause.” (Ans. 17 and 19.) Thus, the Examiner demonstrates that Wetzer discloses the additional element of claim 2. For the foregoing reasons, Appellants have not persuaded us of error in the Examiner’s anticipation rejection of claim 2 by Wetzer. Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner’s rejection of that claim. 3. Claim 3. With respect to claim 3, the Examiner finds that Wetzer discloses “determining a proposed corrective action from the compiled data.” (Ans. 21.) In particular, the Examiner finds that Wetzer’s standard repair library Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 15 124 provides a proposed corrective action and that the corrective action is determined from the compiled data. (Id.) Claim 3 depends from independent claim 1 via intervening claim 2. Referring to the previous arguments with respect to claims 1 and 2, Appellants argue that the Examiner fails to demonstrate that Wetzer discloses compiling data from a multiple of repaired components for the described uses or determining a “root cause” for the unscheduled maintenance. (App. Br. 9.) In the absence of these steps, Appellants argue, Wetzer does not disclose determining a proposed corrective action from the compiled data. (Id.) As noted above, however, we find that Wetzer discloses each of the steps of Appellants’ claims 1 and 2.5 Therefore, we are not persuaded by Appellants’ argument. In the Reply Brief, Appellants further argue that the Examiner relies of Wetzer’s description of standard methods of repair stored in standard repair library 124 as the source of proposed corrective action, rather than corrective action determined “from the compiled data.” (Reply Br. 2-3.) Wetzer discloses, however, that [f]or each unplanned work category/task type pair identified in the work description library database 120, a standard method of repair is established and associated data is stored in the standard repair library database 124. This library, in one embodiment, includes task descriptions, basic required tool listings as well as any special processing notes, skills or certifications required for the task, including safety warnings. This database also includes both schedule span estimates and cost estimates of the effort required to accomplish the standard repair tasks. 5 We note that claim 3 does not require that the corrective action is linked to the root cause of claim 2. (See App. Br. 9.) Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 16 (col. 5, ll. 48-57 (emphasis added).) Thus, Wetzer describes that, for each identified work category/task pair, a standard method of repair is established, and data is associated with the established method. (Ans. 21.) Moreover, Wetzer states that “[a] technician identifies location of the unplanned work and answers tailored questions posed by the system to obtain additional information about the nature of the work. Using this information, the system identifies and describes the unplanned work tasks . . . .” (Col. 11, ll. 20-24.) Therefore, we find that Wetzer describes the use of compiled data, such as that contained in work description library database 120, to enter standard repair library database 124 and, thereby, to determine proposed corrective action. See Ans. 17 and 19; col. 2, ll. 55-67. For the foregoing reasons, Appellants have not persuaded us of error in the Examiner’s anticipation rejection of claim 3 by Wetzer. Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner’s rejection of that claim. 4. Claim 24. With respect to claim 24, the Examiner finds that Wetzer discloses that “said computer system communicates with at least one repair facility, each of said repair facilities communicates data which pertains to unscheduled maintenance of each of said component which said repair facility has repaired.” (Ans. 23.) Appellants, however, fail to address the rejection based on Wetzer and, instead, merely repeat the language of the claim and states that advantages of Appellants’ systems. As such, Appellants’ repetition of the language of claim 24 is not considered to be an argument for separate patentability. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1)(iv). Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 17 For the foregoing reasons, Appellants have not persuaded us of error in the Examiner’s anticipation rejection of claim 24 by Wetzer. Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner’s rejection of that claim. 5. Untimely Arguments We do not consider Appellants’ argument that purports to distinguish the method described in claims 16-22 over the method described in claims 2- 9. (Reply Br. 3.) This argument is presented for the first time in the Reply Brief and, therefore, is waived as untimely. See Ex parte Borden, 93 USPQ2d 1473, 1474 (BPAI 2010) (informative) (“[T]he reply brief [is not] an opportunity to make arguments that could have been made in the principal brief on appeal to rebut the Examiner’s rejections, but were not.”).6 CONCLUSIONS Appellants have not shown that the Examiner erred in rejecting claims 1-9 and 16-22 under § 101, and Appellants have not shown that the Examiner erred in rejecting claims 1-9 and 16-24 under § 102(e). DECISION The Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 1-9 and 16-24 is affirmed. 6 Even if we were to consider this belated argument, we question whether Appellants have identified deficiencies, by which each group of claims may be distinguished over Wetzer and from each other. Appeal 2010-006130 Application 11/454,466 18 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). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv) (2010). 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