Taya Kotlyar et al.Download PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardApr 29, 202013595380 - (D) (P.T.A.B. Apr. 29, 2020) 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. 13/595,380 08/27/2012 Taya Kotlyar IRPFS-39 1012 123446 7590 04/29/2020 Ingersoll-Rand Company (Taft JCN) Taft, Stettinius & Hollister LLP One Indiana Square Suite 3500 Indianapolis, IN 46204-2023 EXAMINER STIMPERT, PHILIP EARL ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3746 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 04/29/2020 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address(es): taft-ip-docket@taftlaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte TAYA KOTLYAR, JOEL E. HIGBEE, SCOT C. STRICKER, JAMES B. CARLING, and PHILLIP EDWARDS Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 Technology Center 3700 Before JOHN C. KERINS, RICHARD H. MARSCHALL, and FREDERICK C. LANEY, Administrative Patent Judges. MARSCHALL, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), Appellant1 appeals from the Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1, 2, 4–7, and 10. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. 1 We use the word “Appellant” to refer to “applicant” as defined in 37 C.F.R. § 1.42(a). Appellant identifies the real party in interest as Milton Roy, LLC. Appeal Br. 2. Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 2 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The invention relates to diaphragm metering pumps having degassing systems. Spec. ¶ 1. Claim 1 is the only independent claim and is reproduced below: 1. A diaphragm metering pump comprising: a pump body having a head portion including a suction side and a discharge side defining a flow path, wherein liquid follows through the flow path from the suction side to the discharge side and through an outlet at the discharge side, such that all of the liquid that flows through the pump passes through the outlet; a pump diaphragm actuator; a valve seat arranged at the discharge side; a check valve arranged at the valve seat to allow the liquid to flow through the outlet during a pressure stroke and prevent the liquid from being ingested through the outlet into the pump during a suction stroke; and a degassing system including a check valve actuator operatively connected to the check valve, the check valve actuator being selectively activated to unseat the check valve from the valve seat based on a sensed accumulation of gasses in the head portion to allow the gases trapped in the head portion to pass through the same outlet at the discharge side that all of the liquid flows through. Appeal Br. 14 (Claims App.). REJECTIONS ON APPEAL Appellant appeals from the following rejections: 1. Claims 1 and 10 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Gebauer.2 2 US 5,192,198, issued March 9, 1993 (“Gebauer”). Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 3 2. Claims 1 and 10 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Gebauer. 3. Claims 1 and 10 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Gebauer and Claude.3 4. Claims 2 and 4–7 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Gebauer, Claude, and Jokela.4 ANALYSIS Rejection of Claims 1 and 10 as Anticipated by Gebauer We focus on the rejection of claim 1 because Appellant focuses its arguments on claim 1. See Appeal Br. 6–7. The Examiner finds that Gebauer expressly discloses most of the limitations of claim 1, including the claimed pump body (Gebauer’s pump head 10) with an outlet (nozzle 20b), a pump diaphragm actuator (ram 21), a check valve (poppet ball 40), and a degassing system with a check valve actuator (button 44). Non-Final Act. 3. The Examiner also finds that “the actuator is capable of being selectively actuated to unseat the check valve from the valve seat to allow gases trapped in the head portion to pass through the outlet due to their buoyancy relative to the liquid.” Id. at 4. The Examiner construes the limitation “being selectively activated . . . based on a sensed accumulation of gasses in the head portion” as functional, and not requiring any structure beyond that which Gebauer discloses, even though Gebauer does not teach structure for detecting gas in the pump. Id. The Examiner finds that the claimed sensing 3 US 2004/0062662 A1, published April 1, 2004 (“Claude”). 4 US 5,456,581, issued October 10, 1995 (“Jokela”). Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 4 flows “inherently from the difference in reaction forces from the gases as opposed to liquids.” Id. Appellant argues that Gebauer does not anticipate claim 1 because it “does not discuss the sensing or accumulation of gasses in the head portion of a pump at all” and therefore does not enable claim 1. Appeal Br. 6. Appellant also argues that the Examiner erred by finding that a human operator could sense the gas level and respond by operating the check valve actuator, when the Specification never describes any action by a human operator. Id. at 7. Appellant also argues that even if the Examiner’s reliance on a human operator falls within the scope of the claim, “the claimed degassing system is not inherent in Gebauer because it does not necessarily flow from the teachings of Gebauer.” Id.; see also Reply Br. 2–3. In the Answer, the Examiner finds that the Specification does not foreclose the possibility of human action. Ans. 8. The Examiner also finds that any structure “capable of performing the claimed function” meets the claim limitation. Id. at 8–9. The Examiner finds that gas build-up in pumps posed well known problems and that, based on “perusing the literature available” and Claude, these sources support this view, such that Gebauer inherently discloses and enables the limitation requiring actuation of the check valve “based on a sensed accumulation of gasses in the head portion.” Id. at 9. We agree with Appellant that the Examiner erred in finding that Gebauer inherently discloses a “check valve actuator being selectively activated . . . based on a sensed accumulation of gasses in the head portion.” The Examiner finds that Gebauer’s structure is inherently capable of performing the claimed functions, but concedes that Gebauer “is silent Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 5 regarding gas accumulation.” Non-Final Act. 4; Ans. 8, 10. Instead, Gebauer uses its “actuator” to remove paint clogs. Gebauer, 5:27–31. Although gas may be inherently present in Gebauer’s system, nothing in Gebauer suggests that Gebauer’s system encounters any gas build-up problems as the Examiner finds based on “perusing the literature available.” Ans. 9. The Examiner’s reliance on such literature and Claude to find a problem never mentioned by Gebauer does not support the Examiner finding that Gebauer inherently discloses a structure with such a gas build-up problem. See Reply Br. 2 (“Just because gas buildup is a problem that is known in the diaphragm pump industry does not mean that each and every single diaphragm pump in existence suffers from this problem.”). The lack of any express or inherent disclosure related to gas problems in Gebauer also undermines the Examiner’s finding that Gebauer inherently discloses degassing structure capable of meeting the limitations of the claims. Because the Examiner’s findings of inherency lack an adequate foundation, we do not sustain the rejection of claim 1 as anticipated by Gebauer.5 Claim 10 depends from claim 1, and we do not sustain the rejection of claim 10 for the same reasons as claim 1. Rejection of Claims 1 and 10 as Obvious over Gebauer Alone The Examiner rejects claims 1 and 10 “as anticipated by or, in the alternative . . . as obvious over [Gebauer] alone or in view of [Claude].” Non-Final Act. 3 (emphasis added). The alternative language in the rejection sets forth three rejections, as listed above: (1) anticipation by 5 We need not reach other issues raised by Appellant, such as the alleged non-enablement of Gebauer and the propriety of allowing a human operator to perform claimed functions. See Appeal Br. 6–7. Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 6 Gebauer; (2) obviousness over Gebauer “alone”; and (3) obviousness over Gebauer and Claude. Id. We do not sustain the second rejection, obviousness based on Gebauer alone, because the body of the rejection does not set forth findings and reasoning that support an obviousness rejection based on Gebauer alone. See id. at 3–5. Instead, when addressing the obviousness of claim 1, the rejection relies on Claude for its teaching of a sensor to detect gas in the pump. Id. at 4–5. Rejection of Claims 1 and 10 as Obvious Based on Gebauer and Claude We focus on the obviousness rejection of claim 1 because Appellant focuses its arguments on claim 1. See Appeal Br. 8–10. For this obviousness rejection, the Examiner finds that “Gebauer does not explicitly teach structure for or methods of detection of gas in a pump” but that “Claude teaches . . . a degassing system (28) operative to open the discharge passage and allow gases trapped in the head portion (16) to escape.” Non- Final Act. 4. The Examiner also finds that Claude teaches that its degassing system “may be responsive to gas detection sensors (150, see paragraph 17), and further teaches that the process of venting gas into the discharge line ‘prevents the pump 10 from air binding or losing prime.’” Id. (internal quotations omitted). The Examiner determines that it would have been obvious “to provide a sensor for detecting gas in the pump head of Gebauer and to activate the actuator of Gebauer to clear that gas from the pump head, in light of the teachings of Claude, in order to prevent air binding and/or loss of prime.” Id. at 4–5. Appellant argues that the Examiner’s “proposed modification of Gebauer in view of Claude would impermissibly alter the principle of operation of both devices.” Appeal Br. 8. As to Gebauer, Appellant argues Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 7 that changing Gebauer’s actuator from a paint clog remover to a degasser changes Gebauer’s principle of operation. Id. As to Claude, Appellant argues that the rejection is more accurately viewed as based on Claude in view of Gebauer, and “the entire discharge end of Claude would need to be modified, and doing so would alter the principle of operation of the device.” Id. at 8–9. In particular, “Claude discloses a degassing system that bypasses the discharge check valve” and in the combination the system “would no longer be a bypass system and would no longer use a valve that is not a check valve (the flapper [in] the Claude bypass system is not a check valve) to degas.” Id. at 9. Appellant also relies on a previous statement by the Examiner during prosecution that proposes omission of Claude’s bypass elements but retention of their functions suggests that the combination is not obvious. Id. at 9–10. Appellant argues that Gebauer does not identify any need to degas its system, only Claude raises that possibility, and therefore if one looked to Claude, Claude’s “entire solution,” including its bypass system, would be added to Gebauer. Reply Br. 3–4; see also Appeal Br. 10 (arguing that “the only obvious way for a skilled artisan to modify Gebauer to include a degassing system based on Claude, would be to transplant the entire bypass degassing system of Claude over to the pump of Gebauer”).6 6 Appellant does not make this point explicitly, but if Claude’s “bypass solution” were added to Gebauer, the proposed combination would apparently no longer disclose liquid flowing through the outlet “such that all of the liquid that flows through the pump passes through the outlet” as required by claim 1. Appeal Br. 14 (Claims App.). Appellant implicitly acknowledges that the Examiner’s proposed combination does not run into this problem, because it does not propose adding the “bypass” aspects of Claude to Gebauer. See Appeal Br. 8–10; Non-Final Act. 4–5. Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 8 In the Answer, the Examiner summarizes the prior prosecution history, and finds that at no time did the Examiner concede that Claude’s principle of operation would be changed. See Ans. 11–12. The Examiner finds that such arguments do not properly address the rejection based on a modification of Gebauer, which does not teach a separate passage for degassing as in Claude, and therefore the modification does not omit any such structure from Gebauer. Id. at 12. The Examiner further finds that Gebauer’s principle of operation is unseating the check valve, and that the proposed modification does not interfere with this operation. Id. at 14–15. We are not persuaded that the Examiner erred in the rejection of claim 1 as obvious over Gebauer and Claude. As an initial matter, Appellant does not contest the Examiner’s findings as to the disclosures of the two references, and that the proposed combination discloses all of the limitations of claim 1. See Appeal Br. 8–10. As to the combination itself, we are not persuaded that the Examiner erred by proposing a combination based on a modification of Gebauer, rather than the other way around. Id. at 8. The Examiner need not frame the rejection and the proposed modification in a combination in the manner most helpful for Appellant, and the rejection on appeal clearly relies on Gebauer as the primary reference, with modifications based on Claude’s teachings. Non-Final Act. 4–5; see also In re Mouttet, 686 F.3d 1322, 1333 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (rejecting argument that use of “primary” or “base” reference label establishes error in rejection). Appellant’s argument premised on allegedly improper modifications of Claude by adding Gebauer’s structure fail to address the rejection. As to whether the Examiner improperly left out Claude’s “bypass” portion of its degassing system, we disagree with Appellant’s argument. Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 9 The Examiner relies on Claude for limited purposes—a sensor that detects gas to activate the actuator and clear gas to prevent air binding or loss of prime. Non-Final Act. 4–5. We are not persuaded that the Examiner erred by modifying Gebauer with these teachings because of the failure to also incorporate Claude’s entire “bypass” system. Appellant does not argue persuasively that the use of a sensor in the manner proposed in the combination, standing alone, would not provide advantages in Gebauer’s system that support the proposed combination. See Non-Final Act. 4–5 (citing advantages such as detecting gas and opening valve to clear gas and “prevent air binding and/or loss of prime”). The possibility that the bypass structure of Claude provides additional advantages beyond the sensor does not undermine the use of Claude’s sensor in Gebauer’s system, without adding the bypass structure. In addition, Claude itself does not state that its sensor system can only be used with Claude’s bypass structure, or that its sensor option teaches away from use with a direct, non-bypass approach as in Gebauer. See Claude ¶ 14 (describing opening of valve 28 to open passageway 40), ¶ 17 (describing operation of valve 28 “on timed intervals” using system 200 responsive to gas detection sensors 150). The Examiner’s proposed modification also preserves Gebauer’s principle of operation, contrary to Appellant’s argument. Gebauer operates by moving an actuator to unseat a check valve, which in turn removes clogs. See Gebauer, 5:24–34. The Examiner’s proposed modification retains this same functionality. See Non-Final Act. 4–5; Ans. 12; In re Mouttet, 686 F.3d at 1332 (rejecting argument that principle of operation would be destroyed by combination when modifications did “not affect the overall principle of operation”). Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 10 We are also not persuaded that the Examiner’s earlier statements during prosecution that the claim would not have been obvious in light of Claude suggests that the claim would not have been obvious in light of Gebauer as modified by Claude. See Appeal Br. 9–10. The reasoning in previous rejections is not before us on this appeal, and use of Gebauer in the proposed combination here distinguishes the issues on appeal from those in any previous rejection based on Claude in combination with other prior art. Based on the foregoing, we sustain the rejection of claim 1 as obvious over Gebauer and Claude. Appellant does not raise any additional arguments as to dependent claim 10, and we therefore sustain the rejection of claim 10 for the same reasons as claim 1. See Appeal Br. 8–10 Rejection of Claims 2 and 4–7 as Obvious Based on Gebauer, Claude, and Jokela Claims 2 and 4 depend from claim 1, and further require the check valve actuator to be “configured and disposed to act upon the check valve along an axis substantially parallel to the flow path” (claim 2) or “configured and disposed to act upon the check valve along an axis that coincides with the flow path” (claim 4). Appeal Br. 14 (Claims App.). The Examiner finds that Jokela teaches a metering pump with an actuator 90 that meets these limitations. Non-Final Act. 5 (citing Jokela, Fig. 2). The Examiner finds that Jokela’s arrangement “would be predictably effective for selective actuation of a valve along a flow path, and would be constructable by known techniques (such as those shown in Gebauer and Jokela).” Id. The Examiner determines that it would have been obvious “to arrange an actuator as taught by Jokela relative to the flow paths of Gebauer as an obvious matter of the mere substitution of one known apparatus for Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 11 unseating a check valve for another.” Id. The Examiner further finds that Jokela teaches that its solenoid allows for automatic control of its valve, and determines that it would have been obvious “to provide an actuator as taught by Jokela to the pump of Gebauer in order to allow for automatic control of the unseating of the check valve as opposed to the manual control required by Gebauer alone.” Id. at 5–6. Appellant argues that Jokela shows its check valve on the inlet side of the pump and does not teach a degassing system. Appeal Br. 10. Appellant also argues that modifying Gebauer with Jokela’s teaching to meet the requirements of claims 2 and 4 would change Gebauer’s principle of operation. Id. at 11. More specifically, Appellant argues that Gebauer’s check valve actuator acts perpendicular to the flow path of the pump, which is “crucial to the operation of Gebauer.” Id. According to Appellant, Gebauer’s arrangement enables easy access to valve lifter 43 outside of a flow region, and “[i]t is unclear how Gebauer could be modified to provide a manual actuator that acts along an axis substantially parallel or coincident to the flow path.” Id. (citing Gebauer, 5:20–22, 5:32–34, Fig. 5). Appellant contends that the proposed modifications would “needlessly complicate” Gebauer’s actuator, and that Gebauer would lead one away from taking such an approach. Id. at 11–12. In the Answer, the Examiner further finds that Jokela’s failure to disclose anything regarding degassing does not address the rejection, which relies on a combination of Gebauer and Claude to teach the system of claim 1, including the degassing system. Ans. 16. As to changing the orientation of Gebauer’s actuator so that it is parallel to the flow path, the Examiner finds that the principle of Gebauer’s operation relates to moving valve body Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 12 (40) away from its seat (41), and that this operation remains the same after the modifications based on Jokela. Id. at 17. As to the alleged difficulty in making the modification, the Examiner finds that Jokela teaches how to create a 90 degree bend in a flow path where the actuator enters, and that one of skill in the art “would be fully capable of providing such a bend as part of the proposed substitution.” Id. The Examiner also finds that Gebauer does not teach away from such modifications because it does not mention Jokela’s system, much less criticize it. Id. at 17–18. We are not persuaded that the Examiner erred in the rejection of claims 2 and 4. Appellant implicitly concedes that the proposed combination discloses all of the limitations of claims 2 and 4, and we limit our analysis to whether the Examiner adequately supported the proposed modification of Gebauer based on Jokela’s teachings. None of Appellant’s arguments are persuasive. First, Appellant’s arguments as to Jokela’s check valve location and lack of a degassing system do not apprise us of error in the rejection because the rejection does not rely on Jokela for these claim features, and instead relies on the combination of Gebauer and Claude to teach these limitations. See Non-Final Act. 4–5. Second, we agree with the Examiner that the proposed modification does not change Gebauer’s principle of operation. As noted above, Gebauer’s principle of operation involves moving an actuator to operate a valve. See Gebauer, 5:24–34. The proposed combination retains this functionality. Further, Gebauer does not describe the angle at which the actuator intersects with the flow path as important or central to its operation, or that operation could not be achieved if the actuator was parallel with the flow path. Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 13 Third, as to the potential complications in making the modification, the Examiner made additional findings in the Answer that Appellant did not contest. See Ans. 17; Reply Br. 3–4. Those findings—that Jokela discloses structure helpful in making the modification and that one of skill in the art “would be fully capable of providing such a bend”—provide adequate foundation for the Examiner’s proposed modification and do not reveal any “teaching away” from the modification by Gebauer. Based on the foregoing, we sustain the rejection of claims 2 and 4 as obvious based on Gebauer, Claude, and Jokela. Claims 5 and 7 For dependent claims 5 and 7, Appellant relies on the same arguments as to the rejection of claim 1. See Appeal Br. 12. Accordingly, we sustain the rejection of claims 5 and 7 for the same reasons that we sustain the obviousness rejection of claim 1. DECISION We reverse the Examiner’s rejection of (1) claims 1 and 10 as anticipated by Gebauer and (2) as obvious over Gebauer. We affirm the Examiner’s rejection of (1) claims 1 and 10 as obvious over Gebauer and Claude, and (2) claims 2 and 4–7 as obvious over Gebauer, Claude, and Jokela. Appeal 2018-004349 Application 13/595,380 14 DECISION SUMMARY In summary: Claims Rejected 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/Basis Affirmed Reversed 1, 10 102(b) Gebauer 1, 10 1, 10 103(a) Gebauer 1, 10 1, 10 103(a) Gebauer, Claude 1, 10 2, 4–7 103(a) Gebauer, Claude, Jokela 2, 4–7 Overall Outcome 1, 2, 4–7, 10 AFFIRMED Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation