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Nonobviousness II: Requiem for the Suggestion Test

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Fisher-Price argues that claim 25 is nothing more than the Bevan device, a toy ... Fisher-Price also responds that particularized and specific motivations to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nonobviousness II: Requiem for the Suggestion Test


1
Nonobviousness II Requiem for the Suggestion Test
  • Patent Law Prof Merges
  • 3.11.08

2
  • Tthe differences between the subject matter
    sought to be patented and the prior art are such
    that the subject matter as a whole would have
    been obvious at the time the invention was made
    to a person having ordinary skill in the art to
    which said subject matter pertains.

3
KSR Intl v. Teleflex
  • The claimed invention at issue in this case is a
    straightforward combination of (i) a pre-existing
    type of adjustable pedal, and (ii) a
    pre-existing type of electronic control that is
    commonly used on newer cars.

4
Claim 4
  • A vehicle control pedal apparatus (12)
    comprising
  • a support (18) adapted to be mounted to a vehicle
  • structure (20)
  • an adjustable pedal assembly (22) having a pedal
    arm (14)
  • moveable in force sic and aft directions with
    respect to said support (18)

5
  • a pivot (24) for pivotally supporting said
    adjustable pedal assembly (22) with respect to
    said support (18) and defining a pivot axis (26)
    and
  • an electronic control (28) attached to said
    support (18) for
  • controlling a vehicle system
  • said apparatus (12) characterized by said
    electronic control (28) being responsive to said
    pivot (24) for providing a signal (32) that
    corresponds to pedal arm position as said pedal
    arm (14) pivots about said pivot axis (26)
    between rest and applied positions wherein the
    position of said pivot (24) remains constant
    while said pedal arm (14) moves in fore and aft
    directions with respect to said pivot (24).

6
298 F.Supp.2d 581, 592 (ED Mich 2003)
  • The Court finds little difference between the
    teachings of the prior art and claims of the
    patent-in-suit. Asano teaches the structure and
    function of each of the claim 4 limitations,
    except those relating to an electronic pedal
    position sensor. Specifically, Asano teaches an
    adjustable pedal assembly pivotally mounted on a
    support bracket with the pedal moving in a fore
    and aft directions with respect to the support
    and the pivot remaining in a constant position
    during movement of the pedal arm. Thus, Asano
    "fairly suggests" the same mechanical assembly
    design asserted in claim 4 of the patent-in-suit.

7
Dist ct. opinion, contd
  • The electronic pedal position sensor asserted in
    claim 4, however, is fully disclosed by other
    prior art references. Both the 503 Series pedal
    position sensor and the '068 patent teach an
    electronic pedal position sensor being responsive
    to the pedal pivot shaft and causing a signal to
    be sent to the engine to increase or decrease
    engine speed based on the rotation of the pivot
    shaft.

8
  • It is undisputed that in the mid-1990's more cars
    required the use of an electronic device, such as
    a pedal position sensor, to communicate driver
    inputs to an electronically managed engine. It is
    also undisputed that adjustable pedal assemblies
    have existed in the art since the late 1970's.
    Clearly it was inevitable that adjustable pedal
    assemblies would be joined with an electronic
    device to work in conjunction with modern
    electronically controlled engines.

9
  • The Court finds that Defendant has offered
    sufficient evidence of a suggestion to combine a
    pivotally mounted adjustable pedal assembly with
    an off-the-shelf modular pedal position sensor to
    solve the problem of designing a less expensive,
    less complex, and more compact adjustable pedal
    assembly for use with electronically controlled
    vehicles.
  • -- 298 F.supp.2d 594

10
Federal Circuit opinion
  • The specification of the 565 patent indicates
    that prior-art pedal assemblies incorporating an
    electronic control suffered from being too bulky,
    complex, and expensive to manufacture. See 565
    patent, col. 1, ll. 48-53. It was this problem
    that the 565 patent set out to address. See id.
    col. 2, ll. 2-5.

11
Fed Cir.
  • We agree with Teleflex that the district court
    did not apply the correct teaching-suggestion-moti
    vation test. We also agree that, under that test,
    genuine issues of material fact exist, so as to
    render summary judgment of obviousness improper.
  • -- Fed Cir case no. 04-1152, slip op at 10.

12
  • Under our case law, whether based on the nature
    of the problem to be solved, the express
    teachings of the prior art, or the knowledge of
    one of ordinary skill in the art, the district
    court was required to make specific findings as
    to whether there was a suggestion or motivation
    to combine the teachings of Asano with an
    electronic control in the particular manner
    claimed by claim 4 of the 565 patent. See
    Kotzab, 217 F.3d at 1371 Rouffet, 149 F.3d at
    1357. That is, the district court was required to
    make specific findings as to a suggestion or
    motivation to attach an electronic control to the
    support bracket of the Asano assembly.

13
  • The test requires that the nature of the
    problem to be solved be such that it would have
    led a person of ordinary skill in the art to
    combine the prior art teachings in the particular
    manner claimed. We have recognized this situation
    when two prior art references address the precise
    problem that the patentee was trying to solve. .
    . . In this case, the Asano patent does not
    address the same problem as the 565 patent. The
    objective of the 565 patent was to design a
    smaller, less complex, and less expensive
    electronic pedal assembly. The Asano patent, on
    the other hand, was directed at solving another
    problem.

14
  • A consortium of five major corporations,
    including Microsoft and Cisco have filed as
    amicus supporting the petition.  Their brief
    argues that the current structured test for
    obviousness is too easy a hurdle for patentees
    and that the formalities of the test undermines
    courts ability to truly determine whether an
    invention is obvious to one skilled in the art.

15
Steps to a Supreme Court decision
  • On October 3, 2005, the Court asked the Solicitor
    General to file a brief expressing the views of
    the US Government.  The new Chief Justice
    (Roberts) took no part in the decision.

16
  • In late May of 2006, the Solicitor General,
    joined by the PTO, filed a brief in support of
    the Petitioner. The brief is sharply critical of
    the Federal Circuit law in the area
  • The Federal Circuit has transformed one means of
    establishing obviousness under the Graham
    frameworkproof that the prior art provided a
    teaching, suggestion, or motivation for
    combining separate prior art referencesinto an
    inflexible requirement for determining
    obviousness.

17
  • As this case demonstrates, the Federal Circuits
    teaching-suggestion-motivation test extends
    patent protection to non-innovative combinations
    of familiar elements. The issue is important,
    because many patent applications rest on the
    combination of prior art references, and because
    extension of patent rights to obvious
    combinations of familiar elements retards, rather
    than advances, new discoveries.

18
  • The Federal Circuits test creates a substantial
    obstacle to showing that a claimed invention that
    simply combines known features without
    substantial innovation would have been obvious,
    because the test requires the party challenging
    the patent to come forward with affirmative
    evidence in the prior art of a teaching,
    suggestion, or motivation to combine the
    features. That showing may be difficult or
    impossible even though the combination, on its
    face, would have been obvious. For example, such
    affirmative evidence may be lacking if the claim
    arose in a newly emerging technical field or if
    the combination was so obvious to persons skilled
    in the art that no one would have had need or
    incentive to record the trivial extension of the
    art.
  • Brief of the United States as Amicus Curiae at 9,
    14

19
  • The Court should reiterate that the role of the
    hypothetical person of ordinary skill is critical
    in the nonobviousness inquiry and that the person
    is understood to have an ability to combine and
    modify prior art references that is consistent
    with the creativity and problem-solving skills
    that in fact are characteristic of those having
    ordinary skill in the art.  FTC Report, ch. 4,
    at 15.
  • SGs Amicus Brief on the Merits at 25.

20
  • On June 26, 2006, the Court granted certiorari in
    KSR v. Teleflex, No. 04-1350 (U.S.), which
    presents the Supreme Court with the opportunity
    to decide the following question
  • Whether the Federal Circuit has erred in holding
    that a claimed invention cannot be held
    obvious, and thus unpatentable under 35 U.S.C.
    103(a), in the absence of some proven
    teaching, suggestion, or motivation that would
    have led a person of ordinary skill in the art to
    combine the relevant prior art teachings in the
    manner claimed.
  • Pet. for Cert. at i, in KSR v. Teleflex, No.
    04-1350.

21
KSR (contd)
  • The question is essentially a broad challenge to
    the obviousness jurisprudence of the Federal
    Circuit.

22
KSR impacted the Federal Circuit even before
Court decided case
  • Dystar Textilfarben v. CH Patrick, No. 06-1088
    (Fed. Cir. Oct. 3, 2006),

23
  • In Dystar and three other cases, the Federal
    Circuit struck down the claims at issue as
    invalid for obviousness. In two, the lower
    tribunals obviousness holding is upheld in the
    other two, the lower tribunals nonobviousness
    holding is reversed.

24
Dystar Textilfarben v. CH Patrick, 464 F.3d 1356
(FC 2006)
  • Bringing the person of ordinary skill back into
    the suggestion-motivation test

25
  • KSR INTERNATIONAL CO. v. TELEFLEX INC.
  • 2007 U.S. LEXIS 4745 (April 30, 2007)

26
  • The Federal Circuit has employed an approach
    referred to by the parties as the teaching,
    suggestion, or motivation test (TSM test), under
    which a patent claim is only proved obvious if
    some motivation or suggestion to com bine the
    prior art teachings can be found in the prior
    art, the nature of the problem, or the knowledge
    of a person having ordinary skill in the art. --
    casebook p. 666

27
Sensor prior art
  • Pages 667-668 Integrated and freestanding pedal
    sensors, described and claimed in various prior
    art patents

28
P. 670
  • Engelgau had not included Asano among the prior
    art references, and Asano was not mentioned in
    the patents prosecution. Thus, the PTO did not
    have before it an adjustable pedal with a fixed
    pivot point.

29
Supreme Ct. holding
  • We begin by rejecting the rigid approach of the
    Court of Appeals. Throughout this Courts
    engagement with the question of obviousness, our
    cases have set forth an expansive and flexible
    approach inconsistent with the way the Court of
    Appeals applied its TSM test here.

30
Highlights from opinion
  • US v Adams and teaching away

31
P. 674
  • When a work is available in one field of
    endeavor, design incentives and other market
    forces can prompt variations of it, either in the
    same field or a different one. If a person of
    ordinary skill can implement a predictable
    variation, 103 likely bars its patentability.

32
  • Often, it will be necessary for a court to look
    to interrelated teachings of multiple patents
    the effects of demands known to the design
    community or present in the marketplace and the
    background knowledge possessed by a person having
    ordinary skill in the art, all in order to
    determine whether there was an apparent reason to
    combine the known elements in the fashion claimed
    by the patent at issue. To facilitate review,
    this analysis should be made explicit. -- p.
    674

33
  • A court can take account of the inferences and
    creative step s that a person of ordinary skill
    in the art would employ. -- 674

34
  • In many fields it may be that there is little
    discussion of obvious techniques or combinations,
    and it often may be the case that market demand,
    rather than scientific literature, will drive
    design trends. Granting patent protection to
    advances that would occur in the ordinary course
    without real innovation retards progress and may,
    in the case of patents combining previously known
    elements, deprive prior inventions of their value
    or utility.

35
  • When there is a design need or market pressure to
    solve a problem and there are a finite number of
    identified, predictable solutions, a person of
    ordinary skill has good reason to pursue the
    known options within his or her technical grasp.
    If this leads to the anticipated success, it is
    likely the product not of innovation but of
    ordinary skill and common sense. In that instance
    the fact that a combination was obvious to try
    might show that it was obvious under 103.

36
In re O'Farrell, 853 F.2d 894, 903 (Fed.Cir.1988)
  • Obvious to try is NOT the appropriate standard

While absolute certainty is not necessary to
establish a reasonable expectation of success,
In re O'Farrell, 853 F.2d 894, 903-04,
(Fed.Cir.1988), there can be little better
evidence negating an expectation of success than
actual reports of failure. A reasonable jury
could conclude from these reports that one of
ordinary skill in the art would not have had a
reasonable expectation of success . . . Life
Technologies, supra.
37
  • Merges, Uncertainty and the Standard of
    Patentability, 7 Berkeley High Tech. L.J. 1
    (1993).

38
P. 677
  • A person having ordinary skill in the art could
    have combined Asano with a pedal position sensor
    in a fashion encompassed by claim 4, and would
    have seen the benefits of doing so.

39
Leapfrog v. Fisher-Price, 485 F.3d 1157 (Fed Cir
2007)
  • Affirming District court (Delaware)
  • Deadlocked jury, submitted to judge

40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
42
  • Fisher-Price argues that claim 25 is nothing more
    than the Bevan device, a toy that teaches reading
    based on the association of letters with their
    phonemic sounds, updated with modern electronics
    that were common by the time of the alleged
    invention. Fisher-Price also responds that
    particularized and specific motivations to
    combine need not be found in the prior art
    references themselves in the context of an
    improvement that arises from a desire to
    generally improve a known device (e.g., to make
    the product smaller, lighter, or less expensive)
    using newer technology. at 1160

43
At 1161
  • The common sense of those skilled in the art
    demonstrates why some combinations would have
    been obvious where others would not.

44
Holding
  • 861 patent would have been obvious in view of
    the combination of Bevan, the SSR, and the
    knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art.
    -- 1161

45
At 1162
  • We agree with the district court that one of
    ordinary skill in the art of children's learning
    toys would have found it obvious to combine the
    Bevan device with the SSR to update it using
    modern electronic components in order to gain the
    commonly understood benefits of such adaptation,
    such as decreased size, increased reliability,
    simplified operation, and reduced cost.

46
  • 25. An interactive learning device, comprising
  • a housing including a plurality of switches
  • a sound production device in communication with
    the switches and including a processor and a
    memory
  • at least one depiction of a sequence of letters,
    each letter being associable with a switch and
  • a reader configured to communicate the identity
    of the depiction to the processor,
  • wherein selection of a depicted letter activates
    an associated switch to communicate with the
    processor, causing the sound production device to
    generate a signal corresponding to a sound
    associated with the selected letter, the sound
    being determined by a position of the letter in
    the sequence of letters.
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