Ex Parte SmithDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardFeb 27, 201310879776 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 27, 2013) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARKOFFICE 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. 10/879,776 06/29/2004 Alan Smith 610P015 9106 42754 7590 02/27/2013 Nields, Lemack & Frame, LLC 176 E. Main Street Suite #5 Westborough, MA 01581 EXAMINER STEPHENS, JACQUELINE F ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3761 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 02/27/2013 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 ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ Ex parte ALAN SMITH ____________ Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 Technology Center 3700 ____________ Before STEVEN D. A. McCARTHY, ANNETTE R. REIMERS, and CARL M. DeFRANCO, Administrative Patent Judges. DeFRANCO, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Alan Smith (Appellant) appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1-12 and 15-28. Claims 13-14 are cancelled. We have jurisdiction over this appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We REVERSE. THE CLAIMED INVENTION The claimed subject matter relates to “a device for rectal lavage, and to a method for using such a device, particularly for patients undergoing bowel surgery.” Spec. 1, ll. 4-6; fig. 1. Independent claim 1 is illustrative of the subject matter on appeal, and recites: 1. A device for rectal lavage, comprising: a rigid tubular body (10); a nozzle (12) for insertion into the anus (50) of a patient, the nozzle (12) being constituted by a tapered front end portion of the tubular body (10) that is more flexible than said rigid tubular body, and having a broadest region (15); a port (14) for the insertion of an irrigation hose (16) into the device; an opening (18) in said nozzle (12) for the passage of the irrigation hose (16) there-through; at least one drain hole (20) positioned in said nozzle (12), forward of said broadest region (15) thereof and spaced from said opening (18), for the passage of irrigated fecal matter from the rectum (52) into the hollow interior (24) of said tubular body (10); and a discharge outlet (22) from the hollow interior (24) of said tubular body (10) for the discharge of irrigated fecal matter from the device, the internal cross-sectional area of the discharge outlet being greater than the internal cross-sectional area of the largest of the drain hole(s). Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 3 THE REJECTIONS The Examiner rejected claims 1-12 and 15-28 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Smith (EP 1 262 205 A2, pub. Dec. 4, 2002) in view of Fisher (GB 110,818, pub. Nov. 8, 1917). 1 Ans. 3. ANALYSIS Appellant emphasizes four limitations in independent claim 1 that purportedly distinguish the claimed device over the prior art, including: (1) the intended use of the device “for insertion into the anus”; (2) the nozzle having a “tapered front end portion” and a “broadest region”; (3) the nozzle being “more flexible” than the “rigid tubular body”; and (4) the “drain hole positioned in said nozzle, forward of said broadest region thereof and spaced from said opening” in the nozzle. App. Br. at 5-15. The Examiner found that Smith discloses a rectal lavage device that meets essentially all the claim limitations except for the claimed “tapered front” for the nozzle and the claimed “at least one drain hole forward of the broadest region” of the nozzle. Ans. 4. For those two limitations, the Examiner relied on GB ‘818 which, like Smith, relates to “colon irrigators.” Id.; see also GB ‘818, p. 1. In relying on GB ‘818, the Examiner found that it “teaches a tapered front (page 2, paragraph 1 and Figure 2) and drain holes 14 (Figure 2).” Id. The Examiner concluded that, based on the teachings of GB ‘818, a skilled artisan would have been motivated to modify the nozzle of Smith with a tapered front to “provide a device that is more comfortable to insert” into the rectum of the 1 Both the Examiner and Appellant use the nomenclature “GB ‘818” when referring to the Fisher reference. For consistency, we will adopt the parties’ nomenclature for Fisher rather than refer to it by name. Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 4 patient, and further, would have been motivated to modify Smith’s nozzle with drain holes “to provide clear drain passage for the return flow of waste material.” Id. We agree with the Examiner that: Smith discloses a device for colonic lavage comprising a generally rigid tubular body 10 having a front end nozzle portion 12 for insertion into the anus of a patient; a port 24 for the insertion of an irrigation hose 26 into the device; an opening 16 in the nozzle 12 for the passage of the irrigation hose there through, and a discharge outlet 20 from the hollow interior of the tubular body 10. Ans. 3-4. We further agree with the Examiner’s finding that Smith’s “nozzle 12 is constituted by a flexible (paragraph 0012) material” and that “[t]he nozzle has a broadest region at the tip or ‘hill’ of the corrugations and is tapered at the bottom or ‘valley’ of the corrugation as broadly as claimed.” See Ans. 4. We also agree with the Examiner’s finding that GB ‘818 “teaches a tapered front (page 2, paragraph 1 and Figure 2)” and that “[o]ne having ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to modify Smith with a tapered front.” See id. We have considered the Appellant’s arguments with respect to these particular findings but find them to be without merit. That said, we now address the “drain hole” limitations of claim 1. We note that independent claim 28 recites the same “drain hole” limitations. App. Br., Claims Appendix. As required by independent claims 1 and 28, the “drain hole” has two express limits as to its location on the nozzle, namely, it is positioned forward of the broadest region of the nozzle and spaced from the opening in the nozzle. App. Br., Claims Appendix (emphasis added); see also Figs. 1 and 3. In other words, as explained by Appellant, the claimed “drain hole” is “formed in the tapered front end [of the nozzle] between the nozzle opening 18 and the widest part Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 5 of the nozzle.” App. Br. 11 (emphasis in original). The Examiner recognized that Smith lacks a drain hole within the claimed limits. Ans. 4. While Smith does disclose an “opening 16” that permits the drainage of waste material (as indicated by arrows B), it is neither “forward of said broadest region” of the nozzle nor “spaced from said opening” in the nozzle, as required by claims 1 and 28. See Smith, paras. [0021], [0024], [0025] and fig. 2 . Knowing this, the Examiner turned to GB ‘818 for its purported disclosure of “drain holes 14 (Figure 2).” Ans. 4. In analyzing GB ‘818, the Examiner continually points to “drain holes 14” as providing the key to modify Smith, finding that they “are capable of receiving waste fluid.” Ans. 4 and 7. Based on that finding, the Examiner surmised that a skilled artisan would have been motivated to modify Smith with “drain holes as taught in GB 110818” because doing so would “provide clear drain passage for the return flow of waste material.” Id. at 4. Appellant raises two substantive errors with the Examiner’s analysis of GB ‘818. First, Appellant asserts that “although the openings 14 of GB '818 are holes,” they are “not drain holes” and they are “not located in the nozzle at all,” let alone “between the nozzle opening 18 and the widest part of the nozzle.” App. Br. 10, 11 and 13 (emphasis in original). Rather, according to Appellant, the “drain holes 14” of GB ‘818 are located in the irrigation hose (i.e., applicator tube 7) of the GB ‘818 device, and as such, they are “for the administration into the colon of anesthetic.” Id. at 11 (emphasis in original). Hence, Appellant argues that the Examiner’s modification of Smith to include the “holes 14,” as taught by GB ‘818, would result in something different than what the claims require, namely, “such a modification would require that such holes be provided in the hose 26 of Smith, not in the nozzle of Smith, and such holes, like in GB ‘818, would not ‘drain’ but Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 6 rather would ‘administer’ whatever is being administered through that hose 26”. App. Br. 11-12. Our reading of GB ‘818 coincides with the Appellant’s view. Claims 1 and 28 recite that the “drain hole” is positioned in the nozzle for the passage of waste material “from the rectum.” App. Br., Claims Appendix; see also App. Br. 10-11. GB ‘818, on the other hand, expressly discloses that the holes (i.e., openings 14), on which the Examiner relied, are located in the irrigation hose (i.e., applicator tube 7) that delivers anesthetic into the rectum. Specifically, GB ‘818 provides: 1) “The particular object of this invention being to provide an instrument for the administration of anaesthetics by the rectum of the colon,” [p. 1, ll. 3-5]; 2) “In the performance of the anaesthesia, the anesthetic is made to flow through the flexible applicator tube 7,” [p. 2, ll. 25-26]; and 3) “The flexible applicator tube 7, is provided with an opening 13, at the extreme end thereof, and other openings 14 are provided in the side wall of said tube 7. The said tube 7, may be of any suitable length and is in practice connected with a vessel which contains the anesthetic, as ether, or any other medical solution that may be desired for the administration.” [p. 2, ll. 16-20]. Thus, contrary to the Examiner’s finding, GB ‘818 discloses that the express purpose of the openings or holes 14 is to administer or supply fluid; they do not drain fluid. In other words, the holes 14 of GB ‘818 do the opposite of what claims 1 and 28 require. As such, the holes 14 of GB ‘818 cannot reasonably be considered to constitute drain holes, and the Examiner’s reliance on them for the teaching to modify Smith is erroneous. As for the second error in the Examiner’s analysis of GB ‘818, Appellant contends that Smith cannot be modified as the Examiner proposes because “[p]lacing apertures in the nozzle 12 of Smith would be completely redundant; Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 7 draining is already accomplished without such apertures.” App. Br. 15; see also id. at 12-13. Appellant further explains that drainage “is already taken care of by the very large opening 16” in the Smith nozzle, thus, no purpose “could possibly be served by modifying the Smith device to include ‘drain’ holes.” Id. at 12, 15 (emphasis in original). While we recognize that Smith’s drain hole is integral with the nozzle 12, whereas GB ‘818’s drain holes are separated from the tapered nozzle 1, nonetheless, both Smith and GB ‘818 provide a hole for draining waste material from the colon. Similar to Smith’s device which includes “opening 16” where waste material “returns to the tubular body 10 to be discharged through the outlet 20,” GB ‘818’s device includes “apertures 8” for the “return flow of wasted anesthetic . . . into the discharge duct 10.” Smith [0010] and [0025] and Fig. 2; see also GB ‘818, p. 1, ll. 6-10, p. 2, ll. 21-25, and Fig. 2. Thus, the reason proffered by the Examiner for modifying Smith to include a drain hole, i.e., “to provide clear drain passage for the return flow of waste material” (Ans. 4), appears to already be performed by the opening 16 in Smith’s device. As such, the Examiner has not provided any findings that Smith recognized a problem with the drain hole. Without a persuasive articulated reason based on some rational underpinning for modifying the reference as proposed, the Examiner’s rejection appears to be the result of hindsight analysis. See In re Kahn, 441 F.3d 977, 988 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (cited with approval in KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007)) (“rejections on obviousness grounds cannot be sustained by mere conclusory statements; instead, there must be some articulated reasoning with some rational underpinning to support the legal conclusion of obviousness”). Therefore, absent hindsight, we fail to see why one of ordinary skill in the art would have been led to replace the integrated drain opening in Smith’s nozzle with the separated (and, arguably, less than ideal) drain holes of GB ‘818, as the Examiner proposes. Appeal 2010-006619 Application 10/879,776 8 For the foregoing reasons, the rejection of independent claim 1, and its respective dependent claims 2-12 and 15-27, and independent claim 28, as unpatentable over Smith and GB ‘818 cannot be sustained. DECISION The Examiner’s decision is reversed as to claims 1-12 and 15-28. REVERSED tj Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation