James Singer
Jan 11, 2017
Featured

Federal Circuit: obviousness requires a clear and explicit explanation

The Federal Circuit recently vacated a Patent Trial and Appeals Board (PTAB) decision that found obvious several claims of a patent application relating to methods for re-configuring icons on a touch-sensitive display. In In re Van Os (Fed. Cir. Jan. 3, 2017), the court's decision focused on the PTAB's failure to provide sufficient reasoning for the rejection, rather than the question of whether or not the claims were in fact obvious.

The claims related to a user interface for a touch-sensitive display that would enter a "reconfiguration mode" after it detected a sequence of two touches that had different durations in particular locations of the display. The Examiner and the Board both found the claims to be obvious in view of two prior art patents.

The court found both the Examiner's and the PTAB's explanations to be lacking, stating:

Here, neither the Board nor the examiner provided any reasoning or analysis to support finding a motivation to add Gillespie’s disclosure to Hawkins beyond stating it would have been an "intuitive way" to initiate Hawkins’ editing mode.

The Board did not explain why modifying Hawkins with the specific disclosure in Gillespie would have been "intuitive" or otherwise identify a motivation to combine.”The court explained that it had a long history of requiring Examiners and the Board to sufficiently explain the reasoning for an obviousness rejection:

Since KSR, we have repeatedly explained that obviousness findings “grounded in ‘common sense’ must contain explicit and clear reasoning providing some rational underpinning why common sense compels a finding of obviousness.... Absent some articulated rationale, a finding that a combination of prior art would have been "common sense" or "intuitive" is no different than merely stating the combination "would have been obvious."

Because the Board and the Examiner failed to meet their burden, the court directed the USPTO to allow the claims and grant the patent.

https://ipspotlight.com/2017/01/03/federal-circuit-obviousness-requires-a-clear-and-explicit-explanation/

Tags
1