In Re Micheal C. Scroogie ( 2006 )


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  •                  NOTE: Pursuant to Fed. Cir. R. 47.6, this disposition
    is not citable as precedent. It is a public record.
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    05-1370
    (Serial No. 09/401,198)
    IN RE MICHAEL C. SCROGGIE, MICHAEL E. KACABA,
    DAVID A. ROCHON and DAVID M. DIAMOND
    (Real Party Interest Catalina Marketing Corporation)
    __________________________
    DECIDED: March 13, 2006
    __________________________
    Before MAYER, RADER, and PROST, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge PROST. Opinion concurring-in-part and
    dissenting-in-part filed by Circuit Judge MAYER.
    PROST, Circuit Judge.
    Michael C. Scroggie, Michael E. Kacaba, David A. Rochon, and David M.
    Diamond (collectively, “Scroggie”) appeal a decision by the United States Patent and
    Trademark Office Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (the “Board”) affirming the
    final rejection of claims 41-67 of U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 09/401,198 (the
    “’198 application”) as obvious under 
    35 U.S.C. § 103
     in view of a single prior art
    reference, 
    U.S. Patent No. 5,933,811
     (“Angles”). Ex parte Scroggie, Appeal No. 2004-
    0738, Paper No. 33 (B.P.A.I. Nov. 30, 2004) (“Board Decision”). Because the Board
    erred in construing the term “generating page data” in claims 41-49, we reverse the
    Board’s decision with respect to those claims, but because the Board correctly
    construed the term “personalized web page” in claims 50-67, we affirm the Board’s
    decision with respect to those claims.
    BACKGROUND
    On September 23, 1999, Scroggie filed the ’198 application. The claims of the
    ’198 application are generally directed to a system and method for generating a web
    page. In claims 41-49, “generating page data” is both a limitation of the claims and a
    part of the preamble, whereas for claims 50-67, “generating a web page” is only part of
    the preamble. Additionally, claims 50-67 contain the limitation “personalized web page.”
    Claims 41 and 50 are representative with respect to each of those limitations which are
    the focus of the parties’ dispute in this case.
    41. A computer implemented method for generating a web page, said
    method comprising the steps of:
    transmitting a prompt for personal information from a main
    computer to a personal computer over a computer network;
    transmitting personal information data from said personal computer
    to said main computer over said computer network in response to said
    prompt; and
    generating page data defining a web page based upon said
    personal information data.
    50. A computer method for generating a web page, said method
    comprising the steps of:
    transmitting a prompt for personal information from a main
    computer to a personal computer;
    receiving at said main computer personal information data
    transmitted from said personal computer; and
    05-1370                                       2
    transmitting from said main computer to said personal computer
    web page data for displaying a personalized web page, said personalized
    web page based upon said personal information data.
    (emphases added).
    The ’198 application’s specification, however, appears to be more narrow than its
    claims because it is generally directed to a method for sending shopping incentives
    (e.g., coupons) to customers over the internet. The coupons can be transmitted to the
    customer in various ways, including by e-mail and by embedding the coupons in a web
    page. The coupons can then be printed by the customer and used at retail stores.
    In the decision on appeal, the Board relied solely on Angles as establishing a
    prima facie case of obviousness of claims 41-67.1       In general, Angles discloses a
    system and method for delivering customized electronic advertisements in an interactive
    communication system. The Board found that the first two elements of representative
    claim 41, i.e., the two transmitting steps, were clearly taught or suggested by Angles.
    Scroggie does not disagree. Additionally, the Board found that the examiner had not
    explained where, in Angles, the third element, “generating page data defining a web
    page based upon said personal information data” was either taught or suggested. The
    Board, however, found that column 4, lines 7-9, of Angles discloses that advertisements
    sent to a consumer’s computer may contain hyper-links to other information and that the
    “hyper-links typically direct the user’s Internet browser to access different websites on
    1
    Additionally, the Board found that the examiner’s rejection of claims 32-40
    was improper because the examiner did not provide a convincing reason why the
    disclosure in Angles obviated the phrase “assigning a web page address to said web
    page based upon said personal information,” as found in those claims. Therefore, the
    Board reversed the examiner’s rejection with regard to claims 32-40 and therefore,
    Scroggie has not appealed the Board’s decision with respect to those claims.
    05-1370                                    3
    the Internet.” Board Decision, slip op. at 5. Thus, the Board concluded that since the
    advertisements sent to a consumer in Angles are based on personal information of the
    consumer and the hyper-links in the advertisement lead to a web page which is
    generated from some page data, “one may fairly interpret this disclosure as a teaching
    of ‘generating page data defining a web page based upon said personal information.’”
    Board Decision, slip op. at 8.
    In regard to claims 50-67, the Board found that the hyper-links in Angles suggest
    the “personalized web page” limitation because those hyper-links lead to a web page as
    a result of personal information.     Thus, the Board concluded that the web pages
    displayed could be considered “personalized web pages” as that term is used in claims
    50-67.
    On Scroggie’s request for rehearing, the Board reaffirmed its conclusion that
    Angles teaches the third limitation of claim 41, “generating page data defining a web
    page based upon said personal information.”           The Board reiterated that “if the
    advertisements, which are sent to a consumer based on personal information, are said
    to be ‘page data’ (i.e., the advertisement page contains data including a hyperlink) and
    the hyperlink (the hyperlink defining a web page since clicking on this hyperlink will send
    the user to that web page) in that page data is directed to a certain web page, it can be
    reasonably said that Angles generates page data defining a web page based on
    personal information, as claimed.” Ex parte Scroggie, Appeal No. 2004-0738, Paper
    No. 33, slip op. at 3-4 (B.P.A.I. Feb. 10, 2005).
    05-1370                                      4
    DISCUSSION
    Obviousness is a legal question based on underlying factual findings. See e.g.,
    In re Mayne, 
    104 F.3d 1339
    , 1341 (Fed. Cir. 1997).          What a reference teaches,
    including whether it teaches toward or away from the claimed invention, is a question of
    fact. Para-Ordnance Mfg. v. SGS Imps. Int’l, 
    73 F.3d 1085
    , 1088 (Fed. Cir. 1995). This
    court upholds the Board’s factual findings unless they are unsupported by substantial
    evidence. In re Gartside, 
    203 F.3d 1305
    , 1316 (Fed. Cir. 2000).
    Claim construction, however, is a question of law reviewed de novo on appeal.
    Cybor Corp. v. FAS Techs., Inc., 
    138 F.3d 1448
    , 1454 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (en banc).
    Since during prosecution, claims must be given their “broadest reasonable
    interpretation,” this court reviews the Board’s interpretation of disputed claim language
    to determine whether it is “reasonable” in light of all the evidence before the Board. In
    re Hyatt, 
    211 F.3d 1367
    , 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2000); In re Morris, 
    127 F.3d 1048
    , 1055 (Fed.
    Cir. 1997).
    Scroggie contends that the Board incorrectly concluded that Angles teaches or
    suggests limitations defined by claims 41-67. He argues that a hyper-link is not a web
    page, but rather a logical address which is clearly known on the Internet. With respect
    to claims 41-49, he asserts that the inclusion of hyper-links in the advertisement sent to
    the consumer does not generate page data (i.e., result in page data being generated).
    Consequently, when a consumer clicks on the hyper-link, it does not result in
    “generating page data defining a web page based upon said personal information data,”
    as recited in claim 41. This is so because the page data, contemplated by the hyper-
    links in the advertisements disclosed in Angles, already exist in the server computer
    05-1370                                     5
    having the logical address specified in the hyper-link. Scroggie contends that “[w]hen
    the user clicks [on] the link in the advertisement, his computer sends a prompt to the
    corresponding address, and the computer at that address responds with a data file . . .
    [i.e., a web page], based upon data pre-existing at that computer.” (Appellant’s Br. 17.)
    Thus, Scroggie asserts that the Board erred in finding that Angles discloses this
    limitation because it does not teach or suggest “generating page data defining a web
    page based upon said personal information data.”
    The Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (the “Director”)
    asserts that Angles teaches selecting custom advertisements to send to a consumer
    based on a consumer’s personal information and that those custom advertisements can
    contain hyper-links. The Director argues that since the hyper-links are custom-selected
    and included in the electronic page that shows up on the user’s screen, they are “page
    data.”    Also, since the hyper-links provide a direct link to a web page, they can
    reasonably be said to be “page data” that “define a web page” as required by the
    claims. Additionally, the Director argues that there is no limitation in the claim that
    prevents the customized page data from “preexisting,” rather the only requirement of the
    claim is that it be customized for that consumer. Thus, when the disclosure in Angles
    teaches “selecting” customized advertisements which contain hyper-links to other web
    pages, this is sufficient to teach the “generating page data” element of claims 41-49.
    We disagree. The term “generating page data” means that the page data is
    “generated,” not merely “selected.”      Both the Board and the Director apply an
    unreasonable construction to the term “generating page data” such that Angles, which
    teaches “selecting” advertisements which contain hyper-links can somehow teach or
    05-1370                                     6
    suggest “generating.” Generating does not imply a mere selection of pre-existing page
    data, but rather the creation or origination of such data.       Therefore, the Board’s
    construction of “generating page data” was unreasonable and its conclusion that Angles
    teaches that limitation is thus unsupported by substantial evidence.
    Additionally, in regard to independent claim 50, Scroggie argues that although
    “Angles’ advertisement data may depend upon personal information stored at Angles’
    advertising provider computer. . . . Angles does not show . . . that data stored at some
    address specified in a hyper-link in an advertisement transmitted to Angles’ consumer
    computer depends upon personal inforation [sic].”         (Appellant’s Br. 18.)   Thus,
    Scroggie’s argument focuses on the term “personalized web page” as used in claims
    50-67.
    The Director again argues that Scroggie is improperly reading a limitation into
    those claims because the term “personalized web page” can reasonably be construed
    to cover Angles’s disclosure of custom-selected web pages which are accessed by
    clicking on the hyper-links within the advertisements that are sent to the consumer.
    Thus, the web page is “personalized” because it is custom-selected for the consumer
    based on personal information provided by the consumer.
    We agree with the Director. The term “personalized web page” as used in claims
    50-67 can reasonably be read to cover at least two types of personalization. One type
    of personalized web page is “personalized” because the contents of the web page
    transmitted to the consumer are themselves specific to the consumer. Another type of
    personalized web page is “personalized” because the web page itself, although not
    necessarily specific to an individual consumer, was chosen to be transmitted, via a
    05-1370                                     7
    hyper-link, to that consumer based on the consumer’s personal data. Because the term
    “personalized web page” can reasonably be construed to mean either type of
    “personalized,” and because Angles discloses the latter type, Angles teaches this
    limitation of claims 50-67. Therefore, we will affirm the Board’s decision with respect to
    those claims.
    CONCLUSION
    Because we find that the Board’s construction of the term “generating page data”
    was unreasonably broad, we find that Angles does not teach or suggest “generating
    page data” as used in claims 41-49. Additionally, because we find that the Board’s
    construction of the term “personalized” in claims 50-67 was not unreasonable, the
    Board’s finding that Angles teaches or suggests the “personalized web page” limitation
    in those claims is supported by substantial evidence.       Accordingly, we reverse the
    Board’s decision with respect to claims 41-49, and affirm the Board’s decision with
    respect to claims 50-67.
    05-1370                                     8
    NOTE: Pursuant to Fed. Cir. R. 47.6, this disposition is
    not citable as precedent. It is a public record.
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    05-1370
    (Serial No. 09/401,198)
    IN RE MICHAEL C. SCROGGIE, MICHAEL E. KACABA,
    DAVID A. ROCHON and DAVID M. DIAMOND
    (Real Party In Interest Catalina Marketing Corporation)
    MAYER, Circuit Judge, concurring-in-part and dissenting-in-part.
    I agree that the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, Ex
    parte Scroggie, Appeal No. 2004-0738, Paper No. 33, at 5-6 (B.P.A.I. Nov. 30, 2004)
    (“Board Decision”), should be affirmed with respect to claims 50-67 of U.S. Patent
    Application Serial No. 09/401,198 (“the ’198 application”). However, because we review
    the board’s interpretation of disputed claim language to determine whether it was
    reasonable in light of the evidence before the board, see, e.g., In re Hyatt, 
    211 F.3d 1367
    , 1372 (Fed Cir. 2000), and because we review the factual findings underlying the
    board’s obviousness determination for substantial evidence, I would also affirm the
    board’s finding that claims 41-49 are obvious in light of Angles.
    Because the advertisements sent to a consumer in Angles are based on the
    user’s personal information and the advertisement hyperlinks “lead to a web page which
    is generated from some page data[,]” Board Decision, at 5-6, the board found that one
    may interpret Angles as teaching the third limitation in claim 41, “generating page data
    defining a web page based upon said personal information data.” In Angles, hyperlinks
    are custom-selected for inclusion on an electronic page that shows up on the user’s
    screen and can, therefore, reasonably be called “page data.” The determination that
    the hyperlinks in Angles are “page data [that] defin[e] a web page” was reasonable
    because the hyperlinks, which can link a user to a web page, are custom-selected and
    included on the electronic page that shows up on a user’s screen.
    Finally, the board’s construction of the term “generating,” though broad, was not
    unreasonable.   There is no limitation in the ’198 application that prevents the term
    “generating” from being interpreted to allow preexisting customized page data, so long
    as the page data that is “generated” for the consumer is based on his specific user
    information, as done in Angles.
    05-1370                                    2