In Re American Academy of Science Tech Center

367 F.3d 1359, 70 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1827, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 9382, 2004 WL 1067528
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 2004
Docket03-1531
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 367 F.3d 1359 (In Re American Academy of Science Tech Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In Re American Academy of Science Tech Center, 367 F.3d 1359, 70 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1827, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 9382, 2004 WL 1067528 (Fed. Cir. 2004).

Opinion

BRYSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the United States Patent and Trademark Office’s Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences in a reexamination proceeding, Appeal No.2003-0349. The Board upheld a patent examiner’s rejection, in reexamination, of several claims of U.S. Patent No. 4,714,989 (“the '989 patent”). The owner of the patent, American Academy of Science Tech Center, seeks review of the Board’s decision. We affirm.

I

Before the proliferation of personal computers, it was common for a multiple-user computer system to be arranged so that each user would interface with a mainframe computer by using a so-called “dumb terminal,” i.e., a terminal that did not contain processors and performed only input and output functions. Several dumb terminals would be connected to a single mainframe computer, which would run the user applications. The mainframe computer would receive input from and provide output to users through the dumb terminals. The user applications run by the mainframe computer would access data that was stored in a database residing on the mainframe.

In contrast to systems using a mainframe in conjunction with dumb terminals, the '989 patent describes a network in which the processing of user applications is distributed among several computers. In the '989 patent system, user applications are run on the user stations, while the database resides on a dedicated database computer. Several user stations are networked to the database computer so that a user application running on a user station can store data to and retrieve data from the database residing on the database computer. The patent describes using a “data base simulator” to “enable[ ] an application program ... at the user station to call for storage or retrieval of data from the data center as though it were calling for data from a data base resident at the user station .'989 patent, col. 6, 11. 57-62.

The '989 patent was issued on December 22, 1987, on an application filed on October 20, 1986. The 1986 application was a continuation of an application filed on February 19, 1982. In 1991, American *1362 Academy sued Novell, Inc., in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, alleging that Novell had infringed the '989 patent. In response, Novell filed a reexamination request on June 6, 1994. The district court stayed the litigation pending the outcome of the reexamination.

During the reexamination, the examiner rejected each of the claims of the '989 patent as anticipated by several references. Four of those references, the Ca-naday, Lowenthal, Passafiume, and Hsiao references, are at issue in this appeal. The Canaday, Lowenthal, and Passafiume references describe what American Academy calls “back-end” systems. In such back-end systems, several mainframe computers interface with a single database or “back-end” computer. The mainframe computers run user applications and communicate with the database computer to store and retrieve data from a database that resides on the database computer. The Hsiao reference describes networking several personal computers to a database computer that is connected to a database. 1

The claims under reexamination require a plurality of “general purpose user computers” that are connected to a “data center computer.” The examiner determined that the mainframe computers in the asserted references (and the personal computers of Hsiao) anticipated the “general purpose user computers” element of the claims under examination. The examiner also found that the references taught an additional disputed claim element, that of “indirectly issuing data base calls,” since in each of the references database calls from the user application to the database manager program at the database computer must be sent though some other program or hardware.

In response to those rejections, American Academy submitted arguments and declarations to the effect that the claims of the '989 patent are limited to user computers, such as personal computers, that are each dedicated to a single user. American Academy also argued that the “indirectly issuing” element should be limited to eases in which the user application, when making a database call, is not aware that it is making a remote database call but instead believes that it is making a local database call to the computer running the user application. American Academy thus in effect urged that the “indirectly issuing” limitation should be limited to the use of a database simulator program such as that described in the '989 specification. The examiner was not persuaded by American Academy’s arguments and continued to reject the claims both as anticipated and as obvious in light of the cited references.

American Academy appealed the examiner’s rejections to the Board, which affirmed the rejections. Although the examiner had been persuaded by the time of appeal that the patent was limited to single-user computers, the Board adopted a broader construction' of the claim term “user computer” that encompassed any computer “capable of running application programs for a user.” That construction reached the back-end systems of the prior art. The Board also construed the claim term “indirectly issuing” broadly to include “the request going through some other *1363 component before it is sent to the data base.”

American Academy filed a rehearing request, asserting that the Board’s claim construction was broader than the examiner’s and that the Board’s decision was thus based on a new ground of rejection. The Board granted the request, but it concluded that even under American Academy’s construction it would have been obvious to replace the mainframe computers of the prior art with personal computers. In response to a further rehearing request in which American Academy asserted that the Board’s obviousness rejection also constituted a new ground of rejection, the Board directed that the issue of obviousness be further prosecuted.

In subsequent proceedings before the examiner, American Academy submitted additional declarations, both as to claim construction and as to the issue of obviousness. The examiner, however, again rejected the claims as anticipated and obvious over the prior art.

American Academy appealed the rejections to the Board for a second time. The Board addressed claim 1 in detail, finding that it was representative of the other claims on appeal. Based on the principle that during examination claims should be given their broadest reasonable construction, the Board construed the term “user computer” to encompass the mainframe computers of the prior art. The Board explained that “[although the patent disclosure does refer to servicing a user in the singular, it also notes that the user could be a person, another device, or machine .... ” The Board added that it was not persuaded by the declarations submitted by American Academy because “the declarations offer no evidence in support of appellant’s definition” and “[finstead ...

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367 F.3d 1359, 70 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1827, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 9382, 2004 WL 1067528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-american-academy-of-science-tech-center-cafc-2004.