In Re Schwemberger , 410 F. App'x 298 ( 2010 )


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  •         NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    __________________________
    (Serial No. 11/014,909)
    IN RE RICHARD F. SCHWEMBERGER
    __________________________
    2010-1127
    __________________________
    Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office, Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
    ___________________________
    Decided: October 13, 2010
    ___________________________
    HOWARD N. FLAXMAN, Welsh & Flaxman LLC, of Al-
    exandria, Virginia, for appellant.
    RAYMOND T. CHEN, Solicitor, Office of the Solicitor,
    United States Patent and Trademark Office, of Alexan-
    dria, Virginia, for the Director of the United States Patent
    and Trademark Office. With him on the brief were
    SYDNEY O. JOHNSON, JR. and FRANCES N. LYNCH, Associ-
    ate Solicitors.
    __________________________
    IN RE SCHWEMBERGER                                       2
    Before BRYSON, DYK, and MOORE, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM.
    Richard T. Schwemberger appeals from a final deci-
    sion of the United States Patent and Trademark Office,
    Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (Board), which
    found claims 1-30 of Application Serial No. 11/014,909
    (the ’909 application) unpatentable as obvious. See Ex
    parte Schwemberger, No. 2009-1229 (B.P.A.I. Aug. 12,
    2009) (Initial Decision); see also Ex parte Schwemberger,
    No. 2009-1229 (B.P.A.I. Sept. 18, 2009) (Final Decision).
    For the following reasons, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Mr. Schwemberger is one of the named inventors of
    the ’909 application, which is entitled “Curved Cutter
    Stapler with Aligned Tissue Retention Feature.” The ’909
    application is directed to a surgical stapling instrument
    that applies staples to body tissue. The stapling instru-
    ment of the ’909 application includes a support frame
    with a handle at one end and an “end effector” at the
    other. The end effector supports an anvil and a cartridge
    housing that carries a plurality of staples. The anvil and
    cartridge housing are moveable relative to each other,
    such that tissue can be clamped between the two, and a
    “tissue retention feature” maintains the tissue within the
    end effector during a procedure. Once the tissue is in
    place, a firing mechanism is used to drive staples from the
    cartridge into contact with the anvil, thus suturing the
    tissue together. Figure 1 illustrates a preferred embodi-
    ment of the stapling instrument disclosed by the ’909
    application:
    3                                       IN RE SCHWEMBERGER
    The ’909 application discloses that prior art surgical
    stapling instruments used tissue retention features (such
    as retaining pins and cartridge guides) that were located
    outside the rows of staple lines on a cartridge. For exam-
    ple, Figure 41 of the ’909 application illustrates a prior art
    staple line configuration in which the tissue retention
    features 12 are located outside the staple lines 10:
    IN RE SCHWEMBERGER                                       4
    This configuration creates a gap between the end of the
    staple line and the tissue retention feature where the
    tissue is not sutured closed. The ’909 application states
    that this may contribute to problems such as bleeding or
    leakage of fluids out of the cut tissue. Thus, the ’909
    application discloses that it would be desirable to elimi-
    nate the gaps between the tissue retention devices and
    staple lines by extending the staple lines beyond the
    tissue retention features.
    Claim 9, which is representative of the appealed
    claims, reads as follows:
    9. A surgical instrument adapted for applying a
    plurality of surgical fasteners to body tissue, the
    surgical instrument comprising:
    a frame having a proximal end and a distal end,
    with a handle positioned at the proximal end and
    an end effector positioned at the distal end;
    the end effector being shaped and dimensioned for
    supporting a cartridge housing and an anvil, the
    cartridge housing and anvil structure being rela-
    tively movable between a first spaced apart posi-
    tion and a second position in close approximation
    with one another;
    a firing mechanism associated with the end effec-
    tor and the cartridge housing for selective and
    substantially simultaneous actuation of the fas-
    tening elements; and
    a tissue retention feature associated with the car-
    tridge housing and anvil, the tissue retention fea-
    ture maintaining tissue within the end effector
    during treatment and including
    a top tissue retention member extending
    between the cartridge housing and the an-
    5                                       IN RE SCHWEMBERGER
    vil, wherein the top tissue retention mem-
    ber is capable of selective distal movement
    or proximal retraction, and
    a bottom tissue retention member extend-
    ing between the cartridge housing and the
    anvil;
    the cartridge housing includes at least one staple
    line along a face of the cartridge housing defining
    the longitudinal extent of the surgical fasteners
    being applied, the staple line includes a top and a
    bottom; and
    the top of the staple line is above the top tissue re-
    tention member or the bottom of the staple line is
    below the bottom tissue retention member.
    Initial Decision, slip op. at 2-3 (emphases added).
    The examiner rejected claims 1-30 under 
    35 U.S.C. § 103
    (a) as being obvious over 
    U.S. Patent No. 4,930,503
    (Pruitt) in view of 
    U.S. Patent No. 5,673,841
     (Schulze).
    Pruitt discloses a surgical stapler with a proximal end
    that includes handle 15 and a distal end that includes
    anvil 17 and cartridge holder 20. Cartridge holder 20
    supports staple cartridge 19. Pruitt col.6 ll.21-27. Fig-
    ures 8 and 12 of Pruitt depict frontal views of the dis-
    closed stapler and anvil, respectively:
    IN RE SCHWEMBERGER                                        6
    Staple cartridge 19 can be advanced and retracted with
    respect to anvil 17 using knob 24. 
    Id.
     col.6 ll.35-42.
    Guide bar 38, which is fixed between anvil 17 and car-
    tridge holder 20 inside arm 18, ensures that the cartridge
    and anvil remain correctly positioned relative to each
    other. 
    Id.
     col.7 ll.37-39, 49-51. Pruitt’s stapler also
    includes positioning rod 21, which is moveable between
    staple cartridge 19 and anvil 17. 
    Id.
     col.6 ll.29-34. When
    the anvil and cartridge are positioned against the tissue
    to be stapled, rod 21 can be advanced to pierce the tissue
    and hold the tissue in position during the stapling proce-
    dure. 
    Id.
     col.6 ll.48-53. The closing of trigger 30 actuates
    a plunger mechanism that forces staples 10 out of car-
    tridge 19 into the grooves of anvil 17. 
    Id.
     col.6 ll.54-58.
    The examiner found that Pruitt discloses all limita-
    tions of claim 9 except for the final limitation, which
    recites that “the top of the staple line is above the top
    tissue retention member or the bottom of the staple line is
    7                                      IN RE SCHWEMBERGER
    below the bottom tissue retention member.” However, the
    examiner found that Figure 18a of Schulze teaches this
    limitation. Schulze discloses a surgical stapling and
    cutting instrument. Figures 18 and 18a, reproduced
    below, depict the top and side views of a staple cartridge
    used in Schulze’s instrument:
    As shown in Figure 18a, the staple lines 92 of Schulze’s
    cartridge extend beyond pin 61. The examiner found that
    it would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the
    art at the time of the invention of the ’909 application to
    modify the staple lines of Pruitt according to the design of
    Schulze “for the purpose of ensuring complete closure of
    the tissue.” J.A. 243.
    Mr. Schwemberger appealed to the Board, which af-
    firmed the examiner’s rejection. The Board found that
    Pruitt discloses all of the limitations of claim 9 except the
    final limitation. With respect to the limitation of a “bot-
    tom tissue retention member extending between the
    cartridge housing and the anvil,” the Board noted that the
    specification did not provide any definition of the term
    “bottom tissue retention member.” The Board concluded
    that the ordinary meaning of the term applied and that
    IN RE SCHWEMBERGER                                       8
    this ordinary meaning was broad enough to cover “a
    bottom member [that] retains tissue.” Initial Decision,
    slip op. at 9. The Board observed that Pruitt’s guide bar
    38 retains tissue and is located below positioning rod 21
    (which the Board found satisfied the claimed “top tissue
    retention member”). 
    Id. at 6, 9
    . Therefore, the Board
    found that guide bar 38 satisfied the “bottom tissue
    retention member” limitation. 
    Id. at 9
    .
    The Board also determined that it would have been
    obvious to modify Pruitt’s stapling instrument by incorpo-
    rating the staple line configuration disclosed by Schulze.
    The Board noted that Schulze’s gap spacing pin 61 was a
    “similar device” to Pruitt’s positioning rod 21: Schulze’s
    pin and Pruitt’s rod both functioned to maintain the anvil
    in a position parallel to the staple cartridge during sta-
    pling and, in doing so, both components penetrated the
    tissue trapped between the anvil and the cartridge. 
    Id.
    Because Schulze’s pin and Pruitt’s rod were functionally
    and structurally similar, the Board found that “it would
    have been obvious to improve Pruitt’s positioning rod 21
    in the same manner that Schulze improved the stapler of
    Schulze’s Figures 18 and 18a, namely, by moving the
    positioning rod 21 down below the top of the lines of
    staples 6, 7 and by moving Pruitt’s guide bar 38 above the
    bottom of the line of staples.” 
    Id. at 10
    . Mr. Schwember-
    ger filed a request for rehearing, and the Board denied the
    request.
    Mr. Schwemberger timely appealed, and we have ju-
    risdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(4)(A) and 
    35 U.S.C. § 141
    .
    DISCUSSION
    We review the Board's legal conclusions without def-
    erence and its findings of fact for substantial evidence.
    See In re Gartside, 
    203 F.3d 1305
    , 1315-16 (Fed. Cir.
    9                                      IN RE SCHWEMBERGER
    2000) Claims are given their "broadest reasonable inter-
    pretation" during prosecution, and we review the Board’s
    interpretation of disputed claim language to determine
    whether it is reasonable in light of the specification. See
    In re Morris, 
    127 F.3d 1048
    , 1055 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
    Whether an invention would have been obvious is a legal
    question based on underlying findings of fact, including
    (1) the scope and content of the prior art; (2) the level of
    ordinary skill in the prior art; (3) the differences between
    the claimed invention and the prior art; and (4) objective
    evidence of nonobviousness. Gartside, 
    203 F.3d at 1319
    .
    Mr. Schwemberger first asserts that the Board erred
    by construing “bottom tissue retention feature” to read on
    Pruitt’s guide bar 38, arguing that the inventors of the
    ’909 application acted as their own lexicographer with
    respect to the term. It is true that a “claim term will not
    receive its ordinary meaning if the patentee acted as his
    own lexicographer and clearly set forth a definition of the
    disputed claim term in either the specification or prosecu-
    tion history.” CCS Fitness v. Brunswick Corp., 
    288 F.3d 1359
    , 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2002). However, Mr. Schwemberger
    points to no clear definition of the term “bottom tissue
    retention member” in the specification, and we are unable
    to discern one. Given that the specification sets forth no
    clear definition of the disputed claim term, the Board
    correctly determined that the term should be given its
    broadest reasonable interpretation. See In re Hyatt, 
    211 F.3d 1367
    , 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (“[D]uring examination
    proceedings, claims are given their broadest reasonable
    interpretation consistent with the specification.”). The
    Board’s interpretation of “bottom tissue retention mem-
    ber” as having its ordinary meaning—that is, a bottom
    member that retains tissue—is not unreasonable.
    Under this interpretation, substantial evidence sup-
    ports the Board’s finding that Pruitt’s guide bar 38 meets
    IN RE SCHWEMBERGER                                      10
    the “bottom tissue retention member” limitation. Figures
    8 and 12 of Pruitt depict guide bar 38 as being located
    below positioning rod 21, and Mr. Schwemberger does not
    dispute that rod 21 meets the “top tissue retention mem-
    ber” limitation. Further, Pruitt’s figures show that the
    guide bar 38 defines the lower boundary of the channel
    between the anvil and the cartridge. In this sense, guide
    bar 38 necessarily operates to retain tissue within the
    channel. Mr. Schwemberger argues that Pruitt’s guide
    bar 38 cannot be a “tissue retention” member because it
    does not come into contact with any tissue. However,
    Pruitt does not teach that guide bar 38 cannot come into
    contact with tissue; to the contrary, Figure 12 appears to
    depict the top of guide bar 38 as being exposed, making
    actual contact with tissue possible. More fundamentally,
    claim 9 requires only retention of tissue, not actual con-
    tact, and substantial evidence supports the Board’s find-
    ing that guide bar 38 functions to retain tissue by
    defining a lower limit of the channel between the anvil
    and cartridge.
    Next, Mr. Schwemberger claims that the Board im-
    properly found that Schulze’s gap spacing pin 61 meets
    the limitation of “a top tissue retention member extending
    between the cartridge housing and the anvil, wherein the
    top tissue retention member is capable of selective distal
    movement or proximal retraction.” Mr. Schwemberger
    argues, correctly, that Schulze does not disclose that the
    gap spacing pin is capable of “distal movement or proxi-
    mal retraction.” Therefore, Mr. Schwemberger is correct
    that the gap spacing pin does not meet the “top tissue
    retention member” limitation. However, the Board did
    not find that it did. To the contrary, the Board found only
    that Schulze’s pin “acts as a tissue retention feature in
    th[e] sense that the action of the gap spacing pin 61
    retains the tissue between the anvil portion 40 and the
    11                                     IN RE SCHWEMBERGER
    cartridge assembly 50.” Initial Decision, slip op. at 7
    (emphasis added). The Board found that Pruitt’s position-
    ing rod 21 meets the “top tissue retention member” limi-
    tation, and Mr. Schwemberger does not dispute this
    finding.
    Finally, Mr. Schwemberger argues that the Board
    failed to articulate an appropriate rationale for combining
    Schulze’s staple line configuration with the surgical
    stapler of Pruitt. Mr. Schwemberger asserts that the
    examiner’s motivation for combining Schulze and Pruitt,
    which the Board sustained—to “ensur[e] complete closure
    of the tissue”—does not come from either Pruitt or
    Schulze, but from the ’909 application itself. Therefore,
    he contends, the rationale is based on improper hindsight.
    The Supreme Court has cautioned that although it
    may be valuable to identify a particular reason to combine
    two references, the obviousness analysis is not limited to
    this inquiry. See KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 
    550 U.S. 398
    , 418-19 (2007). Rather, “[i]f a person of ordinary skill
    can implement a predictable variation [of a work], § 103
    likely bars its patentability.” Id. at 417. Similarly, “if a
    technique has been used to improve one device, and a
    person of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that it
    would improve similar devices in the same way, using the
    technique is obvious unless its actual application is be-
    yond his or her skill.” Id. In evaluating obviousness,
    therefore, “a court must ask whether the improvement is
    more than the predictable use of prior art elements ac-
    cording to their established functions.” Id.
    The specification of the ’909 application discloses a
    known problem associated with surgical stapling proce-
    dures: when a section of cut tissue is not sutured fully
    closed, problems such as bleeding and leakage of fluids
    may arise. The apparent solution to this known problem
    IN RE SCHWEMBERGER                                        12
    is to extend the sutures to a point beyond the cut section
    of tissue, thus ensuring that the tissue is fully closed. The
    particular manner in which the inventors of the ’909
    application chose to implement this solution—by extend-
    ing the lines of staples beyond the “tissue retention mem-
    bers” that mark the boundaries of the cut portion of
    tissue—is plainly disclosed by Schulze’s Figure 18a.
    Thus, and particularly in view of the similarities between
    the surgical instruments of Pruitt and Schulze, modifying
    Pruitt’s staple line configuration in accordance with the
    configuration disclosed by Schulze is no more than “the
    combination of familiar elements according to known
    methods . . . [with] predictable results.” See KSR, 
    550 U.S. at 416
    ; see also 
    id. at 421
     (“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.”). There-
    fore, the Board correctly determined that claim 9 is obvi-
    ous over the combination of Pruitt and Schulze.
    Mr. Schwemberger argues that a person of skill in the
    art would not have had a reasonable expectation of suc-
    cess in combining Pruitt’s surgical stapler with Schulze’s
    staple line configuration. Mr. Schwemberger asserts that
    there is no physical space above or below Pruitt’s rod 21
    and guide bar 38 to allow a complete staple to form;
    therefore, Mr. Schwemberger contends, the proposed
    combination would have resulted in an inoperable in-
    strument. However, the Board found that a person of
    ordinary skill in the relevant art would have known how
    to move rod 21 below the top of the staple line or to move
    bar 38 above the bottom of the staple line. Initial Deci-
    sion, slip op. at 10. Mr. Schwemberger points to no con-
    trary evidence showing that this relatively minor design
    change would be outside the scope of ordinary skill.
    13                                   IN RE SCHWEMBERGER
    Because the Board did not err in determining that
    claim 9 is obvious in view of Pruitt over Schulze, we
    affirm the Board’s decision rejecting claims 1-30 under 
    35 U.S.C. § 103
    (a).
    AFFIRMED
    COSTS
    No costs.