In Re John Dash and Patrick S. Keefe ( 2004 )


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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
    04-1145
    (Serial No. 08/439,712)
    IN RE JOHN DASH and PATRICK S. KEEFE
    __________________________
    DECIDED: December 10, 2004
    __________________________
    Before MAYER, Chief Judge, PLAGER, Senior Circuit Judge, and PROST, Circuit
    Judge.
    PROST, Circuit Judge.
    Professor John Dash and Patrick Keefe (“Dash”) appeal from a United States
    Patent and Trademark Office Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (“Board”)
    decision affirming the final rejection of claims 4-11 of application Serial No. 08/439,712
    for lack of utility under 
    35 U.S.C. § 101
     and lack of enablement under 
    35 U.S.C. § 112
    .
    The examiner rejected the application for lack of utility and enablement. We affirm the
    Board’s decision.
    BACKGROUND
    Dash’s patent application discloses a method for generating heat energy using
    an electrolytic cell having a palladium sheet cathode and an inert anode.             The
    electrolyte used in the cell principally contains sulfuric acid and D2O, or “heavy water.”
    According to Dash’s specification, the method produces heat energy; hydrogen,
    deuterium, and oxygen gases; and possibly heavy water through the recombination of
    deuterium and oxygen.
    Dash filed his initial patent application on this invention on April 16, 1990. The
    application was rejected by the examiner for lack of utility and enablement, and the
    Board affirmed the rejection. Ex parte Dash, 27 USPQ2d 1481 (Bd. Pat. App. & Int.
    1993). Dash filed a continuation application that was also finally rejected on the same
    grounds. Dash responded by filing a file wrapper continuation application. After final
    rejection for lack of both utility and enablement and unsuccessful appeal to the Board,
    that application is now before us on appeal.
    Dash and his graduate students have published experimental results that, they
    claim, suggest that nuclear fusion occurred in the apparatus described in the patent
    application. Specifically, they claim to have found distortion of the palladium cathode,
    possibly due to the formation of hydrogen isotopes on its surface; microscopic evidence
    of localized melting; and localized concentrations of gold and silver, which could have
    been produced by nuclear reactions in the palladium.         Additionally, they reported
    measurements of heat produced by the apparatus.            Some of these results were
    submitted to the Patent Office in support of Dash’s attempts to overcome the utility and
    enablement rejections.
    04-1145                                     2
    DISCUSSION
    Dash appeals the Board’s decision sustaining the examiner’s rejection on
    enablement and utility grounds. We have jurisdiction under 
    35 U.S.C. § 141
     and 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(4)(A).
    A. Standard of review
    We review the Board’s legal conclusions de novo and the underlying factual
    findings for substantial evidence. In re Gartside, 
    203 F.3d 1305
    , 1315 (Fed. Cir. 2000).
    The substantial evidence standard requires us to determine whether a reasonable fact
    finder could have arrived at the Board’s decision. 
    Id. at 1312
    . The Board’s claim
    construction is reviewed de novo. See Cybor Corp. v. FAS Techs., Inc., 
    138 F.3d 1448
    ,
    1456 (Fed. Cir. 1998). Whether an invention is operative, and hence has utility within
    the meaning of § 101, is a question of fact. In re Swartz, 
    232 F.3d 862
    , 863 (Fed. Cir.
    2000).    Enablement under § 112 is a question of law based on underlying factual
    inquiries. Enzo Biochem, Inc. v. Calgene, Inc., 
    188 F.3d 1362
    , 1369 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
    B. Arguments
    Dash argues that the examiner improperly required him to submit proof of the
    operability of his invention. He first asserts that the examiner misconstrued the claims
    at issue by considering the words “producing heat energy” in the preamble of each
    claim to be a limitation and by importing a limitation from the specification by requiring
    the “heat energy” to be “excess energy” produced by cold fusion. Dash further argues
    that the examiner failed to establish a prima facie case of lack of utility, and therefore
    that the burden of proving utility should not have been shifted to Dash. Finally, he
    04-1145                                     3
    contends, if a prima facie case was established, then the evidence he submitted to the
    Patent Office was sufficient to rebut it.
    The Patent Office responds that the specification clearly defines “heat energy” as
    excess energy and indisputably shows that the invention is directed to achieving cold
    fusion. The Patent Office also points out that Dash distinguished his invention from
    prior art on the basis of the preamble.          Regarding utility, the Patent Office cites a
    considerable amount of scientific literature that casts doubt on the ability of electrolytic
    methods to produce cold fusion.
    C. Analysis
    As explained below, we construe the claims at issue to require the production of
    excess heat energy and to be directed to a method of achieving cold fusion. After that,
    we turn to the issues of utility and enablement, which here collapse into a single issue.
    See In re Brana, 
    51 F.3d 1550
    , 1564 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (“Obviously, if a claimed invention
    does not have utility, the specification cannot enable one to use it.”).          Given the
    scientific community’s considerable doubt regarding the utility of “cold fusion”
    processes, we hold that the examiner established a prima facie case of lack of utility
    and enablement.      Accordingly, the burden was shifted to Dash, and we hold that
    substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that Dash failed to meet that burden.
    1. Claim Construction
    The Board properly considered the preamble in its construction of the appealed
    claims. During prosecution, Dash distinguished a prior art reference on the basis that it
    “provide[d] no teachings concerning the electrolyte used by [the] present invention to
    produce excess thermal heat[,]” further asking: “What relevance does the degreasing of
    04-1145                                         4
    electrodes by [the prior art reference] have to the production of a thermal output
    according to the method steps of the present invention?”        In response to another
    rejection based on prior art, Dash asserted that the prior art cells did not produce
    “unexpected superior heat,” “excess thermal heat,” or “excess heat[.]” Dash’s use of the
    concept of “producing heat energy,” a feature found only in the preamble of the
    appealed claims, to distinguish prior art supports construing the preamble as a
    limitation, or at least as “context” for the interpretation of the claims. See Metabolite
    Labs., Inc. v. Lab. Corp. of Am. Holdings, 
    370 F.3d 1354
    , 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“A
    preamble may provide context for claim construction, particularly, where as here, that
    preamble’s statement of intended use forms the basis for distinguishing the prior art in
    the patent’s prosecution history.”). Here, the preamble provides context for the utility
    determination by illustrating the purpose for which the invention must be operative.
    Thus, we believe that the Board did not act improperly by taking the preamble language
    into account.
    Further, we agree with the Board’s interpretation of the preamble. Viewing the
    language of the claims in light of the specification and prosecution history, one of
    ordinary skill in the art would understand the term “producing heat energy” to mean that
    the invention generates a net output of heat energy. Dash repeatedly argued during
    prosecution that his invention produced “excess energy.” Moreover, the specification
    “postulate[s] that a nuclear reaction has taken place with the production of energy.” The
    specification offers no other explanation for the production of this energy, which it
    characterizes as “heat on a scale not reconciled with any known chemical reaction[.]”
    Additionally, Dash repeatedly submitted evidence during prosecution that purported to
    04-1145                                    5
    show that the invention produced excess heat caused by nuclear reactions. He also
    distinguished prior art on the basis that it did not produce the unexpected amounts of
    heat that Dash believed were produced by his invention. All these factors support the
    Board’s conclusion that Dash’s claims are directed toward methods of achieving cold
    fusion.
    2. Prima Facie Case of Lack of Utility and Enablement
    The Patent Office establishes a prima facie case of lack of utility by “showing that
    one of ordinary skill in the art would reasonably doubt the asserted utility[.]” Brana, 51
    F.3d at 1566. Because the determination of whether an invention is operative is a
    question of fact, we review the Board’s decision on this issue for substantial evidence.
    Dash argues that the evidence that supported the examiner’s prima facie case is
    invalid because it does not concern the invention as claimed and because the
    documents cited are anecdotal or not peer-reviewed. However, we are aware of no rule
    that forbids the examiner from relying on related technology, anecdotal information, or
    sources that are not peer-reviewed to establish a case of inoperability. These details
    merely go to the weight of the evidence, not whether it can be relied upon at all. Thus,
    we understand Dash’s arguments as attacks on the weight the Board accorded to the
    cited information.
    Substantial evidence supported the Board’s finding that the examiner established
    a prima facie case of inoperability. While it may be ideal for the examiner to offer peer-
    reviewed data on precisely the claimed invention to establish such a case, such
    extreme certainty is not required. The examiner must only establish that a person of
    ordinary skill in the art would reasonably doubt the asserted utility. Brana, 51 F.3d at
    04-1145                                        6
    1566. It was reasonable for the Board to conclude that the examiner had established
    such doubt based on the number and quality of cited references that debunked claims
    of cold fusion.
    3. Dash’s Rebuttal Evidence
    Substantial evidence also supported the Board’s conclusion that Dash failed to
    rebut the prima facie case of inoperability. Dash did not produce evidence sufficient to
    show that his invention generated excess heat. Although Dash compared his D2O cell
    to an H2O cell and measured a higher temperature in the D2O cell, references cited by
    the examiner show that temperature differences between the two cells would be
    expected even without the production of excess heat because the differing properties of
    H2O and D2O, such as their different heats of absorption. Dash’s other evidence, such
    as his claim of localized melting on the palladium electrode, at most establishes that
    some localized heating took place, not that the invention produced a net output of heat.
    Several studies cited by the examiner suggest that localized melting could have been
    the product of an electrochemical process that would not represent a net output of heat.
    Dash’s evidence that his invention achieved cold fusion likewise does not
    convince us that he rebutted the examiner’s prima facie case of inoperability. Dash
    produced evidence regarding detection of tritium, transmutation of palladium, and
    physical transformation of the cathode, as well as corroborating experiments and
    calculations designed to show excess heat. For each type of evidence Dash produced,
    the examiner found at least one sound reason to disbelieve the evidence in either the
    literature that supported the prima facie case or in Dash’s evidence itself. The Board
    affirmed the examiner’s findings.    The evidence cited by the examiner constitutes
    04-1145                                    7
    substantial evidence in support of the Board’s decision. Accordingly, we hold that the
    Board acted reasonably in concluding that Dash did not make a showing sufficient to
    rebut the prima facie case of inoperability established by the examiner.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the Board’s decision sustaining the
    examiner’s rejection of claims 4-11 of application Serial No. 08/439,712.
    04-1145                                     8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2004-1145

Judges: Mayer, Plager, Prost

Filed Date: 12/10/2004

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024