MOREL V. SEKHAR et al. - Page 7



               Interference No. 103,995                                                              Paper 29                        
               Morel v. Sekhar                                                               Page 7                                  

                       21.  Coating composition claim 2 of the ‘084 patent reads:                                                    
                               A coating composition according to claim 1, comprising zirconium                                      
                       diboride and colloidal silica in a weight ratio between 1:1 and 9:1.                                          
                       22.  Coating composition claim 5 of the ‘084 patent reads:                                                    
                               A coating composition [sic, according] to claim 2, additionally                                       
                       comprising silicon carbide.                                                                                   
                       In support of its preliminary motion, Morel purports to establish that the subject                            
               matter of Morel narrow claims 2 and 5 would not have been obvious in view of the subject                              
               matter of Morel broad claim 1.  The subject matter of Morel broad claim 1 can under no                                
               circumstances be prior art vis-a-vis Morel.  Accordingly, what Morel was required to                                  
               establish was that the subject matter of Morel narrow claims 2 and 5 is not anticipated by,                           
               or rendered obvious over, the subject matter of a Sekhar claim designated as                                          
               corresponding to the count.  After all, the issue in seeking to designate a claim as not                              
               corresponding to a count is to establish that if the opponent wins on the issue of priority,                          
               the subject matter of the claims sought to be designated as not corresponding to the count                            
               would not be unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 102(g)/103 over the subject matter of the                                 
               claims of the winning party.  Morel’s procedural non-compliance aside, a penetrating                                  
               analysis of the record will convincingly show that Morel has failed to prove by a                                     
               preponderance of the evidence that the subject matter of Morel narrow claims 2 and 5 is                               
               patentably distinct from the subject matter of Morel broad claim 1.                                                   










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