Interference No. 103,208 Hoshino et al. v. Tanaka Even if there had been no opposition from Tanaka, Hoshino’s Motion H2 should have been denied by the APJ, as it was. The APJ made clear that he did not consider the Larky and Fisher declarations accompanying Tanaka’s opposition to Hoshino’s Motion H2. The lack of a prima facie showing in Hoshino’s Motion H2 is determined independent of any evidentiary showing by Tanaka. The lack of specific factual basis for the conclusions expressed in Mr. Utagawa’s first declaration, the vagueness of what constitutes "substantial" improvement, and the lack of showing for "unexpectedness," all serve to support the APJ’s determination regardless of anything said in the Larky and Fisher declarations. We also agree with the following finding of the APJ (Motions Decision at 8): The APJ also finds that all of the alleged substantial improvements in Ken Utagawa’s first declaration are not supported by quantitative experimental results. What is "substantial" to one may not be substantial to another. And Hoshino et al. have failed to establish the extent of any such allegedly "substantial" improvement through objective and specific experimental data. Hoshino’s reply to Tanaka’s opposition is accompanied by an additional declaration of Mr. Utagawa (second Utagawa - 37 -Page: Previous 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 NextLast modified: November 3, 2007