Appeal 2007-0554 Reexamination Nos. 90/006,118 & 90/006,254 Patent 6,196,681 B1 facie obviousness is a legal conclusion, not a fact. Facts established by rebuttal evidence must be evaluated along with the facts on which the earlier conclusion was reached, not against the conclusion itself. Considering the Declaration of Phillip M. Johnson, “Vice President of Research and Development and Quality Assurance of Bacou-Dalloz USA, Inc., the owner of the above patent” (Decl. 132, p. 1), we find a dearth of requisite facts to support Appellant’s argument that the full scope of the claimed subject matter is patentable over the applied prior art. We are overwhelmed by deficiencies found in the declaration and attached Exhibit B in support thereof. Johnson states that Exhibit B demonstrates commercial success which is said to be “directly attributable to the invention of claims 1-8” (Decl. 132, para. 3). Exhibit B purports to be “based on records kept in the ordinary course of business by Bacou-Dalloz USA, Inc. sales of the Genesis safety eye covering product made and sold by the assignee of the above-identified patent and corresponding substantially to the invention shown, described and claimed in claims 1-6 and made by the method of claims 7 and 8 of above patent” (Decl. 132, para. 2). Exhibit B is submitted to show the commercial success of “Genesis” in the years 2000-2005 by reporting the number of “Genesis” units sold, the dollar amount of sales, and “ASP” (undefined) for each year. While Johnson declares that sales of “Genesis . . . [corresponds] substantially to the invention shown, described and claimed in claims 1-6” (Decl. 132, para. 2) and “is directly attributable to the invention of claims 1- 8” (Decl. 132, para. 3), we are unable to determine: (1) how “the Genesis safety eye covering product” relates to the full scope of the invention 14Page: Previous 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Next
Last modified: September 9, 2013