United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
2009-1060
(Serial No. 08/692,201)
IN RE RICHARD S. LISTER
Peter M. Midgley, Jr., Zarian Midgley & Johnson PLLC, of Boise, Idaho, argued
for appellant. Of counsel was Rexford A. Johnson.
Joseph G. Piccolo, Associate Solicitor, Office of the Solicitor, United States
Patent and Trademark Office, of Arlington, Virginia, argued for the Director of the United
States Patent and Trademark Office. With him on the brief were Raymond T. Chen,
Solicitor, and Benjamin D.M. Wood, Associate Solicitor.
Appealed from: United States Patent and Trademark Office
Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
2009-1060
(Serial No. 08/692,201)
IN RE RICHARD S. LISTER
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Board of Patent Appeals
and Interferences.
__________________________
DECIDED: September 22, 2009
__________________________
Before GAJARSA, LINN and PROST, Circuit Judges.
PROST, Circuit Judge.
Dr. Richard Lister appeals from a decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences (“Board”) that affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 21-25 of his
application under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). Because the record does not contain sufficient
evidence that the prior art reference relied upon by the Board was publicly accessible
more than one year prior to the date on which Dr. Lister filed his patent application, we
vacate and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
Dr. Lister is a Ph.D. clinical psychologist and an avid sportsman. In his earlier
days, he competed regularly in organized golf tournaments. However, he eventually
grew tired of what he describes as the horrendously slow pace of a game of golf.
Although he discontinued his participation in tournaments, he continued to play casually.
During this time, he realized that casual golfers have great difficulty with the ordinary
requirement that, beginning with the second stroke on each hole, the ball must be hit
while lying directly on the ground. This observation led him to conclude that
recreational golfers would be able to obtain better scores in a shorter time if they were
permitted to tee up their balls on every shot except for those taken from designated
hazard areas or the putting green.
Dr. Lister described this method of playing golf in a manuscript entitled
“Advanced Handicap Alternatives for Golf” (“the manuscript” or “the Lister manuscript”):
It is strongly advocated that official sanction be given to the concept
of a T handicap. That is, the unrestricted use of a golf tee or peg on any
golf shot. Currently, it is allowed 18 times, but only when it is the first shot
of the hole being played.
The game otherwise would be played the same, including play in
hazards of sand and water, where a tee would not be advocated or
permitted. On the surface, this may appear to be a small and insignificant
change. Ten years of careful research, by this Ph.D. clinical psychologist,
sports psychologist, and former professional athlete, has found that a T
handicap option would make a profound, positive influence on the game of
golf.
Subsequently, Dr. Lister decided to seek intellectual property protection for his method
of playing golf. Proceeding without the assistance of a lawyer, he submitted the
manuscript to the United States Copyright Office (“Copyright Office”) on July 4, 1994.
The Copyright Office issued a certificate of registration on July 18, 1994. At some point
in the future, Dr. Lister learned that he needed to obtain a patent rather than a copyright
in order to protect his invention. On August 5, 1996, he filed an application with the
United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”).
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The prosecution history of Dr. Lister’s application is lengthy. Over the past
thirteen years, Dr. Lister has gone through several rounds of rejections and
amendments with the examiner and two appeals to the Board. Of the five claims that
remain at issue, claim 21, the only independent claim, is representative:
21. A method for playing a game of organized golf wherein the
improvement is that each participating player or group of players is
permitted under the official or sanctioned rules of said game for normal
play to raise or tee the ball up above turf level at any time during play,
except for designated hazard areas and greens, and further comprising
the step of recording the number of strokes taken by each participating
player of [sic] group of players throughout said game for the purpose of
comparing said number of strokes with the number of strokes of each
other participating player or group of players or to an average or expected
number of strokes for golf play in accordance with said game.
In the most recent final rejection, issued on January 31, 2003, the examiner
rejected claims 21-25 as anticipated by the Lister manuscript under 35 U.S.C. §§ 102(a)
and 102(b). In the examiner’s view, the manuscript was sufficiently publicly accessible
to be a printed publication within the meaning of § 102(b) because an interested
researcher would have been able to find it by searching the Copyright Office’s catalog
by title.
On appeal, the Board reversed the § 102(a) rejection and affirmed the § 102(b)
rejection. Ex parte Lister, No. 2006-0808 (B.P.A.I. Mar. 27, 2008). With respect to
§ 102(a), the Board pointed out that that subsection bars the patentability of inventions
that have been described in a printed publication prior to the applicant’s date of
invention. Because “[Dr.] Lister could not have disclosed his own invention before he
invented it,” the Board concluded that the § 102(a) rejection was erroneous. Turning to
§ 102(b), which precludes the patenting of inventions that were described in a printed
publication more than one year prior to the applicant’s date of filing, the Board noted
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that under In re Klopfenstein, 380 F.3d 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2004), the Lister manuscript
must have been “publicly accessible” in order to have been a printed publication. The
Board found that the copyright registration for the Lister manuscript was issued on July
18, 1994, more than one year prior to Dr. Lister’s application date of August 5, 1996. It
further concluded that an interested researcher would have been able to find the
manuscript by searching the Copyright Office’s catalog by title for the word “golf” in
combination with the word “handicap.” Additionally, the Board found that an individual
seeking to view the manuscript would have been able to do so by visiting the Copyright
Office. Finally, the Board rejected Dr. Lister’s arguments that the inconvenience of
visiting the Copyright Office and the Copyright Office’s rules prohibiting individuals from
making copies of the manuscript precluded a finding of public accessibility. With
respect to the unavailability of copies, the Board found that the inventive concept was
straightforward enough that it could be understood and retained by a person of ordinary
skill in the art upon reading the manuscript without any need to obtain a copy.
In his request for rehearing before the Board, Dr. Lister argued that the
manuscript was not publicly accessible because there was no evidence that it was
actually accessed by anyone. Additionally, Dr. Lister argued that the Board erred by
relying heavily on Klopfenstein, a case about whether a poster presentation at a
conference was a printed publication, rather than citing more factually analogous cases,
such as In re Hall, 781 F.2d 897 (Fed. Cir. 1986), and In re Cronyn, 890 F.2d 1158
(Fed. Cir. 1989), which involved single copies of documents housed in libraries. The
Board rejected both arguments, concluding that evidence of actual access was not a
requirement under SRI International, Inc. v. Internet Security Systems, Inc., 511 F.3d
2009-1060 4
1186, 1197 (Fed. Cir. 2008), and that the discussion of Hall and Cronyn in Klopfenstein,
380 F.3d at 1349, demonstrates that the law set forth in Klopfenstein is relevant to
library cases. Ex parte Lister, No. 2006-0808, slip op. at 3-5 (B.P.A.I. July 22, 2008).
Dr. Lister timely appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)
and 35 U.S.C. § 141.
II. DISCUSSION
A
“Whether an asserted anticipatory document qualifies as a ‘printed publication’
under § 102 is a legal conclusion based on underlying factual determinations.” Cooper
Cameron Corp. v. Kvaerner Oilfield Prods., Inc., 291 F.3d 1317, 1321 (Fed. Cir. 2002).
We review the Board’s factual determinations for substantial evidence, In re Gartside,
203 F.3d 1305, 1315 (Fed. Cir. 2000), and its legal conclusions de novo, Klopfenstein,
380 F.3d at 1347.
Section 102(b) is a bar to patentability if “the invention was patented or described
in a printed publication in this or a foreign country or in public use or on sale in this
country, more than one year prior to the date of the application for patent in the United
States.” 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). “The bar is grounded on the principle that once an
invention is in the public domain, it is no longer patentable by anyone.” Hall, 781 F.2d
at 898.
In order to qualify as a printed publication within the meaning of § 102, a
reference “must have been sufficiently accessible to the public interested in the art.”
Cronyn, 890 F.2d at 1160 (quoting Constant v. Adv. Micro-Devices, Inc., 848 F.2d 1560,
1568 (Fed. Cir. 1988)). “Because there are many ways in which a reference may be
2009-1060 5
disseminated to the interested public, ‘public accessibility’ has been called the
touchstone in determining whether a reference constitutes a ‘printed publication’ bar
under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b).” Hall, 781 F.2d at 898-99. Whether a reference is publicly
accessible is determined on a case-by-case basis based on the “facts and
circumstances surrounding the reference’s disclosure to members of the public.”
Klopfenstein, 380 F.3d at 1350. A reference is considered publicly accessible if it was
“disseminated or otherwise made available to the extent that persons interested and
ordinarily skilled in the subject matter or art exercising reasonable diligence, can locate
it.” Kyocera Wireless Corp. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 545 F.3d 1340, 1350 (2008)
(quotation marks omitted).
Prior cases have looked to a variety of factors when considering whether a
reference was publicly accessible. In several cases involving references stored in
libraries, we have considered whether the research tools available would have been
sufficient to permit an interested researcher to locate and examine the reference. In
Hall, for example, we held that a dissertation shelved in the stacks and indexed in the
catalog at the Freiburg University library was a printed publication. 781 F.2d at 898,
899-90. In contrast, the thesis at issue in In re Bayer was held not to have been publicly
accessible as of the critical date because at that time it was uncataloged, unshelved,
and could have been found in the library at the University of Toledo “only by one having
been informed of its existence by the [author’s] faculty committee, and not by means of
the customary research aids available in the library.” 568 F.2d 1357, 1361 (CCPA
1978).
2009-1060 6
The differences in accessibility in Bayer and Hall were highlighted in Cronyn,
where this court explained that “the critical difference between [Bayer and Hall] that
explains the different results is that on the critical date in Bayer the thesis was
‘uncatalogued and unshelved’ and therefore not accessible to the public, whereas in
Hall the ‘dissertation was accessible’ because it had been indexed, cataloged and
shelved.” 890 F.2d at 1161. At issue in Cronyn was a student’s thesis housed in the
main campus library and the chemistry department library at Reed College. Each
library contained a collection of student theses and a corresponding set of index cards
that listed the title and author of each thesis. Id. at 1159. The index cards were filed
alphabetically by the author’s last name, which, this court noted, “bears no relationship
to the subject of the student’s thesis.” Id. at 1161. Although the index cards and the
student theses were available for public examination, this court held that the theses
were not publicly accessible because “they had not been either cataloged or indexed in
a meaningful way.” Id.
While cataloging and indexing have played a significant role in our cases
involving library references, we have explained that neither cataloging nor indexing is a
necessary condition for a reference to be publicly accessible. See Klopfenstein, 380
F.3d at 1348 (“[Our cases] do not limit this court to finding something to be a ‘printed
publication’ only when there is distribution and/or indexing.”). Depending on the
circumstances surrounding the disclosure, a variety of factors may be useful in
determining whether a reference was publicly accessible. See, e.g., id. at 1350 (listing
four factors relevant to whether a slide presentation was a printed publication);
Bruckelmyer v. Ground Heaters, Inc., 445 F.3d 1374, 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (explaining
2009-1060 7
that an application that resulted in the issuance of a published Canadian patent was
publicly accessible because the issued patent served as a “roadmap to the application
file”); see also id. at 1380 (Linn, J., dissenting) (opining that the application was not
publicly accessible because “the text of an issued patent does not generally serve to
guide researchers to the file history for a more expansive disclosure of the described
invention, and it certainly does not lead researchers to the file history for disclosure of
subject matter not described in the issued text”). In short, we must consider all of the
facts and circumstances surrounding the disclosure and determine whether an
interested researcher would have been sufficiently capable of finding the reference and
examining its contents.
With the framework of the public accessibility analysis established, we turn to the
specifics of Dr. Lister’s appeal.
B
Several of the facts that are pertinent to our public accessibility analysis are not
in dispute. First, the parties agree that the Lister manuscript discloses the claimed
invention. Next, it is undisputed that the Copyright Office issued a certificate of
registration for the Lister manuscript on July 18, 1994. It is also undisputed that the
Copyright Office retained a copy of the manuscript in Washington, D.C., that was
available upon request to be inspected by the public. Additionally, the parties agree
that, absent limited special circumstances, the Copyright Office will neither provide
copies of the manuscript nor permit individuals inspecting the document to make copies
2009-1060 8
themselves. 1 However, the parties do not agree as to when, if ever, the manuscript was
listed in a catalog or index that would have permitted an interested researcher to learn
of its existence and locate it for inspection.
Dr. Lister raises two arguments on appeal. First, he argues that even if the
manuscript was sufficiently indexed so that an interested researcher could learn of its
existence and relevance, the task of traveling to Washington, D.C., and inspecting the
manuscript at the Library of Congress was too burdensome for it to have been
considered publicly accessible. Second, he argues that the manuscript was not a
printed publication as of the critical date because there is no evidence that it was
included in a catalog or index at that time that would have permitted an interested
researcher to discover it. We address each argument in turn.
1. Availability for Inspection
Dr. Lister analogizes this case to Northern Telecom, Inc. v. Datapoint Corp., 908
F.2d 931, 936-37 (Fed. Cir. 1990), a case in which this court held that several
documents relating to a military system for distributed computer processing of logistical
data were not printed publications within the meaning of § 102(b) because they were
not “generally available” to the interested public. According to Dr. Lister, the burden of
traveling to Washington, D.C., and navigating what he describes as the “cumbersome
procedures” necessary to gain access to the manuscript precludes a finding of general
1
Under 37 C.F.R. § 201.2(d)(2), the Copyright Office will provide copies of
copyrighted works in only three circumstances: (1) the copyright holder provides written
authorization; (2) a written request is filed by an attorney representing either a plaintiff or
defendant in connection with litigation relating to the copyrighted work; or (3) the
Copyright Office receives a court order for reproduction of a work that is the subject of
litigation.
2009-1060 9
availability. In support of his position, he cites a September 10, 2004 letter from the
Copyright Office that states that it searched its records but did not find a single request
for inspection of the manuscript. Additionally, Dr. Lister emphasizes that the Copyright
Office is unable to provide copies of the manuscript to interested researchers. See 37
C.F.R. § 201.2(d)(2). Thus, in Dr. Lister’s view, the difficulty of accessing the
manuscript, combined with affirmative evidence that no one has ever requested to
inspect it, demonstrates that the manuscript was effectively unavailable to the public.
We cannot accept Dr. Lister’s argument. First, there is a critical difference
between the requirements for obtaining access to the documents at issue in Northern
Telecom and the steps that one must take to view the Lister manuscript at the Copyright
Office. In Northern Telecom, the documents were housed within the library at Mitre
Corporation, and “[a]ccess to the library was restricted to persons authorized by Mitre.”
908 F.2d at 936. In contrast, in this case, any member of the public who submits a
proper request is capable of gaining access to the manuscript without any need for
special authorization. Second, we have previously recognized that a reference can be
considered publicly accessible even if gaining access to it might require a significant
amount of travel. See Hall, 781 F.2d at 899-900 (holding that a copy of a dissertation
shelved in a library in Germany was a printed publication). Additionally, as the Board
noted, an interested person could hire someone local to inspect the manuscript on their
behalf. Finally, our cases have held that once accessibility is shown, it is unnecessary
to show that anyone actually inspected the reference. See, e.g., SRI, 511 F.3d at 1197
(“[A]ctual retrieval of a publication is not a requirement for public accessibility . . . .”);
Constant, 848 F.2d at 1569 (“Accessibility goes to the issue of whether interested
2009-1060 10
members of the relevant public could obtain the information if they wanted to. If
accessibility is proved, there is no requirement to show that particular members of the
public actually received the information.”). Finally, we agree with the Board that an
interested researcher would be able to gain and retain an understanding of Dr. Lister’s
invention upon inspection of the manuscript and without any need to obtain a copy.
2. Existence and Adequacy of an Index
The above conclusion that the Lister manuscript was available at the Copyright
Office for inspection by any interested person does not end our inquiry. We must also
consider whether anyone would have been able to learn of its existence and potential
relevance prior to the critical date. Dr. Lister argues that this criterion is not met for two
reasons. First, he asserts that the catalogs and databases relied upon by the Board
were not sufficiently searchable to lead an interested researcher to the manuscript.
Second, he argues that even if some of the catalogs and databases were adequate,
there is no evidence that the manuscript was in fact listed in any of them prior to the
critical date.
The parties agree that the only evidence in the record pertaining to the cataloging
or indexing of the Lister manuscript is a statement made by Dr. Lister in an Information
Disclosure Statement (“IDS”) filed with the USPTO during prosecution of his application.
See Oral Arg., 20:31-47, June 4, 2009; available at
http://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/mp3/2009-1060.mp3. In relevant part, that
statement reads:
[A]lthough the Copyright Office maintains a public record of the
registrations of copyrighted works, searching of the catalog cannot be
done by subject. See U.S. Copyright Office, How to Investigate The
Copyright Status of a Work 4, Circular 22, Jan. 1991 (visited Dec. 30,
2009-1060 11
1997) (“The Copyright Office
does not maintain any listings of works by subject”). Effective with
registrations made since 1978, copyright registration information is
available to the public through an automated catalog, accessible either at
the Library of Congress or over the Internet. [Id. at 3] Searching of the
automated catalog can be performed by the first word in the title of the
work or by the author’s last name. However, the automated catalog does
not enable subject matter searching or key word searching of the text of
deposits. Telephone Interview with Copyright Information Specialist, U.S.
Copyright Office (Jan. 6, 1998). . . .
Applicant further submits that any copyright information available
through computerized databases such as DIALOG is not sufficiently
indexed to make Applicant’s deposited work § 102(b) prior art. The
information contained in these databases comes directly from the Library
of Congress, and therefore is available in essentially the exact same
format as found in the automated catalog of the Library of Congress.
Telephone Interview with Linda Jarmy, Catalog Distribution Service,
Library of Congress (Jan. 9, 1998). Computerized searching in these
databases does not offer subject matter searching of copyright
registrations. The only additional feature offered by computerized
searching, such as in the WESTLAW database, is the ability to search the
title of works using key words.
J.A. 122-23 (footnote omitted).
As stated in the IDS and confirmed by the parties at oral argument, the
undisputed facts relating to the indexing of the manuscript are summarized as follows.
There are three relevant databases, the Copyright Office’s automated catalog and two
commercial databases, Westlaw and Dialog. The automated catalog was not sorted by
subject matter and could only be searched by either the author’s last name or the first
word of the title of the work. Westlaw and Dialog obtained the automated catalog data
from the Copyright Office and entered it into their own databases. Users of the Westlaw
and Dialog databases could perform keyword searches of the titles, but not the full
texts, of the works.
Relying on Cronyn, Dr. Lister argues that none of the databases indexed or
cataloged the manuscript in a “meaningful way” that would permit a researcher to locate
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it. See 890 F.2d at 1161. With respect to the Copyright Office’s automated catalog, he
asserts that neither searching by author nor the first word in the title (“Advanced”) would
guide a researcher interested in his golfing method to the manuscript. At oral argument,
the government conceded that the automated catalog alone would have been
insufficient to support a finding of public accessibility. Oral Arg. at 18:48-19:08, 29:47-
30:05; cf. Cronyn, 890 F.2d at 1161 (“Here, the only research aid was the student’s
name, which, of course, bears no relationship to the subject of the student’s thesis.”).
Turning to the Westlaw and Dialog commercial databases, which, unlike the
Copyright Office’s automated catalog, permit the searching of titles by keyword, Dr.
Lister argues that the Board erred by concluding that a researcher would have found the
manuscript by searching for the word “golf” in combination with the word “handicap.”
Dr. Lister criticizes the Board’s conclusion as not taking into account the possibility that
such a search would have either inundated the researcher with hundreds or thousands
of irrelevant results or failed to retrieve relevant documents that happened not to include
both words in their title. Additionally, he suggests that the term “handicap” is not a good
descriptor of the invention because it is not used in any of the claims and that an
interested researcher would have used other search terms, such as “tee” or “ball,” which
would not have yielded the manuscript.
Dr. Lister attempts to impose too rigid of a test for whether an interested
researcher could find a reference. The question is not whether an individual, selecting
terms from the claim language, could execute a single keyword search that would yield
all relevant references including the anticipatory reference at issue. Rather, our inquiry
is whether it could be located by “persons interested and ordinarily skilled in the subject
2009-1060 13
matter or art exercising reasonable diligence.” Kyocera, 545 F.3d at 1350 (emphasis
added) (quotation marks omitted). A reasonably diligent researcher with access to a
database that permits the searching of titles by keyword would be able to attempt
several searches using a variety of keyword combinations. We agree with the Board
that an individual interested in ways to expedite the game of golf and make it easier for
casual players would be inclined to use “handicap” as a search term. Indeed, Dr. Lister
used the term in his specification to describe his invention. See, e.g., J.A. 81 (“In
accordance with one embodiment the present invention provides . . . a golf handicap
method (T Handicap) which generally involves the unrestricted use of teeing the ball
after the first shot, except in hazards and greens.”). Regardless of whether Dr. Lister
views other search terms as more descriptive of his invention, a reasonably diligent
researcher would have searched for “golf” in combination with “handicap.” 2
Accordingly, we conclude that the Lister manuscript was publicly accessible as of the
date that it was included in either Westlaw or Dialog, the databases that permitted
keyword searching of titles.
In order for the manuscript to be a bar to patentability under § 102(b), it must
have been publicly accessible more than one year prior to Dr. Lister filing his application
on August 5, 1996. Dr. Lister argues that there is no evidence that it was in fact
included in either Westlaw or Dialog prior to the critical date. 3 See Manual of Patent
2
Because there is no evidence in the record suggesting that such a search
would have yielded an unmanageable number of references, we need not decide
whether in some circumstances an overwhelming number of search results might
warrant a conclusion that a particular reference included in the list was not publicly
accessible.
3
The government argues that Dr. Lister waived this argument by failing to
raise it before the Board. Although it may not have been the primary focus of the brief
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Examining Procedures § 2128 (“Prior art disclosures on the Internet or on an on-line
database are considered to be publicly available as of the date the item was publicly
posted. Absent evidence of the date that the disclosure was publicly posted, if the
publication itself does not include a publication date (or retrieval date), it cannot be
relied upon as prior art under 35 U.S.C. 102(a) or (b).”). The government offers two
responses, neither of which is persuasive.
First, it asserts that Dr. Lister’s IDS provides substantial evidence that the
manuscript was listed in the commercial databases prior to the critical date. At oral
argument, the government relied on the portion of the IDS stating that “[t]he information
contained in [the commercial] databases comes directly from the Library of Congress.”
J.A. 123 (emphasis added); see Oral Arg. at 21:25-24:10. In the government’s view, the
use of the word “directly” is sufficient evidence that the manuscript was listed in either
Westlaw or Dialog shortly after the Copyright Office issued Dr. Lister’s certificate of
registration on July 18, 1994. We disagree. We see nothing in the IDS that speaks to
the date on which the Lister manuscript was incorporated into the Westlaw and Dialog
databases. When pressed to identify such a date at oral argument, the government’s
only answer was “directly around the time of the Copyright Office’s housing [of the
manuscript].” Oral Arg. at 23:48-24:10. The government asks us to read too much into
the word “directly.” There is no indication that that portion of the IDS was meant to
address the timing of the database updates and, indeed, Westlaw or Dialog could
acquire the catalog information “directly from the Library of Congress” ten years after it
he submitted to the Board, we nevertheless find that the brief sufficiently expressed Dr.
Lister’s disagreement with the examiner’s finding that the manuscript was listed in a
keyword searchable database prior to the critical date. See J.A. 296-98.
2009-1060 15
was first generated for the Copyright Office automated catalog. Further, there is no
other evidence that speaks to the timing or process by which Westlaw or Dialog
incorporated the Copyright Office’s updated automated catalog information into their
databases. Although “evidence establishing a specific date of cataloging” was not
required in Hall, in that case we held that “competent evidence of the general library
practice” of cataloging and shelving established that the thesis became accessible prior
to the critical date. 781 F.2d at 899. In contrast, in this case the government has not
identified any evidence of the general practice of the Copyright Office, Westlaw, or
Dialog with regard to database updates. Absent such evidence, we have no basis to
conclude that the manuscript was publicly accessible prior to the critical date.
The government’s second argument is that it made a prima facie showing that
the manuscript was included in the commercial databases shortly after the Copyright
Office granted the certificate of registration and the burden has shifted to Dr. Lister to
present evidence that it was not in either database before the critical date. Because he
has presented no such evidence, the government asserts that Dr. Lister has failed to
meet his burden and it was proper for the Board to make a finding in the government’s
favor. We do not agree that the government has established a prima facie case that
warrants shifting the burden to Dr. Lister. Essentially, the evidence shows that at some
point in time Westlaw and Dialog incorporated the Copyright Office’s automated catalog
information about the Lister manuscript into their own databases. There is no indication
as to when that occurred or whether it was prior to the critical date. We see little
difference between the evidence in this case and a situation in which an examiner
comes across an undated reference that discloses an invention for which an applicant is
2009-1060 16
seeking the patent. We surely would not view the mere existence of the reference in
the latter scenario as prima facie evidence that it was available prior to the applicant’s
critical date. The government urges us that it is appropriate in this case to presume that
the manuscript information was added to the Westlaw and Dialog databases prior to the
critical date because the critical date was more than a year after the certificate of
registration was granted. However, absent any evidence pertaining to the general
practices of the Copyright Office, Westlaw, and Dialog, or the typical time that elapses
between copyright registration, inclusion in the Copyright Office’s automated catalog,
and subsequent incorporation into one of the commercial databases, any presumption
along those lines would be pure speculation.
Because the evidence contained in the IDS neither provides substantial evidence
that the Lister manuscript was publicly accessible as of the critical date nor suffices to
prove a prima facie case of accessibility that would shift the burden to Dr. Lister to show
inaccessibility, we conclude that the Board erred in affirming the examiner’s § 102(b)
rejection.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the Board’s decision and remand for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 4
VACATED AND REMANDED
2009-1060 17
4
Citing the thirteen-year pendency of his application, Dr. Lister also asks us
to issue an order requiring the USPTO to conclude prosecution and issue a notice of
allowance. Dr. Lister did not argue to the Board that the allegedly excessive delays
during prosecution entitle him to the issuance of a patent. Accordingly, that issue is not
properly before us. See In re Watts, 354 F.3d 1362, 1367-68 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
Additionally, we note that our decision is limited to the question of whether the Board
properly affirmed the examiner’s § 102(b) rejection. Other bars to patentability are not
before us and may be raised during the proceedings on remand.
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