Knauf Insulation, Inc. v. Rockwool International A/S

NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential. United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________ KNAUF INSULATION, INC., KNAUF INSULATION SPRL, Appellants v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S, Cross-Appellant ______________________ 2018-1810, 2018-1811, 2018-1891 ______________________ Appeals from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in Nos. 95/000,672, 95/000,675. ______________________ Decided: October 15, 2019 ______________________ JOSHUA PAUL LARSEN, Barnes & Thornburg LLP, Indi- anapolis, IN, argued for appellants. DAVID CLAY HOLLOWAY, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stock- ton LLP, Atlanta, GA, argued for cross-appellant. Also rep- resented by COURTNEY DABBIERE, DEAN W. RUSSELL, TIFFANY L. WILLIAMS. ______________________ 2 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S Before DYK, LINN, and TARANTO, Circuit Judges. LINN, Circuit Judge In this inter partes reexamination (“reexamination”) the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“Board”) held that claims 16–22 of Knauf’s U.S. Pat. No. 7,888,445 and claims 29–32 of Knauf’s U.S. Pat. No. 7,772,347 (collectively, “ap- pealed claims”) were obvious, and that claims 1-15 of the ’445 patent and claims 1, 2, 4, 5, 7–12, 14–18, and 22–28 of the ’347 patent (collectively, “cross-appealed claims”) are not unpatentable as obvious. Rockwool Int’l A/S v. Knauf Insulation LLC, App. No. 2015-001313 (P.T.A.B. May 1, 2015) (“’445 Board Op. I”); Rockwool Int’l A/S v. Knauf In- sulation LLC, App. No. 2015-004826 (P.T.A.B. Sept. 8, 2017) (“’445 Board Op. II”); Rockwool Int’l A/S v. Knauf Insulation LLC, App. No. 2015-004826 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 12, 2018) (“’445 Reh’g Op.”); Rockwool Int’l A/S v. Knauf Insu- lation LLC, App. No. 2015-001256 (P.T.A.B. May 1, 2015) (“’347 Board Op. I”); Rockwool Int’l A/S v. Knauf Insula- tion LLC, App. No. 2015-004910 (P.T.A.B. Sept. 8, 2017) (“’347 Board Op. II”); Rockwool Int’l A/S v. Knauf Insula- tion LLC, App. No. 2015-004910 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 12, 2018) (“’347 Reh’g Op.”). On direct appeal, Knauf contests the Board’s conclu- sion of obviousness of the appealed claims. Because sub- stantial evidence does not support the combination of references relied on by the Board solely based on the simi- larity of their disclosed reactions, we vacate the Board’s de- termination that the appealed claims were obvious and remand for further consideration. On cross-appeal, Rock- wool contests the Board’s conclusions of non-obviousness of the cross-appealed claims. Because Rockwool lacks stand- ing to assert a cross-appeal, we dismiss the cross-appeal. KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S 3 I A Turning first to the direct appeal. The Board held that the appealed claims were obvious, inter alia, because an ordinary artisan would have combined the Wallace (U.S. Pat. No. 2,215,825), Worthington (U.S. Pat. No. 3,513,001), and Helbing (U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2005/020224) references because of the similarity of their disclosed chemical reac- tions. ’445 Board Op. I at 28–32. None of the three references explicitly teach that the disclosed reactions are Maillard reaction or disclose that the result of the reactions are melanoidin products. More- over, Knauf contends that Worthington and Wallace do not inherently teach a Maillard reaction because Worthington does not teach all the necessary components in a solution, Knauf Br. at 39, and both Wallace and Worthington indi- cate that the reactions occurring are between different re- actants than the Maillard reaction. We conclude that the Board’s determination that Worthington and Wallace in- herently teach Maillard reactions is supported by substan- tial evidence. As the ’445 patent explains, the essentials for a Maillard reaction are an amine component and a re- ducing sugar (or a non-sugar carbonyl reactant), see ’445 patent, Fig. 1; id. at col. 2, ll. 42–44; id. at col. 2, ll. 60–64; id. at col. 10, ll. 32–43, both of which are indisputably taught in Wallace and Worthington. As the Board correctly noted, “the presence of all reactants recited in the claims and in substantial amounts [make it] reasonable to con- clude that the Maillard reaction took place” in Wallace and Worthington. ’445 Board Op. II at 18. As the Board noted, however, Wallace and Worthing- ton do not teach the use of their reactions as binders for “mineral fibers and/or glass fibers,” a “silicon-containing 4 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S coupling agent,” 1 or “an initially alkaline [] solution,” as re- quired by the claims, and for which the Board relied on Hel- bing. Knauf does not contest that Helbing teaches a binding for fiberglass, using a silicon-containing coupling agent, in an initially alkaline solution, and teaches that one of the reactants can be an ammonium salt of a polycar- boxylic acid. The Board reasoned that selecting “a reducing sugar as a polyhydroxy component would have been sug- gested by Worthington and Wallace which have similar re- actants to Helbing (i.e. polycarboxylic acid and ammonia).” ’445 Board Op. I at 27. See also id. at 31 (“Each of Worthington and Wallace describe using a carbohydrate in a reaction similar to the reaction of Helbing. Conse- quently, it would have been obvious [to have] utilized a car- bohydrate in Helbing as an exemplification of a polyhydroxy compound.”). We conclude that a finding of a motivation to combine based on similarity of the references in this case is unsupported by substantial evidence. Helbing only explicitly teaches reactions in which a pol- yhydroxy component interacts with a polyacid component to form a polyester resin. Helbing, Abstract; id. at ¶ 11 (“Thus, a polyacid component has been found to be capable of reacting with a polyhydroxy component, under alkaline, aqueous conditions in the absence of a catalyst, to form a polyester resin.”); id. at ¶ 17 (“In one aspect, the polyacid component is sufficiently nonvolatile to maximize its abil- ity to remain available for reaction with the polyhydroxy component. The polyacid component may be substituted with other chemical functional groups. It is appreciated that other functional groups are selected to minimize their interference with the preparation or formation of the poly- ester resin.”); id. at ¶ 19 (“In one aspect, the polyhydroxy component is sufficiently nonvolatile to maximize its 1 The “silicon-containing coupling agent” limitation is not included in claims 29–32 of the ’347 patent. KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S 5 ability to remain available for reaction with the polyacid component.”). The only guidance provided in Helbing for selecting the polyhydroxy component is that it retain its ability to react with the polyacid component; Helbing does not teach any reaction between the polyhydroxy and an amine, much less between a carbonyl containing compo- nent and an amine, as required for the Maillard reaction. Rather, Helbing teaches the use of ammonia only as a car- rier for the polyacid, to neutralize the polyacid component, or to act as a catalyst; Helbing does not indicate that the ammonia itself is important as a reactant. See id. at ¶ 8, 20, 27. In other words, Helbing teaches a reaction with the general form: Polyhydroxy + Polyacid  Polyester Resin [under certain conditions, including in the presence of ammonia] The Maillard reaction, as described in the ’445 and ’347 patents and as held to be inherently disclosed in Wallace and Worthington, is: Reducing Sugar (or other carbonyl containing com- ponent) + Ammonia  Melanoidins The Maillard reaction in the ’445 and ’347 patents also in- cludes a polyacid component, but that acts primarily as a carrier for the ammonia, rather than as a discrete reactant. See ’445 patent, col. 2, ll. 42-59 (describing basics of the Maillard reaction and noting an option to use the ammo- nium salt of a polycarboxylic acid); id., col. 10, ll. 32–43 (de- scribing Maillard reactions, and noting that “the carbohydrate reactant and the amine reactant are the mel- anoidin reactants for a Maillard reaction”). The reactions taught in Worthington and Wallace similarly emphasize the importance of the amine in creating the binding. See Worthington at col. 2, ll. 47–61; Wallace at col. 1, ll. 42–49. 6 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S These reactions are not similar enough to constitute the sole reason to combine a mosaic of disclosures from each reference to reach the claimed invention. The fact that both Wallace/Worthington and Helbing teach a reac- tion with ammonia and a polycarboxylic acid in some form on the left side of the reaction equation does not alone sug- gest to an ordinary artisan that the various other compo- nents in the reactions would be interchangeable. The Board engaged in no analysis of the functional role played by each component in the reactions. Nor did the Board find any suggestion that a reducing sugar could or should take the place of the polyhydroxy in Helbing’s reaction. Replac- ing Helbing’s polyhydroxy component with a reducing sugar to engage a Maillard reaction would fundamentally change the nature of the reaction taught in Helbing. The key reaction in such a combination would no longer be the polyhydroxy compound interacting with the polyacid com- pound to create a polyester resin—it would be the reducing sugar interacting with the ammonia. The ammonia taught in Helbing as a catalyst or carrier for the polyacid would thus become a key reactant—there is no reason that an or- dinary artisan would make such a fundamental change based on “similarity.” The references only appear similar if a reducing sugar is first selected as the polyhydroxy component in Helbing. But the similarity between Helbing and Worthington/Wal- lace cannot itself lead an ordinary artisan to see the simi- larity. This is classic hindsight bias in light of the claimed invention. See W.L. Gore & Assocs., Inc. v. Garlock, Inc., 721 F.2d 1540, 1552–53 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (exclaiming that that using the claims “as a frame,” and taking the “naked parts of separate prior art references [] as a mosaic to rec- reate a facsimile of the claimed invention” without a find- ing of why ordinary artisans would have found that mosaic obvious, improperly employs hindsight bias). Helbing crit- ically lacks any disclosure of using a reducing sugar as the disclosed “polyhydroxy component.” As noted above, the KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S 7 reason for the polyhydroxy component in Helbing was not as a reducing agent, but to dedicate the hydroxy group as a reactant with polyvinyl alcohol—a reaction that indisput- ably does not lead to a Maillard reaction nor melanoidin products. Indeed, the Board relied on the hydroxy as the reactive group in Helbing in support of the similarity of the references. ’445 Board Op. II at 16 (explaining that Hel- bing’s characterization of the reactant as a “polyhydroxy” compound implied that the reactive group was the hydroxy group, “providing evidence that the same chemical reac- tions in Worthington and Wallace using the hydroxy group of a reducing sugar would take place in Helbing because the remaining reactants are the same.”). But this reason- ing is inconsistent with the Board’s finding that the reac- tion in Helbing is similar to the Maillard reaction taught in Wallace/Worthington. The Maillard reaction reactive group is not the hydroxy group, but the carbonyl group (i.e. a ketone or aldehyde). ’445 patent, col. 9, ll. 58–62. If Hel- bing’s disclosure implies that the reactive group is a hy- droxy, then Helbing’s teaching is directed to a reaction other than a Maillard reaction. Although a reference may be used for everything it teaches, e.g. using a polyhydroxy component, the Board did not identify any suggestion in Helbing to use a reducing sugar as the polyhydroxy component. That genus includes any compound with two or more hydroxy components—an enormous genus with compounds having many distinct chemical properties and potential types of reactions. In- deed, the only guidance in Helbing for selecting the poly- hydroxy component is that it is “sufficiently nonvolatile to maximize its ability to remain available for reaction with the polyacid component.” Helbing at ¶ 19. That a reducing sugar is a member of that genus does not render Helbing sufficiently similar to Wal- lace/Worthington to provide an ordinary artisan with a rea- son to cherry-pick components from each reaction to lead to the claimed invention. It is not enough, even after KSR, 8 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S to support a determination of obviousness that a reference includes a broad generic disclosure and a common utility to that in the claims and other prior art references—there must be some reason to select a species from the genus. See In re Jones, 958 F.3d 347, 350–51 (Fed. Cir. 1992); Takeda Chem. Indus., Ltd. V. Alphapharm Pty., Ltd., 492 F.3d 1350, 1356–57 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (noting that KSR “acknowl- edged the importance of identifying ‘a reason that would have prompted a person of ordinary skill in the relevant field to combine the elements in the way the claimed new invention does’” (discussing and quoting KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007)). The key reactants, nature of the reactions, and products of the reactions taught in Helbing and Wallace/Worthington are distinct. The alleged similarity of the references does not support the conclusion that an ordinary artisan would find it obvi- ous to replace the polyhydroxy component in Helbing with a reducing sugar (thus changing the fundamental teaching of Helbing). The apparent similarity between the prior art references, upon which the Board relied to motivate their combination, is an illusion built upon hindsight bias. In this case, the references are not so similar such that an or- dinary artisan would read from their shared purpose and two common reactants that they could be combined to cre- ate the claimed invention. The lack of similarity between the references under- mines the Board’s finding that an ordinary artisan would combine their teachings to use the alkaline solution, use of the binder with fiberglass, and use the silicon-containing coupling agent of Helbing with the Maillard reaction inher- ently taught in Worthington/Wallace. Because the similar- ity of the references was the Board’s only reason for combining the references, we vacate the Board’s determi- nation of obviousness based solely on the similarity of the cited references and remand for further proceedings. KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S 9 B Knauf also contests the Board’s finding that the combi- nation inherently discloses the quantity limitations found in several of the appealed claims. All of the appealed claims have a quantity limitation for the amount of binder that is melanoidin. For example, claim 16 of the ’445 patent requires that “substantially all of the polymer that binds the mat of mineral fibers and/or glass fibers is melanoidin products.” J. App’x 2191 (Amended Claims). 2 In concluding that this limitation was inherently disclosed by the combination of Worthington, Wallace, and Helbing, the Board: (1) noted that “Patent Owner has not explained what amount of non-melanoidin is permitted by these claims,” ’445 Patent Bd. Op. II at 52, and therefore that any amount above a trace or impurity amount would satisfy the claim limitation; (2) found that “Patent Owner has not established with adequate evidence that the amounts of melanoidin produced in Worthington, Wallace, and Helbing are only trace amounts,” id. at 17; and (3) explained that because “Worthington describes the recited amounts of carbohydrate, as well as ammonium (and other amine) and polycarboxylic acid” in the claims, ’445 Patent Bd. Op. II at 18, the combination with Helbing and Wallace would necessarily meet the same quantity limitations as claimed. The Board erred. First, the term “substantially all” in claim 16 (and the quantity limitations in the other claims) means what it says. The Board may not ignore this limitation or rewrite it to mean “at greater than impurity levels.” See id. at 17 (“The evidence in this record . . . is sufficient to find, for example, that ‘the melanoidin products are present at greater than impurity levels in the polymer.’”). 2 Other appealed claims include different quantity limitations, which the Board should consider on remand. 10 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S It is inapposite that the “’’445 patent is silent as to the amounts, if any, of permitted side-reactants,” id. at 17, be- cause the claims do require a particular amount of mela- noidin products in the binder. Even if the Board were correct that the combination of Wallace, Worthington, and Helbing inherently taught “greater than impurity levels” of melanoidin as claimed in claim 19, this would not support a conclusion that the significantly narrower “substantially all” limitation of claim 16 was inherently satisfied. Second, it was not Patent Owner’s burden to establish that the inherent result of the reaction in the combination of Worthington, Wallace, and Helbing was not “substan- tially all” melanoidin—it was Petitioner’s burden to prove that every limitation in the claim was found in the prior art, either inherently or explicitly. Finally, the Board did not point to substantial evidence showing that executing the reaction in Worthington would produce a binder comprising “substantially all . . . mela- noidin products.” Worthington nowhere indicates the com- position of the resulting binder. This lack is not cured merely because, like the claims, Worthington “describes the recited amounts of carbohydrate,” greater than trace amounts of ammonium, and polycarboxylic acid. Id. at 18. That a prior art reference satisfies these limitations in the reactants is not enough to allow the Board to find inher- ency in the products of the reaction, unless there is evi- dence that any reaction meeting these quantity of reactant limitations would result in the quantity of product limita- tion. See Continental Can Co. USA, Inc. v. Monsanto Co., 948 F.3d 1264, 1269 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (quoting In re Oelrich, 666 F.2d 578, 581 (C.C.P.A. 1981)) (“Inherency, however, may not be established by probabilities or possibilities. The mere fact that a certain thing may result from a given set of circumstances is not sufficient.”). We therefore vacate the Board’s holding that claims 16- 22 of Knauf’s ’445 patent and claims 29-32 of Knauf’s ’347 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S 11 patent are obvious, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. II On cross-appeal, we turn first to the preliminary mat- ter of Rockwool’s standing to invoke the jurisdiction of this court to challenge the Board’s holding of no invalidity with respect to the cross-appealed claims. It is uncontested that Rockwool properly participated in the reexamination un- der 35 U.S.C. § 311 (pre-AIA). However, “once a party seeks review in a federal court, ‘the Constitutional require- ment that it have standing kicks in.’” Consumer Watchdog v. Alumni Res. Found’n, 753 F.3d 1258, 1261 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (quoting Sierra Club v. E.P.A., 292 F.3d 895, 899 (D.C. Cir. 2002)). The “requirement of injury in fact is a hard floor of Article III jurisdiction that cannot be removed by statute.” Summers v. Earth Island Inst., 555 U.S. 488, 497 (2009); Consumer Watchdog, 753 F.3d at 1261. “The party invoking federal jurisdiction must have ‘a personal stake in the outcome.’” Consumer Watchdog, 753 F.3d at 1261 (quoting Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 101 (1983)). Rockwool has not pointed to any evidence showing a case or controversy between the parties with respect to the cross-appealed claims. Rather, Rockwool asserts that we have jurisdiction over Rockwool’s cross-appeal because: (1) Rockwool was involved in the reexamination process and if we affirm the cross-appealed claims, “the parties will be forced to return to the Patent Office and participate in fur- ther proceedings”; (2) our jurisdictional statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A), gives this Court exclusive jurisdiction over appeals from the Board “at the instance of a party who ex- ercised that party’s right to participate in the applicable proceeding before or appeal to the Board”; and (3) a cross- appeal is proper under Bailey v. Dart Container Corp. of Mich., 292 F.3d 1360, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2002) whenever “a party seeks to enlarge its own rights under the judgment 12 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S or to lessen the rights of its adversary under the judgment,” which allegedly occurred here. Rockwool also notes that “the Court generally finds jurisdiction in appeals and cross- appeals from Board decisions.” Rockwool Reply Br. at 4. Although Rockwool has standing to participate in the direct appeal to defend the Board’s decision with respect to the directly appealed claims, see Personal Audio, LLC v. Elec. Frontier Found., 867 F.3d 1246, 1249–50 (Fed. Cir. 2017), Rockwool has failed to establish that it has suffered an injury in fact for purposes of maintaining a cross-ap- peal. This conclusion is dictated by the straightforward ap- plication of this Court’s holding in Consumer Watchdog, 753 F.3d 1258. There, Consumer Watchdog requested reexamination of a patent generally directed to human em- bryonic stem cell cultures. Id. at 1260. After the Board affirmed the patentability of the claims, Consumer Watch- dog appealed. Consumer Watchdog did not allege any in- volvement in research or commercial activities in the stem cell field, nor that it was or intended to be a competitor of the patentee or licensee of the patent; instead, Consumer Watchdog relied on “the Board’s denial of Consumer Watchdog’s requested administrative action—namely, the Board’s refusal to cancel” the claims at issue. Id. at 1261. We held that a party’s interest in a desired outcome on reexamination did not confer standing because Consumer Watchdog was afforded everything to which it was enti- tled—an opportunity to request reexamination and partic- ipate—and that Congress’s grant of the procedural right to appeal the Board’s findings to the Federal Circuit did not eliminate the requirement that appellant have standing to exercise that procedural right. Id. at 1262. KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S 13 Like Consumer Watchdog, Rockwool does not allege that it is a current or prospective competitor of Knauf, 3 or assert anything apart from its past and future involvement in the reexamination at the PTO. Rockwool also does not allege any action by Knauf that would create standing for Rockwool beyond the continued presence of the patent after reexamination. Just as in Consumer Watchdog, this is not enough to satisfy the standing requirement. Moreover, just as the procedural right to appeal a Board decision under 35 U.S.C. § 315(b) did not confer standing on Consumer Watchdog, so to this Court’s jurisdictional grant under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A) does not eliminate the standing re- quirement. There is no inconsistency between this Court having exclusive jurisdiction over appeals from the Board and this Court’s refusal to exercise its jurisdiction to pro- vide an advisory opinion at the behest of a third-party with- out standing. In this context, the grant of a reexamination certificate is similar to the initial grant of a patent. It is well-estab- lished that having an issued patent does not itself confer jurisdiction on anyone wishing to challenge its validity. See Consumer Watchdog, 753 F.3d at 1262. Cf. Hewlett- Packard Co. v. Acceleron LLC, 587 F.3d 1358, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (noting that even after MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 549 U.S. 118, 127 (2007), a declaratory judgment plaintiff must still show that the dispute is “def- inite and concrete, touching the legal relations of parties having adverse legal interests” and holding that a patent owner’s communication to another party “merely identify- ing its patent and the other party’s product line, without more, cannot establish adverse legal interests between the parties” sufficient to support declaratory judgment 3 We need not and do not make any determination about whether such an allegation would be sufficient in and of itself to confer Article III standing on Rockwool. 14 KNAUF INSULATION, INC. v. ROCKWOOL INTERNATIONAL A/S jurisdiction). The grant of a reexamination certificate, sim- ilarly, without more, cannot alone satisfy the standing re- quirement. Rockwool attempts to distinguish Consumer Watchdog because “it has indicated its intent to continue proceedings seeking to cancel the Cross-Appeal Claims at the Patent Office,” Rockwool Reply Br. at 3, which renders its position more than “a general grievance.” See Consumer Watchdog, 753 F.3d at 1263. Just as Rockwool’s current engagement with the PTO cannot itself create standing, it’s future pressing of its claims also cannot itself create standing here. The burden of participating in a hypothetical future inter partes reexamination does not itself constitute an in- jury-in-fact sufficient to confer standing here. Rockwool is also incorrect that it’s Cross-Appeal is proper under Bailey v. Dart Container Corp. of Mich., 292 F.3d 1360, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2002). In Bailey, this Court stated that “[i]t is only necessary and appropriate to file a cross-appeal when a party seeks to enlarge its own rights under the judgment or to lessen the rights of its adversary under the judgment.” Id. That statement was made in the context of determining when a cross-appeal, as contrasted with an alternative ground for affirmance, is proper. Bai- ley could not and did not create a rule disregarding Consti- tutional standing requirements for cross-appeals. Rockwool’s cross-appeal is therefore dismissed for lack of standing. VACATED-IN-PART, DISMISSED-IN-PART, AND REMANDED COSTS No costs.