Case: 18-1048 Document: 68 Page: 1 Filed: 04/03/2020
NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
______________________
WILLIAM MICHAEL FREDERICK TAYLOR,
Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
ANDREI IANCU, UNDER SECRETARY OF
COMMERCE FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
AND DIRECTOR OF THE UNITED STATES
PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE,
Defendant-Appellee
______________________
2018-1048
______________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Virginia in No. 1:16-cv-00012-LMB-
JFA, United States District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema.
______________________
Decided: April 3, 2020
______________________
WILLIAM MICHAEL FREDERICK TAYLOR, Chiddingfold,
Surrey, United Kingdom, pro se.
THOMAS W. KRAUSE, Office of the Solicitor, United
States Patent and Trademark Office, Alexandria, VA, for
defendant-appellee. Also represented by JOSEPH MATAL,
MEREDITH HOPE SCHOENFELD, MAI-TRANG DUC DANG.
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2 TAYLOR v. IANCU
______________________
Before DYK, CHEN, and STOLL, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM.
William Michael Frederick Taylor (“Mr. Taylor”) sued
the Director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“Pa-
tent Office”) under 35 U.S.C. § 145, challenging the Patent
Office’s rejection of U.S. Application Serial No. 10/425,553
(“the ’553 application”), of which Mr. Taylor is the inven-
tor. 1 The district court granted summary judgment to the
Patent Office, concluding that all of the ’553 application’s
claims lack written description and are indefinite. We af-
firm on the ground that the ’553 application’s claims lack
written description.
BACKGROUND
The ’553 application claims priority to United Kingdom
Patent Application No. GB9310175.6, filed on May 18,
1993. The specification describes a system called “GPS Ex-
plorer.” J.A. 277. GPS Explorer “is designed to provide
information [to a user] on the move,” such as “while driv-
ing, flying, sailing, riding or walking.” J.A. 277, 278. The
specification describes an “audio only version” of GPS Ex-
plorer that includes a “Destination Oriented Guidance
1 Mr. Taylor also challenged, in separate cases, the
Patent Office’s rejection of two of his related applications:
U.S. Application Serial Nos. 11/807,860 (“the ’860 applica-
tion”) and 11/391,501 (“the ’501 application”). The district
court consolidated the three cases, and concluded that each
of the applications was unpatentable. Mr. Taylor sepa-
rately appeals the district court’s decision as to the ’860 ap-
plication (Case No. 18-1047) and as to the ’501 application
(Case No. 18-1070). Our decisions on those appeals are be-
ing issued concurrently with this decision.
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TAYLOR v. IANCU 3
Mode.” J.A. 280, 282. In this mode, “[a] route from the
present position to the destination will be determined from
routing data.” J.A. 282. The audio only version of GPS
Explorer also includes a “Tour Mode,” in which GPS Ex-
plorer will “point out things of interest” near the user.
J.A. 281. The specification explains that in “Tour Mode”:
[t]he system will . . . provide tour guidance and
point out things of interest. For example[,] when
walking or driving past historic buildings or other
features information about each building will be
given. It’s [sic] date of construction, who lived
there, how it was built, if it is open to the public.
The dialogue may include historic sounds, the
crack of a coachman’s whip, the voices of children
at play, music drifting on the air, all creating the
atmosphere of a bygone age.
J.A. 281.
In this mode, “[e]n route advertising” may be “inserted
into tours at specified points.” J.A. 285. The specification
also describes a “virtual reality version” of GPS Explorer,
in which “computer generated objects may be overlaid on a
video picture of the real world and the resulting composite
image projected for an observer wearing an artificial real-
ity helmet.” Id. at 287. The specification provides two ex-
amples of this “virtual reality version”:
The device enables a fire or rescue crew visiting say
an oil rig to superimpose structural, electrical or
hazard data onto their real[-]world view of the
structure, giving them safety related information
and audible hazard alerts.
The device would also enable a user visiting the site
for a new building to see the computer[-]generated
image of the new building superimposed in the
landscape. The computer[-]generated image will
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4 TAYLOR v. IANCU
change as the user’s GPS position changes when he
walks around the site.
J.A. 288.
Each of the ’553 application’s pending independent
claims—claims 206 and 220—is directed to the combina-
tion of these features. Claim 206 recites:
An information system on a portable device for pre-
senting information to a user, comprising:
an input device which receives a [sic] one or
more specified modes of operation of the
portable device from the user;
a sensing device automatically sensing a
position of the portable device;
an orientation determining device which
determines a device orientation of the port-
able device[;]
a processing device, responsive to the sens-
ing device, configured to access one or more
databases that contain entries, the entries
containing information on one or more
things of interest at one or more locations,
the processing device determining at least
one entry, from among the entries, based
on the sensed position;
a presentation device, responsive to the
processing device, presenting to the user a
video picture of the real world that repre-
sents the user’s real world frame of refer-
ence from the sensed position and the
sensed device orientation, and overlaying
on the video picture of the real world, based
on the specified mode of operation, a com-
puter-generated representation of the de-
termined at least one entry,
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TAYLOR v. IANCU 5
wherein the processing device further se-
lects advertising information based on the
sensed position, and the presentation de-
vice presents the selected advertising infor-
mation to the user when presenting the
video picture of the real world with the
overlaid computer-generated representa-
tion of the determined at least one entry;
receiving a user input selecting a portion of
the video picture and providing, in re-
sponse to the input user selection, more de-
tailed information related to the selected
portion,
determining route guidance from the
sensed position to a location associated
with input user selection; and
presenting the determined route guidance
to the user.
J.A. 67 (emphasis added). Claim 220 similarly recites:
A method for providing information to a user on a
portable device, comprising the computer-imple-
mented steps of:
receiving one or more specified modes of op-
eration of the portable device form [sic] the
user
automatically sensing a position of the
portable device;
determining a device orientation of the
portable device;
determining, based on the sensed position,
at least one entry from a database contain-
ing entries providing information on one or
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6 TAYLOR v. IANCU
more things of interest at one or more loca-
tions;
presenting to the user a video picture of the
real world that represents the user’s real
world frame of reference from the sensed
position and the device orientation, and
overlaying on the video picture of the real
world, based on the specified mode of oper-
ation, a computer generated representation
of the determined at least one entry,
receiving a user input selecting a portion of
the video picture, and providing, in re-
sponse to the input user selection, more de-
tailed information related to the selected
position,
determining route guidance from the
sensed position to a location associated
with input user selection; and
presenting the determined route guidance
to the user.
J.A. 67–68 (emphasis added).
In a final Office Action, the examiner rejected claims
206 and 220 as indefinite, obvious in light of several prior
art references, and lacking written description. The Patent
Trial and Appeal Board (“Board”) affirmed the examiner’s
written description and indefiniteness rejections. Board
reversed the examiner’s obviousness rejections, reasoning
that the claims were too indefinite for the Board to “make
a proper review of the prior art rejections.” J.A. 8530. The
Board denied Mr. Taylor’s request for rehearing.
Mr. Taylor then filed a complaint under 35 U.S.C. § 145
in district court, seeking judgment that the ’553 applica-
tion’s claims were patentable. J.A. 2. The district court
granted summary judgment to the Patent Office,
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TAYLOR v. IANCU 7
concluding that “the ’553 [a]pplication fails on both written
description and definiteness,” J.A. 45, and denied Mr. Tay-
lor’s motion for reconsideration.
Mr. Taylor appeals. We have jurisdiction to review the
district court’s decision under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(C).
On appeal, we reach only the written description issue.
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant or denial of sum-
mary judgment de novo. MicroStrategy Inc. v. Bus. Objects,
S.A., 429 F.3d 1344, 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2005). Under the writ-
ten description requirement for patentability, the specifi-
cation “must ‘clearly allow persons of ordinary skill in the
art to recognize that [the inventor] invented what is
claimed.’” Ariad Pharm., Inc. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 598 F.3d
1336, 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (en banc) (quoting Vas-Cath
Inc. v. Mahurkar, 935 F.2d 1555, 1563 (Fed. Cir. 1991)) (al-
teration in original). Written description is a question of
fact. Id. (citing Ralston Purina Co. v. Far-Mar-Co, Inc.,
772 F.2d 1570, 1575 (Fed. Cir. 1985)).
The Board concluded that the claims lacked written de-
scription because they covered—yet the specification did
not sufficiently disclose—a presentation device providing:
(1) a video picture of the real world based on the
user’s sensed position and orientation; (2) an over-
laid, computer-generated representation of an en-
try retrieved from a database based on the user's
sensed position and specified mode of operation; (3)
selected advertising based on the user’s sensed po-
sition and presented on the video picture of the real
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8 TAYLOR v. IANCU
world with the overlaid computer-generated repre-
sentation; 2 and (4) route guidance.
J.A. 8521–22 (Board opinion). The Board explained that
although some aspects of these features are disclosed sep-
arately, the specification “does not sufficiently disclose to
the skilled artisan how all of this information is generated
and presented to the user simultaneously.” J.A. 8522–23
(emphasis added). The district court agreed, as do we.
The district court correctly construed the claims to re-
quire simultaneously “presenting . . . a video picture of the
real world” and “overlaying . . . based on the specified mode
of operation, a computer[-]generated representation of” a
point-of-interest entry. Mr. Taylor’s argument that “sim-
ultaneity is not specified” by the claims, Appellant’s Br. 68,
is belied by the language of the claims themselves, which
recite three (claim 220) or all four (claim 206) of these fea-
tures being presented concurrently.
The district court correctly concluded that, in light of
this construction, the claims lack written description. The
claimed features—to the extent that they are disclosed in
the specification—are part of one or the other of two sepa-
rate “version[s]” of GPS Explorer (i.e., the “audio only ver-
sion” or the “virtual reality version”). J.A. 280–87.
Nowhere does the specification disclose integration of these
features into an “information system on a portable device”
(as recited by claim 206) or “method” (as recited by claim
220) that presents these features simultaneously, let alone
how that simultaneity is achieved. Accordingly, a person
of ordinary skill in the art would not understand that the
inventor possessed the subject matter claimed.
2 This feature is recited in claim 206 but not in claim
220.
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TAYLOR v. IANCU 9
The Patent Office’s evidence supporting this conclusion
was unrebutted. Dr. Peter Dana, the Patent Office’s tech-
nical expert, testified that “[t]he specification is completely
devoid of steps for implementing these high[-]level func-
tions” simultaneously. Expert Report of Peter Dana, Ph.D.,
Taylor v. Matal, No. 1:15-cv-1607, ECF No. 86-1, at 14. Dr.
Dana explained:
[t]he specification provides no disclosure of how all
this information is generated and presented to the
user simultaneously. Where are all the video im-
ages coming from? As one example, there is no dis-
cussion of how the presentation of route guidance
is performed. How is a destination selected? How
does the device determine the route that one should
take?
Id. Mr. Taylor’s experts testified about some of the claimed
features in isolation. For example, Mr. Miller discussed
video overlays, and Mr. White, Mr. Carlton, and Dr. Whit-
ing discussed GPS-based guidance. But none of Mr. Tay-
lor’s experts explained why a person of ordinary skill
reading the specification in 1993 would understand Mr.
Taylor to have invented a system or method that simulta-
neously presents all claimed features.
Mr. Taylor’s own experience in attempting to imple-
ment the invention is consistent with Dr. Dana’s testi-
mony. Mr. Taylor admitted that in 1993, when he filed his
initial application, “there was no internet,” and that once
the internet was developed he “attempt[ed] to play catch-
up and move from [his] previous conception [of the inven-
tion] to [one] having more of an involvement in the inter-
net.” Deposition of William Michael Frederick Taylor (day
2), Taylor v. Matal, No. 16-cv-12, ECF No. 51-3, at 11–12.
Mr. Taylor also admitted that even after filing his applica-
tion he was “waiting and waiting and waiting” for “a suita-
ble platform to become available” to allow him to
implement his idea. Id. at 12. Indeed, as the district court
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10 TAYLOR v. IANCU
found, Mr. Taylor’s “first prototype was not operational un-
til 1998 and neither that prototype nor the 2001 version
contained all the features described in the specification,
much less the claims.” J.A. 65. Mr. Taylor’s own testimony
and experience thus shows that the specification did not
demonstrate possession of the claimed invention but was
instead “a ‘mere wish or plan’ for obtaining the claimed in-
vention.” See Novozymes A/S v. DuPont Nutrition Biosci-
ences APS, 723 F.3d 1336, 1344 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (quoting
Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 119 F.3d
1559, 1566 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
Mr. Taylor’s reliance on the specification and other ev-
idence that he contends demonstrates invention of the ’553
application’s claims is unavailing. That evidence, like his
expert testimony, goes to whether each these four features
was, in isolation, sufficiently described—not to the simul-
taneous presentation of these features, as claimed.
No reasonable factfinder could conclude that the ’553
application meets the written description requirement.
The district court did not err in granting summary judg-
ment to the Patent Office. Because a lack of written de-
scription renders the ’553 application unpatentable, we
need not reach the other grounds raised on appeal.
AFFIRMED