Acting
en banc,
the court today vacated the September 20, 2007, judgment in this case, and the panel’s original opinion, which is reported at
Appellant Stephen W. Comiskey (“Com-iskey”) appeals the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (“Board”) affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 1-59 of his patent application as obvious in view of the prior art and therefore unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103. We do not reach the Board’s obviousness rejection of the independent claims under § 103. We conclude that Comiskey’s independent claims 1 and 32 and most of their dependent claims are unpatentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. With respect to independent claims 17 and 46 (and dependent claims 18-29, 31, 47-57, and 59) and depen *970 dent claims 15, 30, 44, and 58, we remand to the PTO to consider the § 101 question in the first instance. We therefore affirm-in-part, vacate-in-part, and remand.
BACKGROUND
I
Comiskey’s patent application No. 09/461,742 claims a method and system for mandatory arbitration involving legal documents, such as wills or contracts. According to the application, the claimed “program ... requires resolution by binding arbitration of any challenge or complaint concerning any unilateral document ... [or] contractual document.”
Independent claim 1 recites a “method for mandatory arbitration resolution regarding one or more unilateral documents” involving the following steps. First, the unilateral document and its author are enrolled. Second, arbitration language is incorporated in the unilateral document requiring that any contested issue related to the document be presented to the pre-chosen arbitration program for binding arbitration. Third, the method “requir[es] a complainant [sic] to submit a request for arbitration resolution.” Fourth, the method conducts arbitration resolution. Fifth, the method provides “support to the arbitration.” Finally, the method determines “an award or decision ... [that] is final and binding.” 1 Independent claim 32 is practically identical to claim 1, except that it refers to contractual documents rather than unilateral documents. 2 Although the application’s written description references “an automated system and method for requiring resolution through binding arbitration” and “a mandatory arbitration system through a computer on a network,” claims 1 and 32 do not reference, and the parties agree that these claims do not require, the use of a mechanical device such as a computer.
*971 Independent claim 17 recites a “system for mandatory arbitration resolution regarding one or more unilateral documents.” It includes the following limitations: (1) “a registration module” to register the unilateral document and its executor; (2) “an arbitration module” for incorporating arbitration language that requires any contested issue related to the unilateral document be presented to the system; (3) “an arbitration resolution module” that requires “a complainant to submit a request for arbitration resolution”; and (4) “a means for selecting an arbitrator from an arbitrator database” and “providing support to the arbitrator ... where the arbitrator determines an award or a decision ... [that] is final and- binding.” 3 Independent claim 46 is practically identical to claim 17, except that it refers to contractual documents rather than unilateral documents. 4 Four dependent claims (claims 15, 30, 44, and 58) also explicitly require use of a computer or other machine. Each states, in full: “[t]he method[/system] of claim [1, 17, 32, or 46] wherein access to the mandatory arbitration is established through the Internet, intranet, World Wide Web, software applications, telephone, television, cable, video [or radio], magnetic, electronic communication, or other communication means.”
II
Comiskey filed his patent application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) on December 16, 1999. On March 28, 2001, the examiner issúed a first office action rejecting claims 1-9, 11-24, 26-38, 40-52, and 54-59 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Ginter, U.S. Patent No. 6,185,683 (’683 patent), in view of Perry, U.S. Patent No. 5,241,466 (’466 patent), and Walker, U.S. Patent No. 5,794,207 (’207 patent). Ginter discloses an electronic system for securely *972 delivering documents from the sender to the recipient through the electronic equivalent of a “personal document carrier” that can validate transactions as well as actively participate in the transaction by, among other things, providing arbitration. '683 patent “Abstract.” Walker discloses an electronic system that allows buyers to submit binding purchase offers and sellers to create contracts by accepting a purchase offer on its terms. It also teaches the inclusion of language in the purchase offers “requiring that both parties submit to binding arbitration of all disputes” and suggests that a “central controller ... can support the arbitration process by providing an arbiter for each dispute.” '207 patent col.30 11.47-54. Perry discloses an electronic central depository for secure storage and rapid retrieval of unilateral documents such as wills. The examiner also found claims 10, 25, 39, and 53 (which added the additional limitation of displaying an “arbitration schedule”) unpatentable over Ginter in view of a document entitled “Arbitration Fee Schedule.” The examiner’s final office action on May 30, 2001, provided the same basis for rejection.
Comiskey filed an amendment after final rejection on August 29, 2001, “to more distinctly claim and particularly point out” the aspects of his invention that he believed were novel, namely pre-enrolling the person in a mandatory arbitration system, including language in the document requiring submission of disputes to this pre-chosen system, and enabling a person to submit a dispute pertaining to the document to this pre-chosen system for binding arbitration. On December 31, 2001, the examiner mailed a final rejection of the amended claims, which rejected the claims on the same basis. After Comiskey filed a request for continued examination, the finality of the prior office action was withdrawn, and the examiner mailed another non-final rejection on July 9, 2002, based again on the same grounds. In response, Comiskey submitted a “declaration of long felt need” on October 1, 2002, claiming that based on his experience representing clients involved in family disputes concerning unilateral documents, he believed his invention addressed an area of long felt need. On November 6, 2002, the examiner mailed a final rejection based on the same reasons as the prior office actions and rejected Comiskey’s assertion of long felt need on the ground that the cited prior art references had recognized and addressed the problem prior to Comiskey.
Comiskey appealed, and on November 30, 2005, the Board affirmed the examiner’s rejection. The Board concluded that because all of the independent claims were argued together they stood or fell together, and it chose claim 32 as representative. It concluded that the combination of Gin-ter and Walker rendered this claim obvious. Despite concluding that all of the independent claims stood or fell together, the Board proceeded to consider claims 1 and 17, directed to unilateral documents, separately. It concluded that the addition of Perry to Ginter and Walker rendered these claims obvious. Finally, the Board considered and affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 10, 25, 39, and 53 as obvious in light of Ginter, Perry, Walker, and the “Arbitration Fee Schedule.”
Comiskey timely appealed to this court. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A) (2000). After oral argument, we requested supplemental briefing directed at the patentability of the subject matter of Comiskey’s application under 35 U.S.C. § 101. In the supplemental briefing, Comiskey argued for the first time that we lacked the power to consider a ground for rejection not relied on below. Alternatively, Comiskey argued that his application was patentable under § 101, *973 and that the subject matter of his application did not fall within an exception to patentability, such as an abstract idea, natural phenomena, or law of nature.
The PTO urged that this court could properly consider the § 101 issue. Indeed, the PTO urged that this court resolve the case on this ground to “give the Office needed guidance in this area.” PTO Supp. Br. 15. The PTO argued that Com-iskey’s independent claims were directed at an unpatentable abstract idea, and not a patentable process, because they neither were tied to a particular machine nor operated to change materials to a different state or thing. Rather the claims imper-missibly “encompasse[d] a method of controlling how humans interact with each other to resolve a dispute, based on a human arbitrator’s perception of the dispute.” PTO Supp. Br. 12.
DISCUSSION
We do not reach the ground relied on by the Board below — that the claims were unpatentable as obvious over Ginter in view of Walker, Perry, and “Arbitration Fee Schédule” — because we conclude that many of the claims are “barred at the threshold by § 101.”
Diamond v. Diehr,
The PTO acknowledges that the examiner, consistent with his obligation under the cases, must have addressed the predicate issue of patentable subject matter and implicitly concluded that the claims met the requirements of § 101. See Oral Arg. Tr. 18:40. For the reasons discussed below, we disagree that § 101 is satisfied. See also Manual of Patent Examining Procedures (“MPEP ”) § 2106 “Guidelines Flowchart” (Rev.5, Aug. 2006) (listing the steps an examiner should follow in determining patentability, with “determine whether the claimed invention complies with ... 101” listed before “determine whether the claimed invention complies with 35 U.S.C. 102 and 103”).
I
We first address Comiskey’s argument that we cannot properly address the issue of patentable subject matter. At oral argument, Comiskey admitted that the court “could affirm on [the § 101] ground if in fact [we] came to the conclusion that ... the subject matter of this claim does not address the statutory subject matter.” In his supplemental briefing, Comiskey attempts to “withdrawn any statement made at oral argument which would infer that this Court could even consider a new statutory grounds for rejection].” Appellant’s Supp. Br. 19. Comiskey now asserts that “[t]his Court lacks the power to sua sponte raise and thereafter decide a statutory ground of patentability never raised during the agency proceeding below” because our review *974 of the Board’s decision is required to be “on the record before the Patent and Trademark Office” under 35 U.S.C. § 144 and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 706. Id. at 16-17.
Over sixty years ago in
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Chenery Corp.,
In confining our review to a judgment upon the validity of the grounds upon which the Commission itself based its action, we do not disturb the settled rule that, in reviewing the decision of a lower court, it must be affirmed if the result is correct although the lower court relied upon a wrong ground or gave a wrong reason. ... It would be wasteful to send a case back to a lower court to reinstate a decision which it had already made but which the appellate court concluded should properly be based on another ground unthin the power of the appellate court to formulate. But it is also familiar appellate procedure that where the correctness of the lower court’s decision depends upon a determination of fact which only a jury could make but which has not been made, the appellate court cannot take the place of the jury. Like considerations govern review of administrative orders. If an order is valid only as a determination of policy or judgment which the agency alone is authorized to make and which it has not made, a judicial judgment cannot be made to do service for an administrative judgment.
Id.
at 88,
As Comiskey points out, some of our cases have concluded that “it is inappropriate for this court to consider rejections that had not been considered by or relied upon by the Board.”
In re Margolis,
It is well-established that “whether the asserted claims ... are invalid for failure to claim statutory subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101, is a question of law which we review without deference.”
AT & T Corp. v. Excel Commc’ns, Inc.,
In these circumstances,
Chenery
not only permits us to supply a new legal ground for affirmance, but encourages such a resolution where, as here, “[i]t would be wasteful to send” the case back to the agency for a determination as to patentable subject matter.
II
Comiskey’s application may be viewed as falling within the general category of
*976
“business method” patents. At one time, “[t]hough seemingly within the category of process or method, a method of doing business [was] rejected as not being within the statutory classes.”
State St. Bank,
Although it has been suggested that State Street Bank supports the patentability of business methods generally, 8 State Street Bank explicitly held that business methods are “subject to the same legal requirements for patentability as applied to any other process or method.” Id. at 1375; see also MPEP § 2106(1) (Rev. 4, Oct. 2005) (“Claims should not be categorized as methods of doing business. Instead, such claims should be treated like any other process claims.”). We must then consider the requirements of § 101 in determining whether Comiskey’s claims 1 and 32 for a method of mandatory arbitration for unilateral and contractual documents claim statutory subject matter.
A
The very constitutional provision that authorized Congress to create a patent system, Article I, § 8, also limited the subject matter eligible for patent protection to the “useful Arts.”
9
According to the Supreme Court, this constitutional limitation on patentability “was written against the backdrop of the [English] practices— eventually curtailed by the Statute of Monopolies — of the Crown in granting monopolies to court favorites in goods or businesses which had long before been enjoyed by the public.”
Graham,
Beginning with the first patent act, the Patent Act of 1790, “Congress [ ] responded to the bidding of the Constitution,”
Graham,
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title. 10
However, the Supreme Court has made clear that the 1952 language change had no substantive effect, stating that “[a]naly-sis of the eligibility of a claim of patent protection for a ‘process’ did not change with the addition of that term to § 101.”
Diehr,
Patentable subject matter under the 1952 Act is extremely broad. Given the breadth of the categories listed in § 101, it is not surprising that the legislative history of the 1952 Act noted that “Congress intended statutory subject matter to include anything under the sun that is made by man.”
Chakrabarty,
Specifically, Supreme Court decisions after the 1952 Patent Act have rejected a “purely literal reading” of the process provision and emphasized that not every “process” is patentable.
Flook,
The prohibition against the patenting of abstract ideas has two distinct (though related) aspects. First, when an abstract concept has no claimed practical application, it is not patentable. The Supreme Court has held that “[a]n idea
of itself
is not patentable.”
Rubber-Tip Pencil,
Second, the abstract concept may have a practical application. The Supreme Court has reviewed process patents reciting algorithms or abstract concepts in claims directed to industrial processes. In that context, the Supreme Court has held that a claim reciting an algorithm or abstract idea can state statutory subject matter only if, as employed in the process, it is embodied in, operates on, transforms, or otherwise involves another class of statutory subject matter, i.e., a machine, manufacture, or composition of matter. 35 U.S.C. § 101. As the PTO notes, “[t]he Supreme Court has recognized only two instances in which such a method may qualify as a section 101 process: when the process ‘either [1] was tied to a particular apparatus or [2] operated to change materials to a “different state or thing.”’”
See
PTO Supp. Br. 4 (quoting
Flook,
However, mental processes — or processes of human thinking — standing alone are not patentable even if they have practical application. The Supreme Court has stated that “[phenomena of nature, though just discovered,
mental processes,
and abstract intellectual concepts are not patentable, as they are the basic tools of scientific and technological work.”
Benson,
Following the lead of the Supreme Court, this court and our predecessor court have refused to find processes patentable when they merely claimed a mental process standing alone and untied to another category of statutory subject matter even when a practical application was claimed. In
Schrader
we held unpatentable a “method constituting] a novel way of conducting auctions” by allowing competitive bidding on a plurality of related items.
Decisions of our predecessor court are in accord.
In re Meyer,
It is thus clear that the present statute does not allow patents to be issued on particular business systems— such as a particular type of arbitration— that depend entirely on the use of mental processes. In other words, the patent statute does not allow patents on particular systems that depend for their operation on human intelligence alone, a field of endeavor that both the framers and Congress intended to be beyond the reach of patentable subject matter. Thus, it is established that the application of human intelligence to the solution of practical problems is not in and of itself patentable.
B
Having considered the governing legal principles, we now turn to Comiskey’s application and begin with indepen
*981
dent claims 1 and 32 which recite “[a] method for mandatory arbitration resolution” regarding unilateral and contractual documents. Comiskey has conceded that these claims do not require a machine, and these claims evidently do not describe a process of manufacture or a process for the alteration of a composition of matter. Comiskey’s independent claims 1 and 32 claim the mental process of resolving a legal dispute between two parties by the decision of a human arbitrator. They describe in essence “conducting arbitration resolution for [a] contested issue” and “determining an award or a decision for the contested issue” through a predetermined “mandatory” arbitration system, and thus claim the use of mental processes to resolve a legal dispute. Thus, like the claims that the Supreme Court found unpatentable in
Benson
and
Flook
and the claims found unpatentable in our own cases, Com-iskey’s independent claims 1 and 32 seek to patent the use of human intelligence in and of itself. Like the efforts to patent “a novel way of conducting auctions” which
Schrader,
C
We consider independent claims 17 and 46 separately. They recite the use of “module[s],” including “a registration module for enrolling” a person, “an arbitration module for incorporating arbitration language,” and “an arbitration resolution module for requiring a complainant [or party] to submit a request for arbitration resolution to the mandatory arbitration system.” Claim 17 also recites “a means for selecting an arbitrator from an arbitrator database.” These claims, under the broadest reasonable interpretation, could require the use of a machine as part of Comiskey’s arbitration system. See Alan Freedman, The Computer Glossary 268 (8th ed.1998) (defining module as “[a] self-contained hardware or software component that interacts with a larger system”); id. at 90 (defining database as “any electronically-stored collection of data”). Similarly, even though Comiskey did not separately argue his dependent claims, our decision is based on a different ground than the Board’s, and we think it is appropriate to separately consider dependent claims 15, 30, 44, and 58. Each of these claims adds the following limitation to its corresponding independent claim: “wherein access to the mandatory arbitration is established through the Internet, intranet, World Wide Web, software applications, telephone, television, cable, video [or radio], magnetic, electronic communication, or other communications means.”
As to all of these claims, which under the broadest reasonable interpretation recite the use of a machine, we think that the § 101 question should be addressed in the first instance by the PTO. We therefore remand to the PTO to consider whether independent claims 17 and 46 (with dependent claims 18-29, 31, 47-57, and 59) and dependent claims 15, 30, 44, and 58 recite patentable subject matter under § 101.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that Comiskey’s independent claims 1 and 32 and dependent claims 2-14, 16, 33-43, and 45 do not claim patentable subject matter. With respect to independent claims 17 and 46 (with dependent claims 18-29, 31, 47-57, and 59) and dependent claims 15, 30, 44, and 58, we remand to the PTO to determine in the first instance whether § 101 is satisfied. If the Board had relied on the new § 101 ground for rejection in the first instance, *982 Comiskey would have had the opportunity to amend his application under 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b). We think that it is appropriate to afford Comiskey the same protections in this respect as he would have had before the Board with respect to the claims that we have held unpatentable.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, VACATED-IN-PART, AND REMANDED.
COSTS.
No costs.
Notes
. Claim 1 states in full:
A method for mandatory arbitration resolution regarding one or more unilateral documents comprising the steps of: enrolling a person and one or more unilateral documents associated with the person in a mandatory arbitration system at a time prior to or as of the time of creation of or execution of the one or more unilateral documents;
incorporating arbitration language, that is specific to the enrolled person, in the previously enrolled unilateral document wherein the arbitration language provides that any contested issue related to the unilateral document must be presented to the manda-toiy arbitration system, in which the person and the one or more unilateral documents are enrolled, for binding arbitration wherein the contested issue comprises one or more of a challenge to the documents, interpretation of the documents, interpretation or application of terms of the documents and execution of the documents or terms of the documents; requiring a complainant to submit a request for arbitration resolution to the mandatory arbitration system wherein the request is directed to the contested issue related to the unilateral document containing the arbitration language;
conducting arbitration resolution for the contested issue related to the unilateral document in response to the request for arbitration resolution;
providing support to the arbitration resolution; and
determining an award or a decision for the contested issue related to the unilateral document in accordance with the incorporated arbitration language, wherein the award or the decision is final and binding with respect to the complainant.
. In addition, Claim 32 notes that the inserted arbitration language would cover a challenge to the contractual document “by any party to the Contract or by any alleged third party beneficiary of the Contract.” It also notes that the party submitting a request for arbitration resolution could be "a party to the Contractual document [or] a party so designated in the contractual document.”
. Claim 17 states in full:
A system for mandatory arbitration resolution regarding one or more unilateral documents comprising:
a registration module for enrolling a person who is executing and one or more unilateral documents associated with the person in a mandatory arbitration system at a time prior to or as of the time of creation of or execution of the one or more unilateral documents;
an arbitration module for incorporating arbitration language, that is specific to the enrolled person, in the previously enrolled unilateral document wherein the arbitration language provides that any contested issue related to the unilateral document must be presented to the mandatory arbitration system, in which the person and the one or more unilateral documents are enrolled, for binding arbitration wherein the contested issue comprises one or more of a challenge to the documents, interpretation of the documents, interpretation or application of terms of the documents and execution of the documents or terms of the documents; and for providing this arbitration language to the enrolled person;
an arbitration resolution module for requiring a complainant to submit a request for arbitration resolution to the mandatory arbitration system wherein the request is directed to the contested issue related to the unilateral document containing the arbitration language; and
a means for selecting an arbitrator from an arbitrator database to conduct an arbitration resolution for the contested issue related to the unilateral document in response to the request for arbitration resolution, for providing support to the arbitrator, and where the arbitrator determines an award or a decision for the contested issue related to the unilateral document in accordance with the incorporated arbitration language, wherein the award or the decision is final and binding with respect to the complainant.
. Claim 46 also notes that the party submitting a request for arbitration may be “a party to the contractual document [or] a party so designated in the contractual document.”
.See In re Thrift,
. The situation is quite different where a party seeks for the first time on appeal to raise a new ground on appeal for
setting aside
agency action.
See Boston Scientific Scimed, Inc. v. Medtronic Vascular, Inc.,
. As we recently noted in our
en banc
decision in
In re Seagate Technology, LLC,
"a court may consider an issue 'antecedent to ... and ultimately dispositive of' the dispute before it, even an issue the parties fail to identify and brief."
. See, e.g., Leo J. Raskind, The State Street Bank Decision: The Bad Business of Unlimited Patent Protection for Methods of Doing Business, 10 Fordham Intel! Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 61, 61 (1999).
. Article I, § 8 states in full: "The Congress shall have Power ... To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” The Supreme Court has concluded that the references to "Science” (i.e., knowledge generally) and "Writings” creates the right to copyright protection and the references to "useful Arts” and "Discoveries” creates the right to patent protection.
See Graham v. John Deere Co. of Kansas City,
. The Supreme Court has defined "manufacture” to mean "the production of articles for use from raw or prepared materials by giving to these materials new forms, qualities, properties, or combinations, whether by hand-labor or machinery” and "composition of matter” to mean "all compositions of two or more substances and all composite articles, whether they be results of chemical union, or of mechanical mixture, or whether they be gases, fluids, powders or solids.”
Diamond v. Chakrabarty,
. In
Benson,
the Supreme Court reversed a decision by our predecessor court that had, in turn, relied on earlier decisions, such as
Application of Musgrave, 57 C.C.P.A.
1352,
. Of course, process claims not limited to claiming an abstract concept or algorithm (i.e., a mental process) may not be subject to the same requirements.
.
See also Diehr,
.
See AT & T,
. In
Musgmve,
our predecessor court concluded that the claims at issue in that case included non-mental steps and claimed patentable subject matter.
