Application of Alexander Weber

312 F.2d 810, 50 C.C.P.A. 980
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 312 F.2d 810 (Application of Alexander Weber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Alexander Weber, 312 F.2d 810, 50 C.C.P.A. 980 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals rejecting claims 20 through 23 and 25 of appellant’s patent application Ser. No. 466,389, filed November 2, 1954.

The application discloses a Venetian blind having vertical slats suspended at their upper ends from runner elements slidable in a horizontal track. Swivel connections are interposed between the upper ends of the slats and the runner elements to permit each slat to turn on its vertical axis in unison by pulling a draw cord to change the angle that the-slats make with the plane of the window.The slats are made in sections connected together with overlapping ends on the= same side thereof.

The use of multiple sections for each-slat allows easy adjustment as to length; of a slat using standard parts. In addition, the connected slat sections may slightly tilt with respect to each other about an axis defined by a line connecting the hooks attaching adjacent sections to permit self-alignment in a vertical plane. It is also stated that multiple sections provide “a distinct vibration damping both as to sound and movement.”

The sections of the slat members are rectangular pieces with each section having a pair of oval openings in one end with a pair of hooks at the other end for connecting the slats together.

The connecting means may be modified by providing a pair of keyhole slots in one end of the slat section and a pair of stud-like elements on the other end. Sheet metal is preferred as the material used! for the slat sections.

The board affirmed the examiner’s final rejection of claims 20 to 23 as unpatentable over Moore and claim 25 as unpat-entable over McLennan taken in view of Moore.

The references relied on are:

Moore No. 162,250 April 20, 1875.

McLennan No. 2,188,575 January 30, 1940.

The Moore patent discloses a fire shield designed to suspend from the roof of a building to provide heat protection against adjacent burning buildings. The shield comprises a plurality of vertical rows of rectangular sheet-metal plates. The connecting means are formed by bending each end of the plate, thus providing a channel and a lip at opposite ends of the plate. Each lip portion is provided with a lug to protrude through a. square opening of the adjoining plate. The ends of each plate are overlapped on opposite sides. Moore also shows a modified form of connection means comprising a pair of laterally spaced hooks on one end of the plate and a pair of laterally spaced holes on the other end.

The McLennan patent discloses a Venetian-type blind of the vertical slat type with slats suspended by their upper ends from runner elements which are slidable in a horizontal track. Swivel connections are interposed between the upper ends of the slats and the runner elements to permit each slat to turn about its vertical axis, to change the angle that the slats make with the plane of the window. The slat members may be made in one piece or in sections connected by means of a *812 swivel pin which permits turning of the respective sections independently to be set at different angles. The lower slat sections, similar to the upper slat sections, are linked together by chains.

Claims 20 through 23 are directed to the sectional slat. Claim 25 is directed to a blind having an elongated horizontal guide with the sectional slat members being slidably suspended from the guide. Claim 24 was allowed.

We quote claims 20 and 25 as representative of the appealed claims:

“20. For use in a blind, in combination, a plurality of slat sections made from thin, elastically resilient material and being arranged in a row extending in one direction and substantially in one plane; connecting means connecting said sections to each other tiltable about respective axes located in said plane and substantially normal to said direction so that said connected slat sections form an elongated slat member; and suspension means for suspending said slat member at the upper end thereof so that said sections align each other in a vertical plane under the action of the force of gravity.
“25. A blind comprising, in combination, elongated horizontal guide means; a plurality of elongated slat members, each of the slat members comprising a plurality of slat sections made from thin, elastically resilient material and being arranged in a row extending in one direction and substantially in one plane, and connecting means connecting said sections to each other, tiltable about respective axes located in said plane and substantially normal to said direction; suspension means slidably arranged in said guide means and attached to the upper ends of said slat members, respectively; and moving means connected to said suspension means for moving said plurality of elongated slat members between a first position in which they are aligned adjacent to each other in a vertical plane extending in longitudinal direction of said guide means and a second position in which said slat members are arranged in substantially parallel vertical planes inclined to the longitudinal direction of said guide means.”

Claim 21, like claim 20, is drawn to the sectional slat, but in addition it recites that the sections overlap, with the overlap of each section with its adjacent sections being on the same side thereof.

Claim 22 further defines the sectional slat by reciting that the connecting means comprises “a pair of engaging members” which are received in “a pair of cutouts.”

Claim 23, in a recitation similar to that of claim 22, discloses the connecting means as comprised of “a pair of hook members” which are received in “a pair of cutouts.”

It is apparent that claims 20 through 23 specify a slat member with a plurality of slat sections connected together forming a row of plates extending vertically in one plane. Novelty of this general structure is dispelled by the Moore patent disclosing, as it does, a plurality of sheet-metal plates connected together to form a row of plates extending vertically in one plane.

The question for resolution is whether the instant claims patentably distinguish over the references.

The limitation that the claimed slat member is “for use in a blind,” making no reference to a “window” blind, does not, in our judgment, exclude the fire shield of Moore. The Moore shield is a cover or screen designed for the purposes indicated. Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, Unabridged, defines blind as: “1. Something to hinder sight or keep out light; a screen; a cover.” It would therefore seem that the term “blind” including screen or cover would serve synonymously with Moore’s fire shield.

Appellant contends that Moore discloses nothing even in vague resemblance to a slat as that word is commonly understood and as defined in Webster, supra. The argument is advanced on the basis *813 of the relative dimensions of the slat and Moore’s sheet-metal plates. Appellant’s quotation from Webster attributes to slat as meaning a “thin, narrow bar especially of wood or metal.” Referring again to Webster, 1

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Related

In re Marzocchi
456 F.2d 790 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1972)

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312 F.2d 810, 50 C.C.P.A. 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-alexander-weber-ccpa-1963.