Application of Anthony J. Civitello

339 F.2d 243, 52 C.C.P.A. 865
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7230
StatusPublished

This text of 339 F.2d 243 (Application of Anthony J. Civitello) 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 Anthony J. Civitello, 339 F.2d 243, 52 C.C.P.A. 865 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals insofar as it rejected claims 2, 9, and 10 of application serial No. 797,970, filed March 9, 1959, for “Square Bottom Bag.” Some claims have been allowed and no appeal was taken on claim 7, which was also rejected.

The rejection of the appealed claims was on the ground that they are un-patentable over the following references:

Haslacher 2,377,005 May 29, 1945
Craig 2,600,487 June 17, 1952

The only issue is obviousness in view of the prior art under 35 U.S.C. § 103.

The invention is a bottom construction and blank assembly for a two-ply paper bag having an oil and grease proof liner *244 which makes the bag suitable for packaging oil-containing or greasy foods such as cookies. The bag is also said to be sift-proof and air-tight and thus suitable for coffee, insecticides, and the like.

Bags of the type here involved have a liner suitably impervious to grease, such as a glassine paper, and an outer ply or wrapper of ordinary paper which may be printed, serving as the external package display. The main purpose of the invention is to provide a bag, capable of being made on existing bag-making machinery, in which the liner is so formed and related to the wrapper as to protect the latter from any oil or grease from the bag contents getting into it for the obvious reasons that it would spoil the appearance of the package, soften up the wrapper and possibly cause it to let go in its bottom seams. The invention further contemplates the use of an all-glued construction as distinguished from prior art lined bags in which the liner is heat sealed, gluing being said to permit faster processing than heat sealing.

Of the appealed claims, claim 2 is directed to a bag. Claims 9 and 10 are directed to a “blank assembly” consisting of the blank which forms the liner and the blank which forms the wrapper, the only difference between the last two claims being that claim 10 says the two blanks are secured together marginally with adhesive. Many, but not all, of the limitations of claim 2 describing the walls, slits, tabs, flaps, and folds and their interrelationships which exist in the completed bag are recited in claims 9 and 10 but claim 2, being more complete, is the most limited of the three appealed claims. We do not set it forth here as it would be meaningless in the absence of a drawing, which would also be meaningless in the absence of a description. Instead, we will state our understanding of the feature relied on for patentability which we find set forth in claim 2.

We first note that both references disclose lined bags, Craig being one with a pasted or glued construction and Haslacher being of the heat-sealed liner type. Appellant’s bag, being made by similar production methods from continuous webs with slitting, plying, tubing, unit separating, and folding techniques common to the art, has many things in common with the prior art. The principal admittedly novel feature is the formation of a flap on the liner at the end of one of the bag walls which overlies and extends somewhat beyond, the corresponding bottom flap on the wrapper, the end of the liner flay being folded around the edge of the wrapper flap to keep it out of contact with the bag contents. The flaps at the opposite side of the bag are then folded, in forming the bag bottom, so that the liner flap is stuck directly to the folded edge of the first-mentioned liner flap. This is described in claim 2 in this language:

“ * * * the projecting bottom portion of one of said inner tube flaps being reversely folded over the bottom edge of an associated one of said outer tube flaps, * * * 'the projecting bottom portion of the other of said inner tube flaps overlying said reversely folded bottom portion * * * and all interior portions of the bag bottom are formed by said inner tube.”

The inner “tube” is, of course, the liner of grease-proof material.

We fully agree with the following statements in appellant’s brief about the Craig reference:

“The bag is provided with a specific bottom construction which attempts to provide for a sift-proof bag, but does not provide a grease-proof bag wherein the liner forms a complete bottom seal exclusive of the wrapper.
* -X- *X* * -X- -X*
“In this patent there is no disclosure or suggestion of a bottom edge of the liner 11 projecting beyond the bottom edge of the wrapper 10. There is also no disclosure of reversely folding a projecting bottom portion of the inner tube flap over the bottom edge of the outer *245 tube flap or overlaying a projecting bottom portion of another inner tube flap upon the reversely folded bottom portion of the one inner tube flap, which features constitute appellant’s invention. There is also an absence in this patent of a disclosure in which an inner tube is sealed to itself exclusively of an outer tube, and outer tube flaps which are protected entirely by the inner tube.” [Our emphasis.]

In fact, Craig, which shows little more than a lined bag (designed for packaging carbon black) shows a construction having the very feature appellant wishes to avoid, paper wrapper edges in direct communication with the interior of the bag where they could absorb grease or the like exuding from the contents.

The Patent Office Solicitor’s brief has very little to say about Craig. In fact it starts its argument with the statement, “Haslacher is the more important reference here * * The examiner’s rejection, found by the board to be ■correct, was “unpatentable over Craig in view of Haslacher.”

Haslacher has a heat-sealed liner and shows a variety of bottom formations, but not appellant’s. The attitude of the board was that Haslacher would make it ■obvious to modify the Craig bag in such fashion as to arrive at appellant’s construction. To do this, however, it is first necessary to modify Haslacher. As above pointed out, the claim feature relied on involves the wrapping of a liner flap end around a wrapper edge and this is the one thing Haslacher does not do. While he does seal the liner to itself and achieve the appellant’s objective of keeping all parts of the wrapper out of contact with the contents of the bag, he ■does not do it with appellant’s structure or in an all-glued bag.

Since Haslacher fails to disclose the feature of the claim relied on, we do not agree with the Patent Office that it would suggest modifying the Craig bag to contain that feature. The Patent Office finds the suggestion only after making a modification which is not suggested, as we see it, by anything other than appellant’s own disclosure. This is hindsight reconstruction. It does not establish obviousness. We therefore find claim 2 allowable over the references applied.

Claims 9 and 10

These claims are on a different footing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
339 F.2d 243, 52 C.C.P.A. 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-anthony-j-civitello-ccpa-1964.