Application of Arthur E. Troiel

274 F.2d 944, 47 C.C.P.A. 795
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1960
DocketPatent Appeal 6480
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 274 F.2d 944 (Application of Arthur E. Troiel) 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 Arthur E. Troiel, 274 F.2d 944, 47 C.C.P.A. 795 (ccpa 1960).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the final rejection of claims 2, 4, 5 and 10, the only claims remaining in application Serial No. 165,039, filed May 29, 1950, entitled “Hole Cap and Tool Therefor.”

In setting up forms into which concrete is poured for making structures such as walls, dams, etc., ofttimes, either initially or in reuse, the lumber used has holes or other imperfections in its surfaces. To prevent the concrete, as it is poured into the forms, from escaping through holes and to provide a smooth surfaced concrete structure, something is needed to cover the holes or other defects in the wood. It is to this that appellant’s invention is directed.

Appellant denominates that which is used for covering the holes a “hole cap.” The cap itself is a disk having, on a circle concentric with and inwardly of the periphery of the disk, a plurality of tabs triangular in shape pushed out to extend from one side only of the disk. The side edges of the tabs adjacent their hinge lines may converge towards the disk, the purpose being to allow some of the wood fibers which are displaced when the tabs are driven into the wood to resume their original positions, hence lock the tabs into the lumber. Additionally, the cross section of the tabs taken on a plane cut through them and parallel to the plane of the disk may be slightly arcuate in shape to provide a tab of greater strength and rigidity.

The disk may also be of magnetic material. A tool useful for applying the “hole cap” to the lumber is described by appellant as having a base at least as large as the disk and a handle attached to the base centrally thereof. The base includes a magnet portion which functions to hold the disk against the base of the tool. By striking the tool holding such a disk when it has been positioned over a hole or other imperfection, the disk may be driven into the lumber.

Claims 2 and 10 are representative.

“2. A hole cap for covering holes and imperfections in lumber such as employed in the erection of forms for pouring concrete structures, comprising a circular plate having a plurality of pointed tabs extending from one side only of said circular *946 plate and at locations surrounding a central solid portion of substantial area adapted to mask such a hole or imperfection, and along substantially a circle of less diameter than said circular plate to provide a moisture guard ring about said arrangement of tabs when said cap is anchored to the surface of such lumber.”
“10. In combination, a hole cap for covering holes and imperfections in lumber such as employed in the erection of forms for pouring concrete structures, comprising a disk of magnetic material, and a plurality of pointed tabs struck from said disk along substantially a circle lying symmetrical with the center of said disk; and a positioning tool for use in applying said disk to lumber, said tool comprising a base having an area substantially corresponding to the area of said disk, said base having a magnetic pole at its lower end for magnetically holding to said base one of said disks, and a handle extending upwardly from said base and centrally thereof to which a force may be applied after positioning a disk over a hole or imperfection to be masked.”

The references relied upon by the examiner and the board are as follows:

Stowe 797,083 August 15, 1905

Popple 800,243 Sept. 26, 1905

Spreen 1,669,541 May 15, 1928

Buchner etal. 2,202,896 June 4, 1940

Sampson 2,551,970 May 8, 1951

Brown 2,602,958 July 15, 1952

The Spreen patent discloses a rectangular sheet metal piece used for covering imperfections and holes in lumber used in concrete forms. It is provided with .a plurality of triangular tabs on one face of the piece which tabs are adjacent two opposite edges thereof and which ■extend in one direction only therefrom, which piece is attached to a piece of lumber by driving the tabs thereinto.

The Stowe patent is directed to an .anchoring device. It discloses a circular disk having a plurality of triangular tabs struck out from the disk which tabs extend alternately from opposite sides of the disk. In use, the tabs on one side extend into, for example, a packing crate, and the tabs on the other side extend into the wooden floor of a car or wagon. The device then prevents the crate from sliding over the car’s floor while being transported.

Sampson discloses a device comprising a flat head having two tapered legs which extend in the same direction from the head, which are arcuate in transverse cross section, and which are convergent adjacent the head. The device is used for fastening electrical conductors to a panel, the legs fitting into preformed slots on the panel.

. The Buchner et al. and Brown patents show serrated tangs having converging portions at the base of driven wood penetrating tabs.

The Popple and Buchner et al. patents show tabs or prongs having arcuate cross sections to add to the prongs’ strength and rigidity. In this connection the board also referred to the corrugation of sheet metal used for roofs, etc., to strengthen the sheeting.

' The examiner rejected claim 2 “as unpatentable over Stowe alone or in view of Spreen.” The Board of Appeals stated that it preferred Spreen as a primary reference. It was the board’s opinion that it was an obvious extension of the Spreen teachings to provide prongs or tabs on all four sides if the sides without prongs were found to engage the lumber too loosely. The board felt that “the particular shape of the plate does not appear to us to be patentably significant and, at best, the difference is deemed one of degree.” Although the board found the Stowe patent to be from a non-analogous art, it felt that Stowe suggested the circular arrangement of the prongs embodied by appellant in his device.

With respect to claims 4 and 5, the board was of the opinion that the additional limitations of the “side edges *947 converging to the disk” and of each tab having an arcuate cross section were well-known expedients in the driven fastener and sheet metal arts. To support this position, the board cited Buchner et al. and Brown as illustrative of the convergent side edge feature and Popple and Buchner et al. as exemplary of the arcuate cross section feature, all used in their respective environments to perform the functions attributed to them by appellant. The board concluded that “appellant has in effect merely associated into a single device a plurality of individual old and well-known features which do not exceed the aggregate individual results expected therefrom.” Although the board added to the record of this case the Buchner et al., Brown and Popple patents, they did not consider the use of those references to involve a new ground of rejection within the meaning of Rule 196(b), 35 U.S.C. Appendix.

A further limitation in claims 4 and 5, i.

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274 F.2d 944, 47 C.C.P.A. 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-arthur-e-troiel-ccpa-1960.