Application of Bisley

197 F.2d 355, 39 C.C.P.A. 982
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1952
DocketPatent Appeal 5876
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 197 F.2d 355 (Application of Bisley) 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 Bisley, 197 F.2d 355, 39 C.C.P.A. 982 (ccpa 1952).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office rejecting as unpatentable over the prior art claims 4,14, 19, 20, 23, 25, 35, 36 and 39 of appellant’s application for a patent on improvements in a “Household Food Mixer.” Seventeen claims (claims 5, 10, 11, 21, 24, 26 through 34, 37, 38 and 40) have been allowed.

The appealed claims relate to various features of an electric food mixer of the generally familiar type commonly used in household kitchens and sold in most electrical appliance stores. The mixer has a base which supports a bowl, or, alternatively, either one of a pair of bowls of different size. Rising from the base at one end thereof is a pedestal or standard on which there is pivoted a supporting member which in turn serves to mount a horizontally extending electric motor power unit and beater drive assembly. A pair of agitators or beaters projects vertically downward from one end of the motor unit into the bowl for mixing the contents thereof, such as a cake batter or the like.

The claims on appeal are directed to four different and distinct features of such a mixer. For convenience, appealed claims relating to a particular feature will be grouped together as Groups I, II, III and IV, and each group will be discussed separately below. The claims of each respective group differ in scope from each other but, insofar as disposition of this case is concerned, have no relationship to any of the claims of any other group.

The references relied on by the Patent Office are: Young 377,003 Jan. 24, 1888; McDonald 920,374 May 4, 1909; Knapp 2,048,455 July 21, 1936; Goldblatt et al. 2,-113,916 April 12, 1938; Kochner et al. 2,-131,290 Sept. 27, 1938; Bean 2,192,843 Mar. 5, 1940.

*358 Group I

Group I consists of appealed claims 20, 25, and 39. As in most conventional mixers of this type, the supporting member of the power unit is hinged or privotally mounted on the pedestal, which rises from the base, so that the beaters can be swung into and out of the mixing bowl when necessary. The claims of this group are directed to an allegedly novel and inventive hinge connection which includes a pivot pin between said support member and pedestal arranged at an angle to both vertical and horizontal planes, considering the base of the mixer as establishing' a horizontal datum plane. This angle of the pin is such that the motor unit is “swung up” out of the plan projection of the bowl to provide access to it by a sort of roll-over movement ■ which has a considerable lateral component of motion sideways. Thus, the over-all height of the mixer is not appreciably increased when the motor unit is moved and the mixer may be more conveniently used on a work area below a low overhanging shelf or cupboard. The angle of the pivot pin is also such that the lower ends of the beaters remain within the projection of the bowl when the motor unit is “swung up” so that drippings from the beaters will be caught by the bowl. Just below this pivot pin there is a second vertical pivot connection between the support member and the pedestal, about which the motor unit and its support member may be swung bodily sideways in order that the beaters may be moved from the center to the side of the bowl if desired.

Claim 20, which appears to be representative of the claims of this group, reads as follows:

“20. In a household food mixer the combination of a power unit driving an agitator comprising a pair of inter-digitating beaters revolving about horizontally spaced vertical axes in their working position defining a vertical plan, a large and small mixing bowl, means for supporting the bowls interchangeably for rotation about a prede- . termined axis, means providing relative shifting between the agitator and said supporting means for locating the agitator in close proximity to one side of either bowl, and means for tilting the power unit to raise the agitator from its working position including a pivot pin located at a point on a line perpendicular to said plane between said axes and whose axis passes closest to the agitator at a point spaced from the pin and outside said one side of the bowl said pin axis intersecting at an acute angle the vertical plane defined by said predetermined bowl axis and the pin itself and the agitator transcribing an arc having a horizontal component of movement away from said side of bowl which is proximate thereto while the power unit is moved laterally from directly over the bowl.”

Claims 20, 25 and 39 were rejected as un-patentable over Kochner et al. That reference discloses a mixer having an arrangement of base, pedestal, motor unit, and support member which is broadly similar to appellant’s. However, in the reference the support member is hinged to the pedestal in conventional fashion by means of a pivot pin having a horizontal axis so that when the motor unit is swung back to lift the beaters from the bowl it moves in a vertical plane, thereby increasing considerably the over-all height of the mixer.

The board was of the opinion that the limitations of these claims when reduced to fundamentals mean only that the pivot pin is disposed at any angle, no matter how slight, to the vertical plane which passes through the center of the bowl and the center of the pedestal. The board held that this would be satisfied by only a slight angular deviation of the horizontal pin of Kochner et al. and that such a change was not, in its opinion, inventive.

The examiner allowed thirteen claims of varying scope directed to appellant’s allegedly novel pivot mounting feature, which is the subject of claims 20, 25 and 39. Two of these claims specifically define in degrees the limits of angularity at which the axis of the pivot pin may be set with respect to horizontal and vertical datum planes. Eleven claims define the angle of the pivot pin axis in essentially geometrical terms by which the angle of *359 that axis is established with respect to such things as the beater axes, the center of the bowl support, the side of the bowl, the power unit axis, and the like. Allowability of an appealed claim is not controlled by the fact that similar claims have been allowed in the Patent Office, since an appealed claim must be patentable in its own right in the opinion of this court. However, similar claims allowed by the Patent Office tribunals furnish evidence of what features those tribunals regarded as patentable, and we think it proper, and sometimes necessary, to consider allowed claims in order to fully determine the views of the board and the examiner. See In re Strommen, 149 F.2d 156, 32 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1007, and In re Barnes, 140 F.2d 1006, 31 C.C.P.A., Patents, 912.

Since the examiner allowed thirteen claims directed to this feature, it appears that he was of the opinion that appellant’s physical embodiment of this feature involved an inventive concept over the art of record. Although the change, when viewed after the event, seems simple, we think it an unobvious one and concur with this opinion of the examiner. See In re Osplack, 195 F.2d 921, 39 C.C.P.A., Patents, -, and cases cited therein.

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197 F.2d 355, 39 C.C.P.A. 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-bisley-ccpa-1952.