Application of Donna Jones Kratz, of the Estate of James J. Jones, Deceased

239 F.2d 394, 44 C.C.P.A. 710, 112 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1956 CCPA LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1956
DocketPatent Appeal 6216
StatusPublished

This text of 239 F.2d 394 (Application of Donna Jones Kratz, of the Estate of James J. Jones, Deceased) 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 Donna Jones Kratz, of the Estate of James J. Jones, Deceased, 239 F.2d 394, 44 C.C.P.A. 710, 112 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1956 CCPA LEXIS 91 (ccpa 1956).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office which reversed a rejection by the Primary Examiner of claim 17 of appellant’s application serial No. 110,393 for a patent on a photographic record for recording the finish of a race, but made a new rejection of that claim under Patent Office Rule 196 (b), 35 U.S.C.A.Appendix.

The appealed claim is as follows:

“In a strip type photographic record of the finish of a racing contest comprising a film strip only having a background area longitudinally extending thereon formed by a continuous image of a narrow transverse portion of the race course containing and axially paralleling the actual finish line on the race course and photographic images of the contestants in their respective order of passing into and through said portion of the race course and their respective positions transversely of the race course: means for assuring proper application of a transverse determinative finish line to said film strip to provably establish the true order or passage of contestants past said actual finish line comprising transversely spaced light transmitting areas formed on said film strip and extending longitudinally from end to end and adjacent said background area, each of said *395 light transmitting areas containing line-like transversely extending, oppositely aligned, adjacent regions of differing light modifying characteristics disposed in transverse parallelism to the axis of said image of said narrow transverse portion of the race course and alternating longitudinally at closely spaced intervals and identifying means individual to spaced regions of similar light modifying characteristics in each of said longitudinally extending areas distinctively identifying corresponding and directly opposed regions of similar light modifying characteristics and adapting said directly opposed regions of similar light modifying characteristics for ready pairing as guide markings for locating a determinative finish line therebetween relative to any selected one of said images of said contestants and in parallelism to said actual finish line whereby said determinative finish line will be accurately applied to provably determine the order in which said contestants reach the portion of the race course containing the actual finish line of the race course.”

The references relied on by the board are:

Belock, 2,257,100, Sept. 30, 1941; Del Riccio, 2,320,350, June 1, 1943; Manza-neta, 2,348,401, May 9, 1944; Crowley, 2,430,975, Nov. 18, 1947; Allen, 2,443,-572, June 15, 1948.

Appellant’s application relates to a photographic film showing the finish of a race. By means of an apparatus which is not involved here, the film, during the taking of the picture of the finish moves across a narrow slot corresponding to the position of the finish line in such a manner that the horses are in focus, while the stationary background appears merely as a formless gray tone. The contestants appear in the picture in the exact order in which they crossed the finish line, but the line itself, being stationary, does not appear in the picture taken on the moving film. However, in order to show that the camera was in proper position with respect to the finish line, a still picture of that line is taken on the film before it is set in motion for photographing the horses, and a similar still picture is taken after the last contestant has passed.

With the arrangement described it may be necessary, in the case of a close finish, to locate the position of the finish line on the film, where the first contestant reached it. If the apparatus was properly adjusted, as can be checked by the two still pictures of the finish line, that line extends exactly transversely of the film and the problem is therefore one of erecting a transverse line across the film at the point corresponding to the position of the leading contestant. In order to facilitate this, appellant’s application discloses the provision of a series of closely spaced short lines along each edge of the film, each line on one edge being in exact alignment with a corresponding line on the other edge. Every other line on each edge is numbered, the numbers running from one to nine and then repeating, and the lines which are in alignment with each other are given corresponding numbers. It is thus a simple matter to locate a transverse line at any desired point by placing a straight edge against any given line on one edge of the film and the correspondingly identified line on the other. By selecting such a pair of lines opposite the position of the leading contestant the finish line may be erected and the position of the contestants with respect to it will be clear.

The patent to Allen No. 2,443,572, relates to a “photo-finish” device in which a series of pictures of the finish line are taken, in the manner of motion pictures, and the picture is selected which shows the leading contestant reaching the line. The patentee states that the picture is provided at one or both edges with a line showing the end of the finish line. It is not clear whether that result is obtained by photographing the ends of the line or in some other manner, but that question is not material here since the appealed claim is directed to the photographic record itself and not to the apparatus or method by which it was produced.

*396 Allen shows" á scale extending along one edge of the film only and “graduated in units corresponding to those of the track, e. g.( feet, inches etc.” In order to determine the position of the finish line he places the picture in an exact predetermined position on a special table and adjusts a straight edge, which is mounted for movement in such a way that it is always exactly transverse of the picture, until it contacts the nose of the leading contestant.

The patents to Belock 2,257,100, Del Riccio 2,320,350 and Crowley 2,430,975 all show devices for photographing the finish of a race on a moving film, in a manner similar to that employed by appellant, but none of them suggests the use of markings along opposite edges of the film as a means for locating the finish line.

The patent to Manzanera No. 2,348,-401 relates to an apparatus for recording wave form signals on a light-sensitive film. It is stated in the patent specification that the customary practice was to employ a series of spaced timing lines extending entirely across the film so that the time of arrival of any particular point on a wave could be noted. It was found, however, that so many cross lines tended to confuse the record and accordingly Manzanera extends only certain of the timing lines across the film, as, for example, every fifth one. The remainder of the timing lines are interrupted, so that only á short portion of each of them appears at each edge of the film. The patentee states that this arrangement is usually sufficient but that if the arrival time of an intermediate portion of a wave is significant “the necessary extension of the timing lines may be effected manually.” The lines which extend entirely across the film are numbered at one end only and the intermediate lines are unnumbered.

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239 F.2d 394, 44 C.C.P.A. 710, 112 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1956 CCPA LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-donna-jones-kratz-of-the-estate-of-james-j-jones-deceased-ccpa-1956.