Application of Everett F. Gustafson

331 F.2d 905, 51 C.C.P.A. 1358
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7204
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 331 F.2d 905 (Application of Everett F. Gustafson) 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 Everett F. Gustafson, 331 F.2d 905, 51 C.C.P.A. 1358 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 1-8 of application serial No. 810,432, filed May 1, 1959, for Device for Storing and Displaying Cards. No claims are allowed.

This is an unusual case. The examiner cited no prior art references. He rejected all claims as “aggregative.” The board, after considering at length appellant’s arguments based on alleged claim limitations, affirmed this rejection “on the basis of the scope of the claims.” At the very end of its opinion it appended a footnote noting that the examiner had cited no reference and saying that in the absence of references it “is difficult to determine the ultimate question of patentability.” The board then called attention to four references evidently found as a result of its own search. The board, however, did not overtly rely on any of the references. Appellant requested reconsideration, noting the deficiencies of the references, *906 which are not included in the record before us, and properly so since they were not relied on, asking reconsideration by the board of its decision “and modification thereof to advise the applicant of subject matter patentable in accordance with the record of prior art before the board.” Appellant there argued particularly the patentability of claims 4 and 8. (All claims are appended to this opinion as an appendix.)

In its second opinion, on the petition, the board denied the petition but in doing so, at least as to claim 4, said that that claim “does not define the invention with the particularity required by paragraph 2 of section 112.” With respect to claim 8, the board adhered to its previous decision that it defined nothing patentable, adding that it was not convinced that the claim “defines more than a convenient and obvious location of elements in space which otherwise would be wasted.” (Our emphasis.)

Appellant’s brief states that the rejection on appeal is “on the ground of aggregation in the sense of an unpatentable combination as defined in In re Worrest,” 201 F.2d 930, 40 CCPA 804, and with this the Solicitor agrees. Appellant further states that “A rejection on aggregation in the sense of unpatentable combination is essentially a rejection on obviousness,” citing In re Troiel, 274 F.2d 944, 47 CCPA 795, and In re Carter, 212 F.2d 189, 41 CCPA 851. The solicitor does not agree that this is necessarily so, saying that the aggregation rejection can be said to be based on 35 U.S.C. § 101, “since such a combination is not an invention which can be patented,” and that furthermore section 112 is involved as is evident from the board’s discussion, citing In re Wright, 256 F.2d 583, 45 CCPA 1005.

As is not unusual, we thus start off with considerable confusion as to just what is the legal basis of the rejection. With the examiner it was merely “aggregation”; with the board it was aggregation with mention, only after petition for rehearing, of 35 U.S.C. § 112; with the solicitor it is in part a rejection for obviousness (which of course involved 35 U.S.C. § 103), In part a rejection based on 35 U.S.C. § 101, and 35 U.S.C. § 112 is “involved.” The only rejection we are asked by him to affirm, however, is that “holding the appealed claims unpatentable on the ground of aggregation.”

We shall return to a consideration of the basis of the rejection after a consideration of the facts on which, of course, all else depends.

What appellant discloses as his Invention is a device for filing business calling cards. Admittedly an old type of rotary file is employed. This file has a rectangular base and four fiat walls forming a rectangular box open at Its top. Centrally of the two side walls near their tops a shaft is journaled and provided exteriorly of the box with turning knobs. Inside the walls a half-cylindrical cover with closed sides and a forward lip is rotatably mounted on the shaft. When closed, the lip rests on the front wall and when open the lip rests on the back wall. The card-holding part of the filing device consists of a cylindrical spindle fixed on the shaft and provided between its ends with a disc which extends radially outward, its periphery being in the form of a circular rib. If a card is provided with a keyhole-shaped opening which extends to one edge, it can be mounted on the disc with the rib in the larger part of the hole, the slot extending therefrom accommodating the disc. Turning the knob brings the cards on the spindle into view as desired.

What appellant did in making his invention was to add to the old file a punch with which to make openings of the necessary shape in calling cards received, of course, in an unpunched condition. While admitting that there is no novelty merely in punching suitable holes in cards for mounting them on a file such as that described, appellant argues that the punch disclosed by him possesses novelty, considering the manner in which the punch is constructed and integrated with the filing device. Novelty is not questioned, nor utility.

*907 It will be appreciated that when the half-cylindrical cover of the file is open it occupies most of the space within the housing, leaving only the front and rear lower corner portions of the rectangular housing empty. Appellant builds the punch into the “waste space” of the front corner portion. Molding some ribs on the base of the housing, he mounts a punch thereon and makes a hole in the base through which punchings can drop. The punch is a simple device consisting of a flat base plate to which an overhead arm is pivoted, a spring urging the arm upwardly. The arm carries a die to punch a hole of proper shape and the die cooperates with an opening in the plate. The arm is longer than the plate and protrudes from the front wall of the housing through a vertical slot. In line with the punch base plate the front housing wall also has a horizontal slot, into which the vertical slot opens, through which cards to be punched can be inserted. Two pins on the punch plate act as stops, determining the degree of permissible insertion.

Certain features are of importance to appellant’s inventive concept, beyond the bare idea of locating the punch in the waste space in the front of the housing. The ribbed disc on the spindle which holds the cards is centered on the spindle. The punch dies are centered on the punch and the punch is centered in the housing. The slot through which cards are placed in punching position is no wider than the space available inside the file between the side walls of the cover, which is the length of the spindle.

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331 F.2d 905, 51 C.C.P.A. 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-everett-f-gustafson-ccpa-1964.