Application of Francis Lockwood O'Brien

265 F.2d 940, 46 C.C.P.A. 851
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1959
DocketPatent Appeal 6425
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 265 F.2d 940 (Application of Francis Lockwood O'Brien) 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 Francis Lockwood O'Brien, 265 F.2d 940, 46 C.C.P.A. 851 (ccpa 1959).

Opinions

WORLEY, Acting Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the Primary Examiner’s rejection of certain claims of appellant’s application for a patent on a musical instrument, on the ground of lack of invention over the prior art.

Appealed claims 4 and 6 read:

“4. A musical instrument comprising a keyboard having a key for each note of the scale, three series of strings, each containing a string for each note of the scale, one of said series having its strings tuned at standard intervals according to the notes which each string represents at standard pitch, another of said series having its strings tuned at identical intervals to the first series but each string being a definite fraction of a semitone lower than its corresponding string of the first mentioned series, and the third series having its strings tuned at identical intervals of the first series, but each string being a definite fraction of a semitone higher than its corresponding string of the first mentioned series, and mechanism operated by each key for striking the related string of each series simultaneously.
“6. A device according to Claim 4 in which the fractional differences in pitch are both substantially % of a semitone.”

The references relied on are:

Muller 512,048 January 2,1894.
Hammond 2,159,505 May 23,1939.
Kannenberg 2,287,105 June 23,1942.
Hanert 2,509,923 May 30,1950.

[942]*942Appellant’s application discloses a piano in which the hammer actuated by each key strikes three strings simultaneously. One string of each group is tuned to a note of the scale, another is tuned a fraction of a semitone, preferably about one-third, below that note, and the third string is tuned the same degree above the note. This arrangement is said to produce a richness of tone which cannot be obtained with a conventionally tuned piano.

The Muller patent shows a piano having three strings for each key, the strings. being struck simultaneously by the hammer, but the strings of each group are tuned to the same pitch.

The patents to Hammond, Kannen-berg, and Hanert all relate to electric organs, and each discloses an arrangement in which each key produces not only a note of the scale, but also a vibration of a slightly higher frequency and one of slightly lower frequency. Only the Hammond patent discloses exact values for such frequencies, and there the basic note is approximately, though not exactly, midway between the higher and lower frequencies, but is not spaced from them by as much as one-third of a semitone as in appellant’s preferred instrument.

The examiner’s first rejection was on the Muller patent alone. That was reversed by the board. The second rejection, affirmed by the board and involved in the instant appeal, was based on Muller in view of Hammond, Kannenberg, or Hanert on the ground that it would not require invention, in view of any of the last three patents, to tune the strings of Muller’s piano in the manner set forth in the appealed claims.

In its decision the board made the following statement:

“We have studied the subsidiary art and find that Kannenberg and Hanert are cumulative only relative to Hammond. We will, therefore, confine our further attention to Hammond and Muller.”

No mention of the Kannenberg and Hanert patents is made in appellant’s reasons of appeal, and in view of that fact the Solicitor of the Patent Office, relying on In re Wesselman, 127 F.2d 311, 29 CCPA 988; In re Boyce, 144 F.2d 896, 32 CCPA 718; and In re Glocker, 153 F.2d 119, 33 CCPA 789, contends that the board’s decision should be affirmed without consideration of its merits.

The Wesselman decision does not appear to be pertinent here since it merely holds that a reason of appeal containing nothing but a general assignment of error does not satisfy the statutory requirement that appellant must specifically set forth his reasons of appeal.

In the Boyce case the examiner based his rejection on six references, only one of which was mentioned by the board in entering a general affirmance. Appellant, in his reasons of appeal, referred only to the reference mentioned by the board. It was held that the board’s action was, in effect, an affirmance of all grounds of rejection employed by the examiner, and, that since appellant had not alleged error in the rejection on those references not mentioned by the board, the decision must be affirmed, and it was not necessary to consider the merits of the case. It is to be noted, however, that one of the references not mentioned by the board was relied on by the examiner as the principal reference, and that the board did not state that any of the references were merely cumulative. Apparently the board merely affirmed one of several independent grounds of rejection without specifically considering the others.

In the Glocker case the examiner rejected the claims on “either the patent to Keefer or the patent to Brelle in view of the patent to Glocker.” The board, in affirming, relied on Glocker only, stating that it was unnecessary to discuss the other patents “as they are cumulative only.” It was held that if this court should disagree with the board as to the rejection on the Glocker patent, the [943]*943board’s decision could not be reversed without considering the examiner’s rejection based on the other two patents in view of Glocker, and since those other patents were not in the record and were not referred to in the reasons of appeal, the board’s decision was affirmed without consideration on the merits.

It is to be noted that in both the Boyce and Glocker cases the ground of rejection discussed by the board was distinct from those which it did not discuss, since a different basic reference was used in each case. Clearly, therefore, a reversal of one ground would not necessarily involve a holding that the other grounds also should be reversed.

In the instant case, on the other hand, the Muller patent is the only basic reference involved and the secondary references Hammond, Hanert, and Kannen-berg, all of which are included in the record, were cited to show the same feature, namely, the producing, in an electric organ, of a note made up of a plurality of frequencies sounded simultaneously. Accordingly, only a single issue is presented, whichever secondary reference is considered; and, if it should be necessary to reverse the rejection on Muller in view of Hammond, as to which appellant expressly assigns error in his reasons of appeal, it would follow that the rejections on Muller in view of Hanert and Kannenberg were also in error.

We are of the opinion that appellant’s reasons of appeal are sufficient. Those reasons, while they expressly mention only the Muller and Hammond patents, definitely advance the contention that it is not proper to combine disclosures of a piano and an electric organ as a basis for rejecting appellant’s claims. Obviously that contention is applicable to the Hanert and Kannenberg patents as well as to the Hammond patent.

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Related

Application of Friedrich Gruschwitz and Albert Fritz
320 F.2d 401 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1963)
In re Gruschwitz
320 F.2d 401 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1963)
Application of Francis Lockwood O'Brien
265 F.2d 940 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
265 F.2d 940, 46 C.C.P.A. 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-francis-lockwood-obrien-ccpa-1959.