Application of George M. Rapata

370 F.2d 584, 54 C.C.P.A. 948
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7714
StatusPublished

This text of 370 F.2d 584 (Application of George M. Rapata) 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 George M. Rapata, 370 F.2d 584, 54 C.C.P.A. 948 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of appealed claims 1 6 through 16. The position of the Patent Office is that the claimed invention is obvious in view of the prior art, 35 U.S.C. § 103.

The claimed invention is a plastic fastener. The prior art relied on is as follows:

Whitted 2,976,345 Mar. 21, 1961
Rapata 2,836,214 May 27, 1958
Herr et al. (German) 1,006,733 Apr. 18, 1957
Kearns 2,402,287 June 18, 1946

The examiner held the claimed invention unpatentable over Herr in view of Whitted and, further, over Kearns in view of Rapata. In affirming the rejection the board states it “applied the art in a manner somewhat different from *585 that used by the Examiner.” The appellant makes no objection. Bather he argues that this demonstrates that there is disagreement as to what the references do teach. We find that the appealed claims were properly rejected in view of the art of record and the decision of the board must therefore be affirmed, An embodiment of the appellant’s invention and the fasteners disclosed in the principal references of Kearns and Herr are depicted as follows:

Appellant

Herr

*586 ~ppe11ant (cont.)

Kearn

Picture The single independent claim on ap- peal

states: 6. A device of the type described comprising a one-piece member of tough deformable and resilient plastic material, said member including a head portion for overlying one side of the work structure, and a plurality of ax- ially extending shank sections sepa- rated by slot extending axially from separate free entering ends thereof for insertion through an apertured work structure, said shank sections having radially solid walls between said slots and having outer surfaces presenting a cross-sectional configuration of prede- termined dimensions, said member hav- ing a passageway extending axially therein and partially defined by inner surfaces of said shank sections and adapted to accommodate an element in- sertable therein for expanding said shank sections, said shank sections each including a plurality of axially ex- tending circumferentially narrow and spaced compressible ribs projecting laterally outwardly from said outer surfaces thereof and having outer edges defining a cross-sectional con- figuration having transverse dimen- sions greater than said predetermined transverse dimensions for engagement with a margin of a work structure aperture when the device is applied to the work structure, each of said ribs extending substantially to said *587 for insuring engagement with an inner edge of the aperture regardless of the thickness of the work structure, portions of said ribs within a work structure aperture being deformed and collapsed when said shank sections are expanded for creating generally radially extending shoulders between said portions of said ribs and additional portions of the ribs located outwardly of said aperture for engaging behind the work structure and cooperating with said head for positively securing the device with respect to the work structure and said expanding element and at least a portion of said inner surfaces being relatively tapered for causing outer end portions of said outer surfaces as well as said ribs to be located radially outwardly of said first mentioned cross-sectional configuration and for engaging behind the work structure when the shank sections are expanded.

Whitted discloses a fastener having a head and a fluted shank portion. The flutes, which extend along the shank to the head, become deformed when the fastener is installed to create radially extending shoulders as locking means. Rapata also discloses the feature of an expanding shoulder to provide locking means.

Whitted

Fig. 1

Rapata

The board reasoned as follows:

* * * The basic concept of ribs on an expansible shank of a fastener being deformed upon expanding said shank and forming lock shoulders is found in Figs. 8 and 9 of Rapata. While the ribs 14 of Herr’s element * * * are not deformed when applied to the single plate shown in Fig. 1 of that patent, it is apparent that these ribs will be deformed and provide locking shoulders when associated with two plates, as in Kearns, for precisely the same reason as in this case and in Figs. 8 and 9 of the Rapata patent. Thus, the Herr * * * structure so used would provide a deformation of the ribs in the second plate and form locking shoulders thereagainst. Moreover, even with a single plate, the patent to Rapata would render obvious the extension in Herr * * * of the ribs and the slots in the shank to the head of the rivet so that the ribs can be crushed and also form locking shoulders, as is taught by Rapata. Appellant has generally argued the lack of showing in Herr * * * and in Figs 8 and 9 of Rapata of a plurality of ribs on *588 each shank section, as is required by claim 6, which is the base claim for the remaining claims on appeal, but there is no clear indication of the particular advantages afforded by the same over the single rib on each shank portion shown by Herr * * * for example. However, it is our opinion that it is obvious to one skilled in the art to provide two or more ribs in place of the single rib shown on each shank section of Herr to attain thereby the obvious result of increased locking shoulders. While the patent to Whitted does not disclose a split, expansible shank, it does disclose plural ribs with each rib having a locking shoulder in the assembly, as is apparent from Fig. 1 of that patent, and from Fig. 3 of Whitted there are more than one rib for each quarter section of the shank.
The tapered structure of the ribs set forth in some of the claims depending from claim 6 are shown by Herr * * * and the polygonal cross section of the shank recited in claims 12 and 15 is not particularly relied on by the appellant for a patentable' distinction and, further, is common, the Examiner referring generally to the art of record for this aspect.

Both the appellant and the solicitor discuss extensively the Herr reference. The appellant argues:

Thus Herr fails completely to teach or suggest (1) the concept of providing ribs adapted to be compressed within a workpiece aperture and formed around an edge thereof for providing retaining shoulders, (2) the concept of obtaining the combination of both shoulders formed on the ribs and shoulders provided by expanding the solid surface of the shank sections for retaining the fastener while facilitating expansion of the fastener, particularly in relatively thick work structures, (3) the provision of a plurality of the aforementioned ribs on a shank section, (4) the provision of the aforementioned ribs on each

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370 F.2d 584, 54 C.C.P.A. 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-george-m-rapata-ccpa-1967.