Application of Jerome H. Lemelson

397 F.2d 1006, 55 C.C.P.A. 1294
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 1968
DocketPatent Appeal 7980
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 397 F.2d 1006 (Application of Jerome H. Lemelson) 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 Jerome H. Lemelson, 397 F.2d 1006, 55 C.C.P.A. 1294 (ccpa 1968).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 7 and 10-19 of application serial No. 78,484, filed December 27, 1960, entitled “Optical Devices.” Appellant has withdrawn claims 16-19, as to which the appeal will be dismissed. As to the others we affirm.

The only issue is patentability of the claimed subject matter over the following prior art references relied on by the board:

Slayter 2,311,613
Biefeld et al. 2,723,215
Squires 2,758,342
Feb. 16,1943
Nov. 8,1955 (filed May 31, 1950)
Aug. 14,1956 (filed May 17,1952)

During the prosecution there has been argument as to whether appellant was entitled to the benefit of the filing date of an earlier application, serial No. 360,954, filed June 11, 1953. It was held he was entitled to it as to certain claims but it is no longer of importance as it will be observed that all of the above patents have. effective dates as references earlier than June 11, 1953. In re Hilmer, 359 F.2d 859, 53 CCPA 1288. —

Appellant’s “optical devices” consist simply of transparent filaments, such as glass fibers or monofilaments, embedded in symmetrical longitudinal array in transparent plastic, such as nylon. His *1008 drawings contain three figures showing a rod-like member of plastic having a circular array of glass monofilaments embedded in it just below the surface; a bundle of filaments of generally circular cross section, the filaments being surrounded by and embedded in a transparent plastic; and a flat sheet of plastic with a layer of transparent monofilaments parallel to one surface. Various proposed uses of such articles are as light-reflecting media or for transmitting light longitudinally of the filaments (piping light). Appellant’s specification explains that to function in these uses his filamentary material and the enclosing transparent plastic must have different indices of refraction. For example, he may use glass filaments of a glass having a high index of refraction and a plastic material surrounding it having a lower index of refraction but, broadly, the requirement is simply that the indices of refraction be different. Appellant appears to regard that as “the salient feature of all claims * *

Claim 7 is illustrative and reads:

7. A fiber optical device comprising in combination, a plurality of flexible, cylindrical transparent mono-filaments which are elongated in shape a sheaving surrounding said mono-filaments, said sheaving totally encapsulating said filaments and comprising a transparent flexible material having a substantially cylindrical external shape and having an index of refraction which is different from the index of refraction of the material of said encapsulated mono-filaments, said mono-filaments being arranged in a substantially symmetrical array and extending along the entire length of the device.

Claims 10-12 are directed to the sheet form and describe the filaments as glass. Claim 13 is directed to a bundle of glass filaments of high refractive index encapsulated in plastic of lower index. Claim 14 would cover a single monofilament of high refractive index glass coated with a protective light transmitting material of lower refractive index. Claim 15 is similar but calls for a bundle of monofilaments.

Slayter’s invention is concisely described in his claim 1:

1. A flexible, non-porous, transparent plastic organic material having the appearance of glass, and a plurality of attenuated glass fibers embedded in said plastic material to form a clear transparent body free from interstitial spaces or voids, said transparent glass fibers having a diameter less than 10 microns, the indices of refraction of said glass fibers and said plastic being the same, whereby the embedded glass fibers optically disappear.

He illustrates the use of his material in a drinking glass or tumbler. To make his plastic tumbler look like glass, though containing reinforcing glass fibers, he wants his fibers to be invisible. He teaches that they will be if their index of refraction is the same as that of the plastic in which they are embedded. Of course, this is the antithesis of appellant’s invention but the question here is not novelty or anticipation but obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103. In the course of teaching how to make glass fibers in plastic invisible, Slayter provides an explicit, detailed description, illustrated in his drawings, of what happens if the glass fibers and plastic have different indices of refraction — as claimed by .appellant. He says, inter alia,

* * * when light rays are directed to and through irregularly shaped bodies embedded within a transparent material having a different index of refraction, the light is broken up and diffused into many foreign refractions and reflections. This may destroy the transparency so that it is impossible to see through such material. [Our emphasis.]

The board described the pertinent disclosures of Biefeld et al. and Squires as follows:

The Biefeld et al. patent discloses textile strands, yarns and cords made *1009 of a bundle of glass fibers which extend in substantially parallel relation with each other. In order to protect the glass fibers from abrasion they are each surrounded with a plastic material some of which are the same as the plastic materials disclosed by appellant. The strand as disclosed in Fig. 4 is substantially circular in cross-section.
The Squires patent shows a plastic mullion which is reinforced with longitudinally extending glass fibers. The patent states that if the mullion is to be transparent, the indices of refraction of the materials used must be the same. However, he states that it is not necessary that the mullion be transparent, hence, it would be obvious that the indices of refraction of the materials used may be different. The mullion shown is substantially identical with appellant’s Fig. 3 disclosure.

Appellant attempts to counter Biefeld et al. by saying the “patent does not touch on the significance of differing indices of refraction,” and this is true but it was relied on by the Patent Office for its disclosure of the bundle structure of glass fibers embedded in plastic. As to Squires, appellant says that the “patent mentions differing indices of refraction with regard to the need for the presence or absence for transparency.” This is not an adequate refutation of the reference.

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Bluebook (online)
397 F.2d 1006, 55 C.C.P.A. 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-jerome-h-lemelson-ccpa-1968.