Application of Leo L. Lechene

277 F.2d 173, 47 C.C.P.A. 923
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1960
DocketPatent Appeal 6487
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 F.2d 173 (Application of Leo L. Lechene) 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 Leo L. Lechene, 277 F.2d 173, 47 C.C.P.A. 923 (ccpa 1960).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Appellant here appeals from the decision of the Board of Appeals which affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 1 through 3 and 7 through 9, the only claims remaining in the application. The invention disclosed relates to a method (claims 1-3) of applying fibers to the cores of rotary brushes such are used in large street sweeping apparatus, and to a bristle element therefor (claims 7-9).

Claims 1 and 8 are illustrative and read as follows:

“1. A method of applying brush stock to a cylindrical core of a rotary brush, the core being provided with a continuous spiral groove in its surface throughout its length, the method comprising forming the brush stock, consisting of a plurality of loose fibers, into an oblong layer in which the fibers are disposed parallel to each other and crosswise to the length of the layer, sewing the fibers into a mat by thread means applied to the fibers crosswise midway their length, applying the midportion of one end of the mat over the spiral groove at one end of the core, imparting to the core a rotary movement about its axis and applying over the mat crosswise thereto and directly over the groove a cable one end of which is attached to said end of the core, holding the cable under tension and causing it to be fed to the core as it rotates to force the midportions of the individual fibers progressively with the rotation of the core into the groove to the end of the core, and securing the cable thereto.
“8. As an article for the formation of bristles in a power-driven rotary ground-sweeping brush, a band of multiplicity of stiff, resilient fibers of vegetable origin disposed crosswise to the length of the band, all the fibers being of the same length and being bound together by thread means crosswise midway their individual lengths, the band comprising a plurality of fibers in depth and being of uniform thickness from one end to another, individual fibers being adapted to be bent upon themselves into a hairpin formation.”
The references relied upon are:
“Dickinson 181,524 Aug. 29, 1876
Phillips 642,484 Jan. 30, 1900
Damm and
Wobbe, Jr. 1,279,282 Sept. 17, 1918
Toplitz 1,398,245 Nov. 29, 1921
Sage 2,122,359 June 28, 1938
Plumeau
et al. 2,323,420 July 6, 1943”

The present invention is essentially an improvement on the process shown in Plumeau et al. of making rotary brushes for mechanical street sweepers in which the broom straws are secured in the spi *175 ral groove of a rotary core by a cable. The improvement which appellant discloses relates to the way in which the broom straws are fed to the drum. In Plumeau et al., the broom straws are manually fed by the operator and laid in the bight between the cable and the rotary drum. The broom straws are fed in separate bunches which are manually distributed as to thickness in the bight. This operation requires stopping the machine each time after one bunch is forced into the groove by the cable and starting the machine when the operator has grasped another handful of the broom straws and is ready to feed the straws to the bight between the cable and the drum.

As distinguished from the Plumeau et al. disclosures, appellant forms the broom straws into an elongated mat in which the broom straws are arranged transversely of the mat and held in place by a single line of stitching which runs the length of the mat midway of the ends of the broom straws. This enables appellant to feed an entire strip continuously to the machine instead of manually feeding separate bunches and intermittently stopping and starting the machine as in Plumeau et al.

Appellant asserts that the improvement over Plumeau et al. results in the production of an improved brush without thin spots in that the thickness of the broom straws are more uniformly distributed in the pre-sewn mat than is possible in the manual feeding process of Plumeau et al. This is asserted to result in the production of a brush which is stronger and which has a longer service life than the brushes produced by the Plumeau et al. teachings. In addition to this improvement in the brush itself, appellant’s method, utilizing the pre-sewn mat of broom straws, is alleged to reduce by two-thirds the time required to attach the straws to the broom core.

The references do not disclose either appellant’s method or article, so novelty is present. Utility of appellant’s invention is established. However, 35 U.S.C. § 103 requires, in addition, that a patent may not be obtained on such an invention “if the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the subject matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which said subject matter pertains.” The examiner and the Board of Appeals found appellant’s invention to have been obvious and for this reason refused to allow the claims here on appeal.

Appellant asserts that the decision of the Board of Appeals is in error and argues that weight should be given to the commercial advantages inherent in his invention as showing that his invention was not obvious. In support of this position, appellant has directed attention to the fact that the Damm et al. reference had been issued 34 years and the Phillips reference had been issued for 52 years at the time the present application was filed. Such time lapses in the evolution of the art, while evidence which should be considered as bearing on the issue of obviousness of an invention, are not conclusive. It is pertinent to note, also, that Plumeau et al. issued in 1943 and that appellant filed his application in 1952. Since appellant’s invention is, at best, an improvement over Plumeau et al., the time lapse in the evolution of this art is but 9 years. This, however, is of little significance. The fact that a given improvement appears after a long time lapse does not of itself prove that such change was unobvious. In re McCarn, 212 F.2d 797, 41 CCPA 905.

When we compare the disclosures of the prior art with the claims on appeal to ascertain precisely what it is that appellant asserts distinguishes his invention from the prior art, we are unable to find legally sufficient support for the position taken by appellant that the claimed invention is unobvious.

As previously pointed out, appellant’s difference over Plumeau et al. resides in preforming elongated sewed mats of the broom straws and feeding such mats to the Plumeau et al. machine. Damm and Wobbe were concerned with a problem of *176 bristle feeding and, like appellant, fed a preformed oblong layer of bristles of uniform thickness to a cylindrical core having a spiral groove therein.

Appellant asserts that Damm and Wobbe lay their fibers or bristles on parallel spaced flat boards and that glue is applied along the line of the spacing.

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Bluebook (online)
277 F.2d 173, 47 C.C.P.A. 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-leo-l-lechene-ccpa-1960.