Application of Paul Cohen and Thomas A. Taverna

292 F.2d 537, 48 C.C.P.A. 1041
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 12, 1961
DocketPatent Appeal 6673
StatusPublished

This text of 292 F.2d 537 (Application of Paul Cohen and Thomas A. Taverna) 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 Paul Cohen and Thomas A. Taverna, 292 F.2d 537, 48 C.C.P.A. 1041 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the rejection by the examiner of claims 12 and 13 of appellant’s application for a patent on a method and apparatus for making and using thin flexible plastic garment, bags.

“12. The method of making and applying individual garment bags to articles of clothing hanging on garment hangers, each garment bag being open at the bottom and closed at the top so that it may be pulled downwardly onto the garment, comprising: the steps of, heat sealing a continuous flat tube of thin heat-sealable transparent plastic film along pairs of lines generally transverse to the tube length and spaced apart therealong approximately the length of the garment bags being made, each pair of lines of heat sealing comprising a first sealed portion extending upwardly and inwardly at less than 90° from one side edge of the tube toward but stopping short of the center line of said tube and second sealed portion extending from the opposite *538 side edge of said tube at the same transverse zone and at a similar angle inwardly and upwardly and stopping short of the center line of said tube, the unsealed space between the inner ends of said sealed portions being wide enough for the hook of a garment hanger to pass through, said sealed portions lying generally parallel to the top shoulders of a garment hanger positioned with its hook extending through said unsealed space, [2] perforating said tube directly above each of said heat sealed portions to provide a transverse tear-off line which intersects a hanger hook which is to extend through said unsealed space, said tear-off line comprising lines of perforation extending respectively from the opposite side edges of said tube to permit the complete severing of the tube at said tear-off line, and [3] winding said tube into a roll; and, the steps of, [4] mounting said roll with the garment bag portion constituting the leading end of said tube being positioned above the zone where a hanger with an article of clothing thereon is to be supported by its hook, [5] supporting a garment upon a hanger hanging from an upright support projecting from below with the garment being free of obstructions above it and at its sides, [6] unwinding said roll and drawing the end bag thereof downwardly over the hanger and garment thereon, the hook of the hanger being passed through the unsealed opening between the inner ends of said sealed portions at the top of the bag, and [7] tearing the end bag from the roll solely along the lines of perforation to completely separate the bag from said tube with the clothing therein.
“13. In equipment for applying garment bags to garments, the combination of, [8] an upright support having hanger supporting means at the upper end thereof to support a garment hanger with a garment thereon while permitting the garment to be free of obstructions from the top and sides, [9] a convenient-to-handle supply of garment bags comprising a continuous flat tube of thin heat-seal-able plastic film wound lengthwise into a roll, said tube being divided into a plurality of separable garment bag portions the top of each of which is interconnected with the bottom of the garment bag portion which is wound beneath it on the roll by an interconnecting portion which comprises an array of perforations providing a tearoff portion generally transverse of the side edges of the tube, said roll being adopted to be rotatably mounted so that said tube may be unwound from the roll by pulling in a downward direction upon the outer free end of the tube, each garment bag portion having a pair of heat-sealed lines extending respectively from the opposite side edges of the tube and each extending upwardly and toward the center line of the tube at the same angles from the respective side edges but stopping shoi*t of said center line whereby the two layers of the tubes are sealed together along the heat-sealed lines to form the top of the garment bag portion with the top edge portions substantially parallel to the top shoulder lines of a garment positioned upon a hanger within a garment bag formed by the garment bag portion, said heat-sealed lines having an opening between their adjacent ends through which the hook of a garment hanger may extend, the two' layers of the tube lying against each other but not being connected together other than along said heat-sealed lines and at their side edges where they are integral, [10] means mounting said roll for unrolling with the free end of the *539 •tube being positioned substantially about a garment supported by a hanger upon said hanger-supporting means, whereby the tube may be unrolled by a downward pulling movement upon the garment bag portion constituting the leading end of the tube while said garment bag portion is being drawn over a garment supported upon a hanger which is held by said hanger supporting means, and the center top portion of the hanger is pushed through the opening between the ends of the heat-sealed lines, and whereby the garment bag portion may then be completely separated from the tube along said perforations to provide a garment bag upon the garment and with the end of the tube presenting the next garment bag portion for application to another garment.” 2

The references relied on by the examiner and the board are:

Blessing 2,479,552 Aug. 23, 1949
Denton 2,609,983 Sept. 9, 1952
Blessing 2,639,566 May 26, 1953
Piazze 2,759,648 Aug. 21, 1956

As the claims point out, appellant’s invention relates to a method of making and applying individual garment bags to articles of clothing hanging on garment hangers, and to apparatus by which the method can be practiced. It is contemplated that the method and apparatus would be used by dry cleaning establishments to protect freshly cleaned garments before and after they have been delivered to the customer.

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Related

In re Busch
251 F.2d 617 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
292 F.2d 537, 48 C.C.P.A. 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-paul-cohen-and-thomas-a-taverna-ccpa-1961.