Application of Percival H. Sherron

263 F.2d 339
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1959
DocketPatent Appeal 6379
StatusPublished

This text of 263 F.2d 339 (Application of Percival H. Sherron) 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 Percival H. Sherron, 263 F.2d 339 (ccpa 1959).

Opinion

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 claims 41, 43, 48, 49, and 50 of appellant’s application for a patent on an improvement in a telephone booth, on the ground of lack of invention over prior art.

The following are typical of the appealed claims:

“41. In a telephone booth a ceiling structure comprising upper and lower horizontal panels extending over substantially the entire booth ceiling and spaced apart to provide a chamber for electrical and telephone wiring, means downwardly displaceably connecting substantially a major portion of said lower panel to the remainder of the structure, illuminating means mounted in said chamber, and removable light transmitting means mounted in said dis-placeable portion of said lower panel below said illuminating means, said displaceable panel portion upon displacement thereof providing an opening for access from the interior of the telephone booth to the entire space within said ceiling chamber and to said illuminating means and electrical and telephone wiring within said ceiling chamber.
“49. In a telephone booth including side walls and a folding door in the front of the booth, a ceiling structure supported by said side walls, said ceiling structure comprising upper and lower horizontal panels spaced apart to provide a chamber for electrical and telephone wiring, means displaceably connecting a portion of said lower panel to the remainder of the structure, said displaceable panel portion extending for substantially the entire width of said lower panel transversely of the booth and extending for substantially a major portion of the depth of said lower panel extending from the front to the back of the booth, the front edge of said displaceable panel portion being positioned to be openable when the booth doors are open, illuminating means mounted in said chamber, and removable light transmitting means mounted in said displaceable panel portion below said illuminating means, said displaceable panel portion providing, upon displacement thereof, an access opening for installation of electrical and telephone wiring and for electrical apparatus in said ceiling chamber.”

The single reference relied on is: Kuntz, 1,979,072, October 30, 1934.

Appellant’s application discloses a telephone booth ceiling structure comprising upper and lower horizontal panels which are spaced to provide a chamber adapted to receive electrical wiring and apparatus including a light bulb for illuminating the booth. The upper panel is provided with a removable access plate which is held in place by means of bolts. A large portion of the lower panel, extending from one side to the other, is hinged to a fixed portion of the panel, so that it may be swung downwardly into the booth to provide access to the entire space between the panels. Removably secured in *341 the hinged panel portion is a glass plate which, in the closed position of that portion, lies below the light bulb so that light may be transmitted to the interior of the booth.

The Kuntz patent discloses a telephone booth having a ceiling comprising spaced upper and lower panels with a plate re-movably secured over an opening in the upper one to provide access to the space between the panels, which space contains electrical wiring and apparatus including a light bulb. The socket in which the bulb is received lies above an opening in the lower panel and the bulb extends into the opening. A plate having a removable translucent portion which normally lies below the bulb is hinged to the lower panel so that, when in closed position, it covers the opening, but the plate may be swung downwardly into the booth to provide access to the bulb. The size and location of the plate, however, are such that it does not provide access to the entire space between the panels. On the contrary, Kuntz provides a plate surrounding the bulb for the express purpose of preventing unauthorized persons from tampering with the other elements in the space between the panels.

It was the opinion of the Patent Office tribunals that Kuntz discloses appellant’s general combination of a telephone booth having a top comprising upper and lower panels arranged to provide a space containing a light bulb and other electrical apparatus, together with a hinged plate having a light-transmitting portion and covering an opening in the lower panel which, when the plate is removed, permits access to a portion of the space between the panels.

The board held that no invention would be required to enlarge the opening and cover plate of Kuntz to provide access to that entire space, and further stated that the opening shown by Kuntz “is clearly large enough, we believe, to enable insertion of one’s hands into the chamber between the ceiling panels and to reach electrical wiring in the ceiling.”

We are unable to agree with the statement last quoted, since it is clear, in our opinion, that Kuntz does not intend to permit access through the opening in the lower panel to any portion of the ceiling space except that immediately surrounding the light bulb. Accordingly, so far as the board’s rejection may be based on a literal anticipation of any of the appealed claims by the Kuntz structure, we cannot sustain it.

We agree, however, with the concurring holdings of the board and the examiner that the exact size and shape of the access opening and its hinged cover are matters of choice and design and that there would be no invention in the broad concept of enlarging these portions of the Kuntz device to provide access to the entire space between the panels. The idea of providing access openings of various kinds and sizes in the casings which enclose apparatus of many sorts is conventional, and in such a state of the art, it cannot be successfully contended that the mere idea of providing such an opening of any desired size and at any desired place is a patentable one, at least in the absenr' of a definite showing of some new and unexpected result.

It is true that Kuntz, who was evidently concerned with an indoor telephone booth, preferred to permit unlimited access to his ceiling space through the upper panel only. It appears to us, however, that if such access were found to be inconvenient, as it probably would be in the case of an outdoor booth, where a weather-tight roof is necessary, it would be an obvious expedient to provide a large covered opening in the lower panel.

Appealed claims 41 and 48 distinguish over Kuntz only in their recitation of the size of the access opening and its closure means. For the reasons hereinbefore stated, we conclude that this does not constitute a patentable distinction, and the board’s decision as to those claims will accordingly be affirmed.

Claim 43 adds to the structure recited by claim 41 a “means downwardly displacing a portion of said upper panel to the remainder of the structure” in order *342 to provide access to the ceiling space through that panel, as well as through the lower one. Kuntz provides an upwardly displaceable portion in his upper panel which may be removed to provide access to the ceiling space and it would not, in our opinion, require invention to make that portion downwardly displace-able if it were found desirable to remove it from below rather than from above.

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83 F.2d 292 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1936)

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263 F.2d 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-percival-h-sherron-ccpa-1959.