Application of Rudolf Brinkmann to Broxten

339 F.2d 450, 52 C.C.P.A. 871
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7241
StatusPublished

This text of 339 F.2d 450 (Application of Rudolf Brinkmann to Broxten) 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 Rudolf Brinkmann to Broxten, 339 F.2d 450, 52 C.C.P.A. 871 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

*451 RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 7 — 11 in application serial No. 837,436, filed September 1, 1959, for “Suspending Means for Filing Folders and the Like.” No claim has been allowed.

The invention relates to a simple one-piece hanger for suspending folders, notebooks, etc., and is best understood by referring to appellant’s Figs. 1, 2 and 5 reproduced below:

*452 Claims 7 and 10. are illustrative and read as follows, reference numerals having been inserted where appropriate to explain and identify the significant portions of the above figures:

“7. A hanger for filing folders [10] and the like, comprising, a flat body [1], integral folder engaging hooks [3, 14] at one edge providing slots [9, 5] opening in the same direction, and an integral flat rod engaging tongue [7] spaced from the other edge to provide a slot [8] opening in a direction opposite the direction in which the slots [9, 5] of the folder engaging hooks [3, 14] open.
“10. A hanger for storing filing folders [10] on a single rod [15] of angular cross section tilted in a position oblique to a horizontal plane, said folders [10] having front and rear covers joined by a binder portion having an outwardly opening fold [11] whose walls are connected by fastener elements [12, 13] constituting spaced abutments, said hanger comprising, a thin flat elongated body [1] having spaced hooks [3, 14] at one and the same edge whose entrance ends are disposed in the same direction to embrace a related pair of said abutments [12,13] and provide non-tilting engagement between the hanger and the folder, and a hanger tongue [7] on the edge of said elongated body [1] opposite said hooks [3, 14] and spaced from said edge and also spaced from the fold [11] to provide an entrance end disposed opposite to the entrance ends of said hooks [3, 14] to detach-ably engage said rod [15].”

Claim 8 is dependent upon claim 7 and calls for a label holder (19) at the end of the body (1) opposite the rod-engaging hook (7). Claim 9 recites essentially the same features as claim 7, viz., body (1), hooks (3, 14), tongue (7), but differs in form and recites that the filing folders are provided with “spaced abutments” (12, 13) with which the hooks (3, 14) engage. Claim 11 is similar to claim 10 with respect to the folders and rod but describes the hook (7) and its relation to the folder in greater detail.

Appellant’s brief says:

“The advantages of the invention over the prior art are several. It provides a simple, easily manufactured, one-piece hanger member rather than a hanger comprising a plurality of parts such as the prior art shows. The hanger and related single supporting rod are easy to use and need not be handled with a great degree of care, because the folder engaging hook members provide a quick, positive connection with the staples or other fasteners normally employed with expandable back folders. The single suspension tongue which extends above the back of the folder when the hanger is in assembled relation therewith, provides a simple and positive means of placing the folder on the angularly disposed supporting rod and removing it therefrom.”

The references relied on are:

Caposi (French) Addn. 67,911 to Patent No. 1,106,060 793,602 773,007 Oct. 14, 1957 Apr. 16, 1958 Apr. 17, 1957 Columbia (Br.) Brinkmann (Br.) *

*453 All of the claims stand rejected as unpatentable over (1) Caposi alone and (2) Columbia in view of Caposi or Brinkmann. Appellant, who waived oral hearing, refers in his brief to a rejection of the claims for being “incomplete and indefinite,” but the solicitor expressly stated in his brief and again at oral hearing that since the examiner’s answer and the board’s opinion were both silent on this point, the alleged rejection “may be considered moot.”

Appellant contends, inter alia, that the Patent Office erred in “using one reference to reject certain claims and then using that same reference combined with others to reject the same claims.” While we agree with appellant that if a claim is fully anticipated by one reference, it is unnecessary also to reject on a combination of references, we find nothing legally wrong with the manner in which the rejections were presented. The sole authority cited by appellant is In re Leflar, 85 USPQ 377, in which a Patent Office Supervisory Examiner condemned multiple references “where they tend to confuse the issue.” However, we fail to understand how confusion could arise here.

Since we believe the rejection on Columbia in view of Caposi or Brinkmann to be dispositive of the issues before us, we will consider only this rejection.

Caposi (Fig. 4) relates to a file suspension device comprising a body (stippled area) having upper and lower parallel edges. The upper edge has oppositely disposed downwardly-opening notches 2 which engage over the vertical flanges of suspension rods 3. The lower edge of the body is provided with a pair of hooks 16 which support the file 12. An exposed edge of the body (see Fig. 2) has a metal plate 5 for carrying a card holder 7.

PA 7241

Columbia also relates to a file suspension device and shows (Fig. 6) a U-shaped suspension hook 2 having a pair of parallel arms 2a, the lowermost of which engages a folded portion of a file or is secured thereto (Fig. 5) by means of a plate 4 having eyelets 5, or it “may be slid into hems or pockets on the file edge.” (Emphasis ours.) The upper arm engages a supporting bar 3 (Fig. 2) *454 which is horizontal along its length (transverse to the plane of the figure) and inclined in the direction opposite to that of the possible fall of the file to' provide greater stability,

Brinkmann relates to folders for use in suspension filing systems and shows (Fig. 7) a single-piece file folder carrier 17 provided with four hook noses 18 for engaging staples 5 and metal paper fasteners" (not shown) passing through the re-entrant spine S of the folder (Fig. 1). The carrier 17 is used to suspend the folder between horizontal rails.

The board, after agreeing with the examiner that all five claims on appeal are drawn to a hanger per se, held that it would be obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to substitute a pair of spaced hooks, such as those designated 18 in Brinkmann’s Fig. 7 or designated 16 in Caposi’s Fig. 4, for engagement of the file folder in place of the eyelets provided for that purpose in the hanger of Columbia.

The gist of appellant’s contention is .that—

“The suggested modification of Columbia in the manner proposed by the Examiner [and board] misses by a wide margin even remotely approximating or suggesting the structure set forth in claims 7-11 * * *.

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Bluebook (online)
339 F.2d 450, 52 C.C.P.A. 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-rudolf-brinkmann-to-broxten-ccpa-1964.