Application of Schuelke

201 F.2d 937, 40 C.C.P.A. 841
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1953
DocketPatent Appeal 5954
StatusPublished

This text of 201 F.2d 937 (Application of Schuelke) 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 Schuelke, 201 F.2d 937, 40 C.C.P.A. 841 (ccpa 1953).

Opinion

COLE, Judge. .

We are concerned here with an attachment for barber tools claimed to be a new and useful improvement originated and first invented by the appellant. Application to the Patent Office praying that a patent issue therefor was made and after appropriate proceedings thereon, the Board of Appeals affirmed the examiner’s rejection of the only claims remaining in the case, -Nos. -9 to 15, inclusive. That decision is the basis for this appeal.

During the oral argument before this court, the appeal from the decision of the board rejecting claims Nos. 9, 13, and 14 was withdrawn and motion was .made by the appellant’s attorney to dismiss the same. Accordingly, claims 10, 11, 12, and 15 remain as the only ones before us. They are in the following language which is quite descriptive:

“10. A barber’s tool comprising a pair of blades, each having a cutting edge, a pivot pin detachably connecting said blades, an elongated receptacle conforming to the shape of one of said blades and having an opening in one side disposed adjacent the cutting edge of the blade on which the same is applied, an opening in said receptacle receiving said pivot pin for retaining said ■receptacle relative to said pair of shears, and means for supporting said receptacle entirely on one of said blades.
“11. In combination with a blade having a cutting edge, an elongated receptacle conforming to the shape of the blade, a first clip at one end of said receptacle yieldingly embracing one end of the blade, a further clip carried by the other end of the receptacle yieldingly embracing the blade, said receptacle having a longitudinal opening in one side disposed adjacent the cutting edge of the blade and having an air vent at one end, said receptacle being supported solely by said blade.
“12. In combination with a blade having a cutting edge, an elongated receptacle conforming to the shape of the blade, a first clip at one end of said receptacle yieldingly embracing one end of the blade, a further clip carried by the other end of the receptacle yieldingly embracing the blade, said receptacle having a longitudinal opening in one side disposed adjacent the cutting edge of the blade and having an air vent at one end, said receptacle being supported solely by said blade, said air vent being disposed adjacent said further clip.
“15. An attachment for barber’s tools comprising an elongated relatively flat and hollow receptacle having first and second end portions, the first end portion of said receptacle being tapered, the second end portion of said receptacle being curved and having an air vent therein, said receptacle having an elongated opening in one side, a first attaching arm at the tapered end portion of said receptacle, and a second attaching arm at the curved end portion of said receptacle, the curved end portion of said receptacle having an aperture therein adapted to receive the pivot pin of a pair of shears.”

Claims 10, 11, and 12 obviously apply to the attachment affixed to a barber’s tool, while claim 15 defines the attachment as such. The sole reference relied upon in rejecting the claims in question is the patent to the inventor La Mere (No. 2,292,453, issued August 11, 1942). The patent to Kaufmann, to which we will subsequently refer, issued February 22, 1927 (No. 1,618,-713).

Having the benefit of a most thorough and painstaking analysis by the officials of *939 the United States Patent Office and the discussion thereof by the attorney for the appellant, it is not difficult with the involved patent applications and accompanying illustrations before us to understand what is involved. The gamut run by the applicant left little unsaid in his behalf. This experience included a rejection in part of the original claim because of the Kaufmann reference, not now of consequence, and objection by the examiner with appropriate reasons to other phases thereof; amendments by the applicant in response thereto with more detailed descriptive remarks and modification to some extent of the setup first presented; action thereon by the examiner, presenting for the first time the La Mere reference, which with further reliance on the Kaufmann patent resulted in total rejection of all claims. This was met with further amendments to the application, including cancellation of a number of claims and the addition of others. The remarks attached thereto discussed at length, in addition to previous approach in the same direction, the claims as then framed along with appellant’s version of the Kaufmann and La Mere patents. Again the examiner reasoned against the applicant in what was termed his final action. Additional amendments followed which were entered for the purpose of placing the case in proper form for appeal to the Board of Appeals. A lengthy brief by the applicant was addressed to the board in which almost every conceivable phase of the controversy was set forth. The art and the claims, including those subsequently withdrawn before us as indicated, were discussed and applicant’s conception thereof as contra-distinguished from that found by the examiner was presented, considerable attention being given to the La Mere reference. The primary examiner added a further comment to his original decision, which was evidently influenced by the arguments made to the board therein. Here the hoard appears with its decision from which we quote to this extent:

“The patent to La Mere discloses, in Figs. 11, 12 and 13, a hair suction disposal attachment in combination with a conventional pair of scissors. It includes an elongated receptacle 74 mounted on the upper scissor blade 72 so as to present an opening running longitudinally to the blade, clip means 77 and 78 projecting laterally therefrom adjacent its ends detachably securing it to the blade member, and an air vent at its rear and to which a flexible suction tube 76 is attached.
“The claims stand rejected as being unpatentable over the La Mere patent. While the Examiner recognizes that there is a difference in structure between the hair disposal attachment defined in the appealed claims and that disclosed by the reference patent, he feels that the line of reasoning used by the Courts in In re Rodman et al., 161 F.2d 232 [34 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1051], and In re Hittson, 636 O.G. 690, 85 USPQ 244 is just as applicable to the state of facts involved in this case; namely, that it is obvious to one skilled in the art with the reference patent before him to modify the reference structure in the manner called for by the appealed claims without the exercise of invention.
“Appellant contends that the reference patent does not disclose the structure recited in the claims and therefore fails as an anticipation of the-structure defined and the features- capable of being accomplished by said/ structure.
“Upon making a careful analysis of the subject matter defined in the appealed claims, we have reached the conclusion that the structure disclosed: by the reference patent is the mechanical equivalent of appellant’s structure.. It appears to us that said two hair disposal attachments do substantially the’ same work when mounted on a barber’stool in substantially the same way and', accomplish substantially the same results, and that the differences in structure merely involve features that cannot be patentably differentiated from-each other.

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Related

In Re Trester
36 F.2d 133 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1929)
In re Morgan
64 F.2d 991 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1933)
In re Rodman
161 F.2d 232 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
201 F.2d 937, 40 C.C.P.A. 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-schuelke-ccpa-1953.