Application of Serge Virgile Beaune, Deceased, by Catherine Louise Albert Beaune, Roberte Louise Beaune, Guy Joseph Beaune and Daniel Charles Beaune, Legal Successor and Heirs

363 F.2d 893
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1966
Docket7637
StatusPublished

This text of 363 F.2d 893 (Application of Serge Virgile Beaune, Deceased, by Catherine Louise Albert Beaune, Roberte Louise Beaune, Guy Joseph Beaune and Daniel Charles Beaune, Legal Successor and Heirs) 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 Serge Virgile Beaune, Deceased, by Catherine Louise Albert Beaune, Roberte Louise Beaune, Guy Joseph Beaune and Daniel Charles Beaune, Legal Successor and Heirs, 363 F.2d 893 (ccpa 1966).

Opinion

363 F.2d 893

Application of Serge Virgile BEAUNE, Deceased, by Catherine Louise Albert Beaune, Roberte Louise Beaune, Guy Joseph Beaune and Daniel Charles Beaune, Legal Successor and Heirs.

Patent Appeal No. 7637.

United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.

July 28, 1966.

John E. Lind, Washington, D. C., for appellants.

J. Schimmel, Washington, D. C. (Fred W. Sherling, Washington, D. C., of counsel), for Commissioner of Patents.

Before RICH, Acting Chief Judge, MARTIN, SMITH, and ALMOND, Judges, and Judge WILLIAM H. KIRKPATRICK.*

SMITH, Judge.

The issue is whether the invention, a process, defined in the single claim1 on appeal is obvious under the terms of 35 U.S.C. § 103. The claim is as follows:

4. Process for the impression of multiple colors upon supports such as fiduciary papers starting from several engraved polychrome elements, comprising forming for each element an engraved copper plate reproducing the motif relative to each element, then forming for each element a plate called the impression plate comprising the motif of relative colors for the corresponding element and differing from the motif to be reproduced, transferring the motif of the impression plate upon inking rollers, cutting each of said inking rollers in order to allow to remain in relief only the motif relative to the color assigned to said roller, inking one of said rollers with a fundamental color, inking each of the other rollers with an altered or derivative color of the fundamental color, inking one of the engraved plates successively with each of said rollers, then wiping said plate so that only the engraved lines contain the ink attributed to such lines, doing the same operation for the other engraved plates by attributing to each of said plates a different fundamental color and colors altered or derivatives of said different fundamental color, superposing successively upon said support each of the engraved plates so inked while using for each of the transfers upon said support except the last a cylinder having a blanket to transfer the ink attributed to the engraved lines of each plate with a very slight pressure without deforming said support, and then effecting the last transfer directly of the engraved plate upon the support by a cylinder having a blanket pressing the support upon the engraved plate to transfer the ink attributed to the engraved lines with a pressure causing simultaneously a deformation of said support.

The prior art references relied on are as follows:

  Lee                282,995     Aug. 14, 1883
  Schultz et al.   1,379,365     May  24, 1921
  Yetter           1,581,151     Apr. 20, 1926
  Lohmann          2,085,435     June 29, 1937
  Lathey           2,303,646     Dec.  1, 1942
  British patent     610,943     Oct. 22, 1948

Appellants' invention will be considered first. It concerns a process for the impression of multiple colors on paper from several engraved elements. The embodiment described in the application and discussed in the briefs relates to three engraved elements. Each of the three engraved elements, mounted on rolls, operates successively on the paper and receives ink from sets of three mutually exclusive inkers. Each engraved element thus receives three inks, a fundamental color and two derivatives of that color. Concerning the first two engraved elements, the ink deposited on the engraved element is transferred to the paper via a roll covered with a blanket of plastic material with "slight pressure." In the third or last printing the ink on the engraved element is deposited directly on the paper. A roll exerts pressure directly on the paper as it passes over the third engraved element causing deformation of the paper.

Appellants comment in their brief on the invention as follows:

* * * the first transfers or printings are made with a very slight pressure and as they are small in number (two in the example cited in the application) the deformation of the paper is zero and consequently the registration can be exact which permits documents whose production is simple and highly protected against counterfeiting.

The transfer of the last printing element is carried out under pressure in order to obtain deformation which modifies the general design and makes more difficult still the counterfeiting of the document.

In addition to the above feature of the invention the invention also comprises a combination of the following:

1. The superpositioning upon a paper of copper plate engraved elements, each inked with a fundamental color and colors derived or obtained from the fundamental color.

2. The inking of each element by inking rollers carrying in relief the color motif attributed to such roller (the fundamental color or the derived or faded color).

3. The constitution of the motif of the colors of the printing rollers starting from a plate called the impression plate comprising the complete motif of color, this complete motif being transferred upon each of said rollers which are then engraved in such a manner so as only to allow in relief the motif of the color assigned to such roller.

Claim 4 was rejected as "unpatentable over Schultz et al. in view of the teachings of Lathey and British." Lee was "cited only to show that plate printing wherein the ink is transferred directly from the engraved plate to the paper takes place under heavy pressure between the printing plate and the impression cylinder." Lohmann was cited to show that the pressure between the intaglio type die and the resilient impression cylinder is such as to emboss the paper. Yetter was relied on "only to show it to be conventional to use different colors or shades and times [sic, tints] of a single color in intaglio printing."

The board in its opinion adopted the following reasoning of the examiner:

The British patent teaches the technique recited in lines 3 to 11 for making cut out inking rollers and indicates that they are to be used for inking intaglio plates with several colors * * Lathey has a clearer showing of inking intaglio plates with cut out inking rollers and then wiping to leave the ink only in the engraved lines. Having the colors of the inks as "fundamental" (or primary) and "altered or derivative colors", as called for in this claim, is the use of shades and times [sic, tints] of a color, in different inks, and a matter of choice in the art, as in Yetter, for example. Schultz et al. disclose multicolor printing wherein the last ink impression is made directly upon the paper by an intaglio printing plate and the preceding ones are made indirectly, by using a blanket to transfer the ink from the printing plates to the paper. This reference also indicates that intaglio printing plates may be used for these preceding impressions. It is not seen to be unobvious to one skilled in the art to have all the printing plates on the cylinders * * * of Schultz et al. as intaglio plates, to ink each of these plates with several inks, as taught by Lathey and the British patent, using inking rollers made as shown in the British patent.

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Related

Application of John C. Chupa
359 F.2d 908 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1966)
In re Beaune ex rel. Beaune
363 F.2d 893 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1966)

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