Berry Brothers Corporation, and Cross-Appellee v. Paul L. Sigmon, Trading as Sigmon Hosiery Manufacturing Company, and Cross-Appellant

317 F.2d 700, 137 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 590, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5377
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1963
Docket8816
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 317 F.2d 700 (Berry Brothers Corporation, and Cross-Appellee v. Paul L. Sigmon, Trading as Sigmon Hosiery Manufacturing Company, and Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry Brothers Corporation, and Cross-Appellee v. Paul L. Sigmon, Trading as Sigmon Hosiery Manufacturing Company, and Cross-Appellant, 317 F.2d 700, 137 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 590, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5377 (4th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Chief Judge.

The subject of this suit is a patent for a “sock package,” that is to say, a package for the display of men’s socks. The package consists of two socks, stretched one over the other on a stiff insert, so that the customer is presented with an appearance simulating the ankle and heel of a foot. The owner of the patent brought suit for alleged infringement. The defendant asserted invalidity of the patent and denied the alleged infringement. The District Court upheld the patent’s validity and found infringement within a narrow scope, as to certain products of the defendant (Defendant’s Exhibit 25), but concluded that most of the sock packages produced by the defendant did not infringe the plaintiff’s patent (particularly Plaintiff’s Exhibits 34 and 36). 1 Each side has appealed from the rulings adverse to it.

John C. Berry was issued patent No. 2,696,295 for the sock package upon his application filed on July 22, 1954. Berry Brothers Corporation of Greensboro, North Carolina, assignee of John C. Berry, is the plaintiff and Paul L. Sigmon, t/a Sigmon Hosiery Manufacturing Company of Hickory, North Carolina, is the defendant.

The problem to which the patent addresses itself is the attractive display of socks. In the conventional manner of displaying such merchandise for sale prior to 1953, there was a disadvantage in that it was difficult for the customer to visualize the appearance of the sock as it would be when in stretched, wearing condition. Also the units forming a pair were stitched or taped together and it was not unusual for a sock to be separated from its mate. With the advent of stretch socks, their elastic properties aggravated the problem, for when not under tension the socks were wrinkled, shrunken and unattractive in appearance.

Claim 1 of Berry’s patent reads as follows:

' “1. A sock package comprising a flat substantially stiff strip insert of sheet material having a configuration resembling that of a foot and ankle in vertically extended position, said insert having a substantially straight leading edge, and upper and lower trailing edges, said trailing edges connected to one another by a rearwardly projecting heel portion, a first sock enveloping and carried by *702 said insert in a flat slightly tensioned state, and a second mating sock enveloping said insert and said first stocking in a flat, slightly tensioned state.”

The italicized language, about which more will be said later, was added to meet objections of the Patent Examiner.

Claim 2, the only other claim with which we are here concerned, differs from claim 1 only in that “the insert is provided with a folding line positioned transverse to the long axis of said insert to permit the folding of the stocking package upon itself.”

Patent Office History Shortly after Berry filed his application, there appeared in a trade paper an advertisement of the Interwoven sock package, which then seemed to Berry to infringe his device. He promptly requested the Patent Office to make his application special and its consideration was advanced. It turned out that Interwoven actually practiced the patent later granted to Power, No. 2,748,930, which was similar to Berry; but, as it mounted only one sock on each insert, the plaintiff now concedes that the Interwoven package does not infringe his patent.

In its original form Berry’s application recited that his invention related to a stocking package, but at the instance of the Examiner the application was amended to limit it to the specific environment of a package for the display and marketing of men’s socks and to exclude women’s stockings. Throughout the application, where the word “stocking” appeared, it was stricken and the word “sock” was interlined but, through an obvious inadvertence, in one instance, the word “stocking” was not changed. We attach no particular significance to this oversight because from the context the intention is plain beyond doubt.

Initially rejecting the application, the Examiner assigned several reasons. He thought the Berry package unpatentable over the prior art, citing particularly Aberle, No. 1,992,799, 2 and Palmers’ Austrian patent, No. 152,918. 3 The Examiner expressed the view that it would not be invention to mount a second sock or stocking on such inserts as shown by Aberle or Palmers, or to stretch one stocking over another already stretched on an insert in “the manner in which a plurality of garments are sometimes placed on a single clothes hanger to conserve space.” He raised further objections to the patentability of the Berry device. “The arrangement of the foot and ankle and the location of the fold line,” the Examiner said, are “merely matters of mechanical choice and not patentable differences especially in view of Thus 4 and Wadsworth”. 5

In response, the applicant’s attorney made a number of changes in the application and argued at interviews in the Patent Office and in written communications the uniqueness and inventive characteristics of the Berry package. He emphasized that placing two socks on a single insert in a tensioned state permits the maintenance of the socks thereon; and that this is of advantage to the customer “since it places the socks in a wearing state giving him a clear idea as to how they will appear when worn” and permits a better examination of the merchandise. Another characteristic which the attorney stressed is the construction of the insert, in which the angle and foot portions are “in a vertically extended position, with the leading or *703 forward edge straight.” Further, he pointed out that Berry uses a substantially stiff insert that will tension and support the two socks “in a substantially erect state and in a flat, laid-out condition.” Conceding that each element was old, he claimed for the Berry pack that the cumulative effect of these characteristics in combination was to form a new and useful article.

Addressing himself to the Examiner’s citations to Aberle and Palmers, the attorney said that Aberle was closer than Palmers to Berry, but that even Aberle would not stand in the way of a patent. In distinguishing the Berry package from Aberle, he argued that Aberle is not directed to the formation of a sock package, but rather to means to maintain ladies’ hosiery in a proper state when packaged in a box and the insert therefor is “a thin stiff paper.” He further pointed out that in Aberle the ankle position is angularly disposed with respect to the leg portion, which is contrary to the applicant’s insert; and that Aberle’s device does not disclose or suggest the positioning of a stocking on an insert in a tensioned state, or the positioning of two separate pieces of footwear on a single insert to complete a formal stocking package. The Examiner was still not persuaded that Berry had a patentable invention over the prior art.

There followed further interviews with the Assistant Examiner and the Acting Primary Examiner, in the course of which “helpful suggestions” were made. Thereupon the attorney drafted and submitted a second supplemental amendment, saying:

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No. 9112
330 F.2d 164 (Fourth Circuit, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
317 F.2d 700, 137 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 590, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-brothers-corporation-and-cross-appellee-v-paul-l-sigmon-trading-ca4-1963.