In re Adamson

92 F.2d 717, 25 C.C.P.A. 726, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1937
DocketNo. 3858
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 F.2d 717 (In re Adamson) 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
In re Adamson, 92 F.2d 717, 25 C.C.P.A. 726, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 213 (ccpa 1937).

Opinion

Leneoot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, affirming a decision of the examiner rejecting all of the claims of appellant’s application. Ten claims are involved, numbered 13 to 22, inclusive; claim 13 is illustrative of all the claims in issue and reads as follows:

13. A tailored business suit formed primarily of a one-way stretch woven fabric having the softness, flexibility and appearance characteristic of suiting material and made of inelastic warps and wefts having interposed at intervals between the inelastic wefts one or more elastic wefts of a diameter not appreciably larger than the inelastic wefts, said elastic wefts being constructed and arranged to impart to the fabric a small degree of stretch in the body encircling direction of the fabric.

[727]*727The references cited are:

Field, 1,919,292, July 25, 1933.
Heltewig (Australian), 16,067, July 3, 1929.

Appellant’s application relates.to an outer garment snob as a suit of clotb.es, constructed from a woven fabric consisting of inelastic .warp threads, and both inelastic and elastic weft threads. The fabric is placed in the suit in such position that the elastic wefts impart a small degree of stretch in the body encircling direction of the fabric.

The patent to Field relates to undergarments, such as corsets, girdles, etc., comprising a knitted or woven fabric made of two-way .stretch material, by the use of elastic yarn made of rubber filaments incorporated in both the warp and weft of the fabric. Both warp and weft are composed principally of' elastic threads, but the patent-states : • '

* * * Relatively non-elastic tlireads may cooperate with at least one of ■said groups of threads to limit the stretch ,of the material in one of said ■directions, or possibly in both. Two examples of such material are shown in Figs. 6 and 7, and will be described below in more detail.
When material of the character shown in Fig. 6 is employed for the main panels of the garment, it is preferable to have the non-elastic strands, which limit the stretching of the material in the direction of their length, extend up and down in the panels, to control their stretching in this direction. However, these strands may run crosswise, ■ or even diagonally. Thus, for example, there are shown in Figure 2 non-elastic strapds 25' running crosswise of the wearer, said non-elastic strands limiting the stretch around the body of the wearer. ,

The preamble of the patent contains the following:

* * * it has been proposed to make garments, adapted to be worn about the hips, of sheet rubber, but these are unsatisfactory for ordinary use on account of obvious reasons, principally lack of porousness. On the other hand, suggestions have been made to the effect that pieces of material which are ■elastic in one direction could be sewed or otherwise secured together so that parts of the garment are able to stretch in one direction and parts in other directions. However, for one reason or another, none of the proposals in the art has proven satisfactory. (Italics ours.)

The patent to Heltewig discloses a woven fabric in which elastic threads are incorporated in the weft only. The patent states some of the uses for which the fabric is suitable, such as varix bandages, knee protectors for sport, mittens, etc. The claim of the patent, however, is very broad and reads as follows:

1; A rubber-elastic woven, or knitted fabric in which rubber-threads at stretched state are shot as weft alternately with yarn-wefts into the warp or tow of loops adjusted wider in accordance with the rubber-stretching.

[728]*728The examiner in his statement recited several grounds of rejection; as follows:

The invention in this case does not appear to reside in garments. No garment structure is recited in the claims. The structure recited is for the most part that of the fabric. Such expressions as “outer garment” and “tailored business suit” are' too indefinite to convey any particular structure, and each of the claims was rejected as being indefinite.
# 5*« ift # * Hi Jjc v
It is not apparent that applicant has, by selecting a material of the character disclosed for an outer garment or business suit, done anything of a radical nature to warrant invention, and each of the claims accordingly was further rejected as calling for lack of invention, for this reason.
Each of the claims was further rejected on the art above explained. While Field discloses the use of an inherently stretchable elastic fabric in an undergarment, it would not involve invention to employ such a fabric in an outer garment. Field faced applicant’s problem of constructing a fabric that would conform to the body of the wearer upon assuming different postures and he solved it as did applicant, by employing fabric embodying elastic threads. Therefore, in view of this teaching of Field it would not involve invention to employ such a fabric in an outer garment, whether it be a suit, a vest, a pair of trousers, or a dress.
While the claims do not specifically disclose that the elastic threads lie onVy in the weft of the fabric, nevertheless, the patent to Heltewig discloses this feature and the claims accordingly were further rejected on Field in view of Heltewig.

The Board of Appeals in its decision stated:

All of the appealed claims are directed to a garment such as a business or tailored suit made from woven fabric having practically no stretch in the vertical direction but having a considerable stretch circumferentially. No special type or style of suit is claimed. The novelty, if any, must necessarily reside in the particular kind of cloth used. As described, this cloth is made of the usual woolen thread for the warp and weft, but interposed at suitable intervals in the wefts are elastic threads having a rubber core wrapped with fiber so as to resemble ordinary woolen thread. These elastic threads are put under slight tension so as to hold the other weft threads in a slightly slack condition.
Each of the patents to Field and Heltewig shows that is is old to make up woven fabric in the manner set forth in these claims, but it is clear from the description, that the fabric disclosed in these patents was intended for use mainly in making under-garments, bandages, mittens, socks, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 F.2d 717, 25 C.C.P.A. 726, 1937 CCPA LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adamson-ccpa-1937.