In Re Anita Dembiczak and Benson Zinbarg

175 F.3d 994, 50 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1614, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 8109
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedApril 28, 1999
Docket98-1498
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 175 F.3d 994 (In Re Anita Dembiczak and Benson Zinbarg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Anita Dembiczak and Benson Zinbarg, 175 F.3d 994, 50 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1614, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 8109 (Fed. Cir. 1999).

Opinion

CLEVENGER, Circuit Judge.

■ Anita Dembiezak and Benson Zinbarg appeal the rejection, upheld by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, of all pending claims in their Application No. 08/427,732. See Ex Parte Dembiczak, No. 96-2648, slip op. at 43 (May 14, 1998). Because the Board erred in sustaining rejections of the pending claims as obvious under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (Supp.1998), and for obviousness-type double patenting, we reverse.

I

The invention at issue in this case is; generally speaking, a large trash bag made of orange plastic and decorated with lines and facial features, allowing the bag, when filled with trash or leaves, to resemble a Halloween-style pumpkin, or jack-o’-lantern. As the inventors, Anita Dembiezak and Benson Zinbarg (collectively, “Dem-biezak”) note, the invention solves the long-standing problem of unsightly trash bags placed on the curbs of America, and, by fortuitous happenstance, allows users to express their whimsical or festive nature while properly storing garbage, leaves, or other household debris awaiting collection. Embodiments of the invention — sold under a variety of names, including Giant Stuff-A-Pumpkin, Funkins, Jack Sak, and Bag-O-Fun — have undisputedly been well-received by consumers, who bought more than seven million units in 1990 alone. Indeed, in 1990, the popularity of the pumpkin bags engendered a rash of thefts around Houston, Texas, leading some owners to resort to preventative measures, such as greasing the bags with petroleum jelly and tying them to trees. See R. Piller, “Halloween Hopes Die on the Vine,” Hous. Chron., Oct. 19,1990, at 13A.

The road to profits has proved much easier than the path to patentability, however. In July 1989, Dembiezak filed a utility patent application generally directed to the pumpkin bags. In a February 1992 appeal, the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (“the Board”) reversed the Examiner’s rejection, but entered new grounds for rejection. Dembiezak elected to continue prosecution, filing a continuation application to address the new grounds for rejection. Thereafter, the invention made a second appearance before the Board, in April 1993, when the Board both sustained the Examiner’s rejection and again entered new grounds for rejection. Again, a continuation application was filed (the instant application). And again the Examiner’s rejection was appealed to the Board, which sustained the rejection in a May 14, 1998, decision. See Dembiezak, slip op. at 43.

A

The patent application at issue includes claims directed to various embodiments of *997 the pumpkin bag. Claims 37, 49, 51, 52, 58 through 64, 66 through 69, and 72 through 81 are at issue in this appeal. Though the claims vary, independent claim 74 is perhaps most representative:

74. A decorative bag for use by a user with trash filling material, the bag simulating the general outer appearance of an outer surface of a pumpkin having facial indicia thereon, comprising:
a flexible waterproof plastic trash or leaf bag having
an outer surface which is premanufac-tured orange in color for the user to simulate the general appearance of the outer skin of a pumpkin, and having
facial indicia including at least two of an eye, a nose and a mouth on the orange color outer surface for forming a face pattern on said orange color outer surface to simulate the general outer appearance of a decorative pumpkin with a face thereon,
said trash or leaf bag having first and second opposite ends, at least said second end having an opening extending substantially across the full width of said trash or leaf bag for receiving the trash filling material,
wherein when said trash or leaf bag is filled with trash filling material and closed, said trash or leaf bag takes the form and general appearance of a pumpkin with a face thereon.

All of the independent claims on appeal, namely 37, 52, 72, and 74, contain limitations that the bag must be “premanufac-tured orange in color,” have “facial indi-cia,” have openings suitable for filling with trash material, and that when filled, the bag must have a generally rounded appearance, like a pumpkin. Independent claims 37, 52, and 72 add the limitation that the bag’s height must at least 36 inches. Claim 72 requires that the bag be made of a “weatherproof material,” and claim 74, as shown above, requires that the bag be “waterproof.” Claim 52 recites a “method of assembling” a bag with the general characteristics of apparatus claim 37.

B

The prior art cited by the Board includes:

(1) pages 24-25 of a book entitled “A Handbook for Teachers of Elementary Art,” by Holiday Art Activities (“Holiday”), describing how to teach children to make a “Crepe Paper Jack-O-Lantern” out of a strip of orange crepe paper, construction paper cut-outs in the shape of facial features, and “wadded newspapers” as filling;
(2) page 73 of a book entitled “The Everything Book for Teachers of Young Children,” by Martha Shapiro and Valerie Indenbaum (“Shapiro”), describing a method of making a “paper bag pumpkin” by stuffing a bag with newspapers, painting it orange, and then painting on facial features with black paint;
(3) U.S. Patent No. 3,349,991 to Leonard Kessler, entitled “Flexible Container” (“Kessler”), describing a bag apparatus wherein the bag closure is accomplished by the use of folds or gussets in the bag material;
(4) U.S. Patent No. Des. 310,023, issued August 21, 1990 to Dembiczak (“Dembiczak ’023”), a design patent depicting a bag with a jack-o’-lantern face;
(5) U.S. Patent No. Des. 317,254, issued June 4, 1991 to Dembiczak (“Dem-biczak ’254”), a design patent depicting a bag with a jack-o’-lantern face; and,
(6) Prior art “conventional” plastic lawn or trash bags (“the conventional trash bags”).

Using this art, the Board affirmed the Examiner’s final rejection of all the independent claims (37, 52, 72, 74) under 35 *998 U.S.C. § 103, holding that they would have been obvious in light of the conventional trash bags in view of the Holiday and Shapiro references. The Board determined that, in its view of the prior art, “the only difference between the invention presently defined in the independent claims on appeal and the orange plastic trash bags of the prior art and the use of such bags resides in the application of the facial indicia to the outer surface of the bag.” Dembiczak, slip op. at 18. The Board further held that the missing facial indicia elements were provided by the Holiday and Shapiro references’ description of painting jack-o’-lantern faces on paper bags. See id. at 18-19. Dependent claims 49 and 79, which include a “gussets” limitation, were considered obvious under similar reasoning, except that the references cited against them included Kessler. See id. at 7.

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175 F.3d 994, 50 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1614, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 8109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anita-dembiczak-and-benson-zinbarg-cafc-1999.