In re Beswick's Appeal

16 App. D.C. 345, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5301
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1900
DocketNo. 139
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 App. D.C. 345 (In re Beswick's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Beswick's Appeal, 16 App. D.C. 345, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5301 (D.C. Cir. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents refusing a patent for an improvement in musical notation.

The rejected claims are nine in number, as follows :

“ 1. In musical notation characters, signs or symbols individually adapted to designate tones having lengths equal to a third or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone.

“2. As an improvement in musical notation characters^ signs or symbols individually adapted to designate tones having lengths equal to a third -or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone, in combination with characters, signs or symbols adapted to designate half, quarter, eighth or like tone lengths.

3. As an improvement in musical notation, notes adapted to designate tones having lengths equal to one-third or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone, and comprising notes having heads or stems and provided with different numbers of dots associated with their stems, substantially as described.

“4. The improvement in notation, consisting of notes individually adapted to designate tones having lengths equal to a third, or a divisional part thereof, of a whole tone, and constructed with heads and stems and also with dots associated with their stems, in combination with notes adapted to indicate half, quarter, eighth or like tone lengths, and constructed with heads and stems.

“5. As an improvement in musical notation, rests individually adapted to designate silences having a length equal to one-third or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone.

“ 6. As an improvement in musical notation, rests adapted to designate silences, having a duration equal to one-third, or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone, and [347]*347comprising different numbers of dots connected together, substantially as described.

“ 7. As an article, a music-score in which are employed characters, symbols or signs, individually adapted to designate tones or rests, or both, having lengths equal to one-third or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone.

“8. As an article, a music-score in which are employed notes or rests, or both, adapted to designate tone lengths or silences having lengths equal to one-third or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone, and formed substantially as described.

“9. As an article, a music-score containing characters adapted to designate tones or rests, or both, having lengths equal to one-third or an even divisional part thereof, of a whole tone, in combination with characters adapted to designate tones or rests or both, having lengths equal to one-half or an even divisional part thereof, of such whole tone.”

The references cited in the rejection of these claims by the special examiner are Grove’s Dictionary of Music, Vol. 1, p. 455, subject, “Dot;” Idem., Vol. 4, p. 173, subject, “Triplet,” and the musical publication, “Tam O’Shan ter,” by William Warren.

1. As shown by the references to Grove, in what is called the ancient system of measured music, “the rythm was at first always triple — that is to say, the accent fell upon the first beat of every three, and each note was of the value of three of the next lower denomination.” Vol. 1, p. 455.

And, as stated by appellant, the tones and rests designated are one-third, one-ninth, one-twenty-seventh, and the like parts of a whole tone, making a system in which the tones and rests are successive divisional thirds of a whole tone.”

2. In the modern notation each note is equal to two of the next lower denomination, and the division of a note into three is not provided for, although in the ancient “ measured music” it was the rule. Grove’s Dictionary, Vol. 4, p. 173.

[348]*348Here, as stated by appellant, “the notes and rests designate tones and pauses of one-half, one-fourth, one-eighth, and like similar lengths making a system in which the tones and rests are successive divisional halves of the whole tone.”

3. By reason of the division into halves in the modern or common notation, “ notes worth one-third of the next longer kind have to be written as halves, and are then grouped in threes by means of curved lines with the figure 3 usually placed over the middle note as an additional distinction. Such a group is called a ‘triplet,’ and is executed at a slightly increased speed, so that the three triplet notes are equal to two ordinary notes of the same species. ‘ Triplets ’ may be formed of notes of any kind and also of rests, or of notes and rests together.” Grove, Vol. 4, p. 173 ; and -see illustrations.

The appellant calls the triplet “ a musical anomaly consisting usually of three notes of like denomination grouped together and arbitrarily allotted the time two of them should have, so that when the music is rendered, each tone of the group has but two-thirds of the time to which its denominational value entitles it.”

It would seem, however, that, as claimed by the examiner, “the ‘triplet’ in musical notation has the value of one-third of the note of the next higher denomination. It must therefore be a third, a sixth, a twelfth, a twenty-fourth, etc., of a whole note.”

The system of applicant, for which patentable novelty is claimed, is thus described in the brief filed on her behalf:

“Instead of dividing the whole tone successively by two, as is done in the ordinarily employed system just described, she divides it first by three, and then successively by two. In this way the tones expressed are whole tones, third tones, sixth, twelfth, twenty-fourth and like tones; with corresponding rests, of course. As symbols or characters for expressing these tones and pauses, applicant has for convenience selected a system of notes and rests corresponding [349]*349in general form and construction to those previously described as embodied in the system of notation now in common use. The third tone she designates by a note similar to the ordinary half-note — that is, a hollow oval head and a vertical stem — with a-dot at the end of the stem. The sixth tone she designates by a note similar to the quarter-note, with a dot at the end of its stem; the twelfth note by a similar note having two dots on its stem; the twenty-fourth and like tones by similar notes, each with one more dot added to the stem; all as shown in the drawing incorporated in the transcript of record between pages 28 and 29. Pauses or silences of corresponding length are conveniently designated by' rests involving similar features of construction, as shown in Pig. 2 of the drawings.”

It appears, therefore, that the applicant divides the whole tone first by three, as in the ancient system of measured music, and then successively by two, after the method of the modern notation. Thus she obtains the expression of whole tones and one-third, one-sixth, one-twelfth, one-twenty-fourth tones, etc.

After having defined the “time” value of the “triplet,” as hereinabove stated, the examiner said :

“ The result in musical effect of the use of the triplet, etc., in musical notation must therefore be precisely the same as that of applicant’s third, sixth, twelfth note, etc. The only difference between the two is that applicant’s third, sixth, etc., notes are designated by one or more dots

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Bluebook (online)
16 App. D.C. 345, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-beswicks-appeal-cadc-1900.