In re Blanchard

82 F.2d 402, 23 C.C.P.A. 998, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1936
DocketNo. 3621
StatusPublished

This text of 82 F.2d 402 (In re Blanchard) 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 Blanchard, 82 F.2d 402, 23 C.C.P.A. 998, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 67 (ccpa 1936).

Opinion

Lenroot, 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 claims 1, 2, 3, 7 to 12, inclusive, 14, 15, and 17 to 20, inclusive, of appellant’s application. Certain claims were allowed by the examiner.

Claims 1, 10,17, and 20 are illustrative and read as follows:

1. The combination with a lathe comprising a bed, a head-stock, a spindle, and a pulley thereon, of a support beneath, spaced from and supporting said bed, [999]*999power transmitting mechanism below saicl support ancl comprising a shaft, bearings for said shaft, and an overhanging pulley on said shaft, outside said bearings and beneath the first-mentioned pulley, and a belt connecting said pulleys, said support being provided with a single opening through which both leads of said belt extend, thereby to permit removal and replacement of said belt to be accomplished by passing said belt bodily through said opening.
10. The combination with a lathe comprising a bed, a head-stock, a spindle, and a pulley, of a support beneath ancl spaced from said bed, a pulley beneath said support, a belt connecting said pulleys, and means in the space between saicl support ancl said bed for adjusting saicl bed toward and from said support.
IT. The combination with a lathe comprising a bed, a head-stock, a spindle, and a pulley thereof, of a housing beneath said bed, a transmission mechanism within said housing, said mechanism comprising driving and driven shafts projecting from said housing, a pulley on said driven shaft, a belt connecting said pulleys, a motor having a shaft parallel with saicl driving shaft, means including- a flexible, driving member connecting said motor shaft to said driving shaft, means supporting said motor on said housing- for movement toward and from said driving- shaft, and means for holding said motor in fixed position to maintain the tension of said flexible, driving member.
20. The combination of a lathe comprising a bed, a head-stock thereon, a spindle journaled in said head-stock, a pulley on said spindle, a support for said bed beneath the latter, a transmission mechanism beneath and supported by saicl support ancl including- driving and driven shafts, a pulley on said driven shaft, a belt connecting said pulleys, a motor having a shaft, a pulley on said motor shaft, a pulley on said driving shaft, a belt connecting said pulleys on said motor shaft and on said driving shaft, and means providing for removal ancl replacement and tensioning of said belf.s without disassembling any part of saicl motor, saicl transmission mechanism or said lathe.

The references cited are:

Hunziker, 122,768, January 16, 1872.
AYoerd, 144,178, October 28, 1873.
Wrigley, 434,011, August 12, 1890.
Bouillon, 1,407,834, February 28, 1922.
Langhammer, 1,469,226, October 2, 1923.
Ingham et al., 1,501,346, July 15, 1924.
Schellenbacli, 1,535,346, April 28, 1925.
Cockburn, 1,070,139, May 15, 1928.
Schroder, 1,708,903, April 9, 1929.
Jarvis, 1,874,755, August 30, 1932.

Appellant’s application relates to a precision bench lathe, the bed of which is small enough to be positioned upon a large bench; the motor ancl gear shift used in driving the head-stock are positioned below the bench. The details of the alleged invention are sufficiently-described in the above-quoted claims.

The examiner combined a large number of the cited references to produce appellant’s structure, ancl held that such combination of elements would be obvious to one skilled in the art ancl did not involve invention.

[1000]*1000We will not undertake to describe all of the cited references utilized by the examiner, as we deem it unnecessary to do so for the purposes of deciding the issues before us.

The Board of Appeals in its decision stated:

The examiner has been at some pains in attempting to meet the various claims on appeal by combining certain references of record. It is perhaps true it is not especially clear how various features in the patented constructions could be combined or substituted for other mechanism without considerable modification of structure. AVe, however, look at the matter in a broader light. It is our view that what appellant Iras done is to incorporate certain features ■old in the prior art in a type of lathe not in ordinary use but old in the art and has produced a somewhat different design rather than features of patentable merit. For instance, the provision of suitable means to allow a continuous belt to be withdrawn seems to us more or less obvious with the type of lathe under discussion. Also the arrangement for adjustment of the two driving belts between the head-stock and the gear shift mechanism and between the gear box and the motor is either not new in itself or does not appeal to us as presenting patentable novelty. In our opinion this is a case where it is necessary only to point out in the prior art the features alleged to be novel and show lack of either novelty or invention and not attempt to find all tire elements recited in the various claims in any one patent or to explain how certain features found in different patents could be combined. . (Italics ours.)

It Avill be noticed that all of the claims before us are in the form of combination claims, and the only question is whether the combinations set out in the claims required the exercise of the inventive faculty.

Claims 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, and 9 embrace elements that permit the use of an endless belt for driving the lathe spindle. Appellant points out that the use, for that purpose, of a belt in which the two ends are are brought together and fastened to each other by a leather lacing or a metallic fastener would, in passing over the pulleys cause vibration interfering Avith the fine precision of. the lathe. An endless belt is therefore desirable to avoid such vibration. It was held by the Patent Office tribunals that the structures sliOAvn in certain of the references, particularly that in the patent to Schellenbach, disclosed a similar arrangement of mechanism which permitted the use of endless belts, and that therefore this element of appellant’s combination claims would be obvious to one skilled in tbe art, without the exercise of invention. We are not in accord with this Anew, and Ave must disagree with the Anew that the structure disclosed by Schellenbach would permit the use of an endless belt. The Solicitor for the Patent Office contends that the impediment to the removal of the belt shown by Schellenbach is only a detachable hood, but we are not of that opinion. What the solicitor terms a detachable hood is merely a covering for the head-stock, but tlie head-stock itself clearly would prevent the removal and replacement of an endless belt. With respect to the other references disclosing means [1001]*1001for removing endless belts from the structures disclosed, we do not think that one skilled in the art would get the suggestion therefrom that such means could be employed in appellant’s combination, and.

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Bluebook (online)
82 F.2d 402, 23 C.C.P.A. 998, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-blanchard-ccpa-1936.