In re DeReamer

154 F.2d 149, 33 C.C.P.A. 910, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 104, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 426
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1946
DocketNo. 5102
StatusPublished

This text of 154 F.2d 149 (In re DeReamer) 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 DeReamer, 154 F.2d 149, 33 C.C.P.A. 910, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 104, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 426 (ccpa 1946).

Opinion

Hatpield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the Primary Examiner rejecting claims Nos. 1 and 5 in appellant’s application for a patent for an invention relating to a molded pulp pad “having rows of spaced apart cuplike substantially square receiving seats” thereon.

Claims numbered 4 and 1 in appellant’s application were allowed by the Board of Appeals.

Claim 1 is illustrative of the appealed claims. It reads:

1. A packing material in the form of a cushion pad embodying therein a rectangular sheet-like body portion having rows of spaced apart substantially, square cup-like egg receiving seats thereon, each of a relatively shallow inverted pyramidal shape and including four full counterpart sides which meet at the corners of the seat and slope downwardly and inwardly from their upper base ends toward the center of the seat where they coaet to form the bottom thereof, the mid portion of each side of each seat constituting the egg end engageable area therefor.

The allowed claims contain limitations which are not included in, the claims on appeal, and the board was of opinion that those limitations warranted the allowance of those claims.

The reference is: Brigham et al., 2,168,317, August 8, 1939.

In appellant’s .structure, filler strips are spaced between upper and lower pads and separate the pad into the usual cells. Each of the cuplike egg supports or seats is substantially square and of a ¿¡hallow inverted pyramidal shape, including, as stated in clairii 1, “four full counterpart sides which meet at the corners of the seat and slope [911]*911downwardly and inwardly from their upper base ends toward the center of the seat where they coact to form the bottom thereof, the mid portion of each side of each seat constituting the egg end engage-able area therefor.” It is the square cuplike receiving seat which is the material part of the claims in issue.

The reference patent relates to packing material to be used in packing eggs or other fragile articles, and it is stated in the patent that eggs are packed in layers in cases or'crates; that each layer is supported, by a sheet of material known as a “flat”; and. that each egg in each layer is separated from other eggs in the layer by strips, referred to as “ ‘fillers’ or ‘cell cases.’ ”

The patentees state:

In our present invention, we arrange every alternate diagonal row of the in individual eggs supports of the flat of the Chaplin Patent No. 1,987,525 at right angles to the diagonal rows which are not rearranged and thus produce through the sheet groups of four supports wherein two opposite supports have their major axis disposed in another diagonal direction of the sheet and at right angles to said first named pair.

The patentees were not attempting in their application to describe anything new in individual egg supports, but referred to the Chaplin Patent No. 1,987,525, issued January 8,1935, as disclosing the .individual egg supports. The patentees’ invention relates to the manner, in which the egg supports, disclosed in the Chaplin patent, are disposed on the pad, and, as argued by counsel for appellant, the claims of the reference patent call for “upstanding elongated article supports.”

It is apparent from the drawings in the reference patent that the egg supports do not' differ in any material degree from the structure shown in the Chaplin patent.

The patentee Chaplin states:

My support consists in tlie main of a structural contouring which as here shown is diamond-shaped in appearance *. * * but which may be otherwise shaped accordingly as the contours of the object to be packed may vary.

The patentee further states :

It will be observed that the supports fabricated in the sheet of wet laid fibre are not really diamond-shaped but consist essentially of two opposed oppositely angled structural formations.

The egg supports of the Chaplin patent are shallow and of inverted pyramidal shape, and have four sides which slope downwardly and inwardly toward the center of the seat. Two diametrically opposed corners in the patentee’s structure have cut-out portions or notches, which cause the egg receiving seat to appear to be diamond-shape, and the patentee states that in addition to providing means for introducing air at the bottommost portion of the egg, the notches provi de “a flexible or yielding section between the points” or edges of the walls immedi[912]*912ately adjacent the notches so that when the points move outwardly the notches or slots open up, and when the.points move inwardly the notches “automatically grow narrower.”

Claim 2 of the Chaplin patent reads:

2. A support for a fragile object, comprising two oppositely disposed pairs of side walls, each pair flexibly connected witli each other at one end, a flexible connection between the other ends of said walls for outward and inward movements of said other ends, and a cradle suspended between said side walls for raising and lowering movements accordingly as said side walls are moved outwardly or inwardly by the insertion of a large or a small object into said cradle.

In rejecting the appealed claims, the Primary Examiner stated that the reference patent disclosed a pad having “substantially square cup-like egg receiving seats thereon,” each seat being “of a relatively shallow inverted pyramidal shape and including four sides * * * which slope downwardly and inwardly from their upper base ends toward the center of the seat”; that the reference patent does not disclose four full counterpart sides, as called for by the appealed claims; that each of the egg receiving seats in the patent supports “the egg in the same manner as the seat in applicant’s device”; and that it required a mere change in shape to make the egg receiving seats “of smaller diameter thereby permitting the sides to be substantially ‘full counterpart’ as defined in these claims.”

On appeal, the Board of Appeals in its original decision stated that appellant’s egg receiving seats are of inverted pyramidal shape; that the arrangement of the egg receiving seats in the patent is somewhat different from that in appellant’s structure; that in the reference patent the seats are pyramidal in shape “having straight sides but two of the opposite corners of said sides are incomplete by reason of the large inset spaces” or notches; and that in the patent the egg rests on, and is supported at, four points, although the egg receiving seats or depressions do not have full counterpart sides as in appellant’s structure.

In that decision, the board allowed claim 7 because of certain limitations contained therein, but affirmed the decision of the examiner as to claims 1, 4, and 5.

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154 F.2d 149, 33 C.C.P.A. 910, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 104, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dereamer-ccpa-1946.