In Re Farrand

49 F.2d 1035, 18 C.C.P.A. 1452
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1931
DocketPatent Appeal 2760
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 F.2d 1035 (In Re Farrand) 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 Farrand, 49 F.2d 1035, 18 C.C.P.A. 1452 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

GARRETT, Associate Judge.

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 six claims in an application for patent on alleged new and useful improvements in sound control apparatus. Two claims were allowed. Of those rejected, No. 14 seems fairly representative: “14. A loudspeaker comprising a support, a dia^ phragm mounted in said support, said diaphragm comprising a large direeUaeting cone and a flexible rim connecting the edge of the cone to the support and forming with the walls of the cone an abrupt bend, and electro-magnetic actuating means for the cone comprising a field magnet having opposed polar faces forming an air gap between them and an armature eo-axially connected with the cone and which is reeiproeable in said air gap in a path parallel with said polar faces.”

Three references are cited, to wit:

Hopkins, 1,271,529, July 2, 1918.
Hopkins, 1,271,527, July 2, 1918.
Siemens (Br.), 4,685, of 1877.

As stated and as shown by the claims, the application relates to sound control apparatus. A physical demonstration before us was of a device used in radio receiving sets. The drawings disclose a loudspeaker having a support-carrying ring to which is attached a conic diaphragm. The diaphragm is eleetro-magnetieally actuated by a coil, said coil being eo-axially connected with the cone or diaphragm by a rod. The coil is movable or floatable in the field of a magnet, produced by a winding of small wire, located in *1036 the air gap between a pole member and the core member. The circumferential flange of the diaphragm is rigidly clamped between clamping rings secured to each other by suitable means, as by screws. The diaphragm has a portion which forms, with the cone walls, a bend, thereby constituting a flexible rim for flexibly connecting the conical portion of the diaphragm to the support.

The essential elements of the combination are stated in appellant’s brief to be: “(1) The flexible support for the cone, (2) the large direct acting cone itself and (3) the floating coil or floating armature electrical driving mechanism.”

Claims Nos. 7 and 8 were allowed by the examiner. These had limitations to the floating coil as the electrical driving means, the claims stating the field magnet for said coil to be disposed on the concave side of the cone.

It is conceded that each feature or element of appellant’s combination is shown in the prior art.

The patents to Hopkins show diaphragms and the other features appear in the patent to Siemens, the specification of which contains the following recitations relative to figures 5 and 6 of the Siemens- drawings:

“Instead of an iron diaphragm or a nonmagnetic membrane, having on it an iron disc, nonmagnetic membranes may be employed, as shown in Figs. 5 and 6.
“In the construction, shown by Fig. 5, the vibrating diaphragm is a thin sheet of brass or German silver, to the centre of which is fixed a light coil u, preferably of aluminum. This coil is in an annular magnetic field produced by a powerful horseshoe magnet. When the diaphragm, which is in equilibrium, vibrates, currents are induced in the coil which moves with it, and these currents conveyed to the distant station cause a similar coil there to vibrate with its membrane, reproducing the sound pulses which gave motion to the former coil.
“According to the construction shown by Fig. 6 the coil in the magnetic field is fastened to a membrane, of parchment or other material of trumpet form, to increase the effect of the sound pulses.
“Telephones, like those shown in Figs. 5 and 6-, without iron diaphragms, require powerful magnets, but they reproduce articulated sounds with great distinctness.”

The diaphragms of the Hopkins patents relate primarily to phonographic reproduction and the Siemens patent relates to telephone reproducers.

It is the contention of appellant that, by the combination which he has made of the old elements, he has produced a new and useful result which is patentable, in that (a) his loudspeaker is novel in construction, operation and results; that (b) neither reference discloses the structure, mode of operation, or results obtained by his apparatus; that (e) extensive and important changes would be necessary in the references to secure these; that (d) patentability was recognized by the Patent Office by the allowance of claims 7 and 8; and that (e) his device has proven a great commercial success, having virtually supplanted all others in the radio field. Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consolidated Rubber Tire Co., 220 U. S. 428, 31 S. Ct. 444, 55 L. Ed. 527, is cited as an authority which should control in the decision of the case.

That appellant has produced an apparatus which is superior to the devices used for the purposes for which his was devised, is doubtless true, but mere improvement without invention is not patentable. The question is: Has he, by his rearrangement of elements, all admittedly old, created something which' gives a novel and useful result and did its creation require invention as distinguished from mechanical skill?

The particular result which is claimed as new and emphasized in appellant’s brief and argument before us, as well as in a brief filed as amicus curiae, under the court’s permission, by counsel for Atwater Kent Manufacturing Company, a licensee of appellant, is that the combination comprises an apparatus which reproduces or transmits low tones or bass notes to an extent and with a success never before attained in the art. Of course, decided improvement in the transmission of all tones or notes is claimed, but the emphasis is placed as stated.

That the contentions with reference to the claimed result as to the low tones received careful consideration by the tribunals of the Patent Office is evident from an examination of their decisions. The case was in the Patent Office for many years, the application was many times amended, and affidavits in support of the claims were filed as permitted by the Patent Office rules.

It- must be said that during the earlier consideration of the application the feature relating to the improved reproduction or transmission of low tones or bass notes as distinguished from the higher tones, or from *1037 the better transmission of tones generally, does not seem to have been emphasized as later it came to be.

The specifications do not single out this feature for definite mention, but do recite the following as claimed advantages produced: “The total elastic restoring force, localized in the diaphragm and its flexible rim, may be kept down to that small .and predetermined value that will cause the diaphragm to produce the sound waves directly in the surrounding air without sensible resonant distortion. In other words, the fundamental period of the tympanum will lie far down in the working range of frequencies.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.2d 1035, 18 C.C.P.A. 1452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-farrand-ccpa-1931.