In Re Faustmann

155 F.2d 388, 33 C.C.P.A. 1065, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 541, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 459
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 1946
DocketPatent Appeal 5180
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 155 F.2d 388 (In Re Faustmann) 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 Faustmann, 155 F.2d 388, 33 C.C.P.A. 1065, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 541, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 459 (ccpa 1946).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.

Appellant applied to the United States Patent Office for a patent for his claimed new, original and ornamental design for a typewriting machine. The Primary Examiner rejected the claim in said application and cited the following references: Bills D. 93,152, August 28, 1934; Lentz D. 134,305, November 10, 1942; Ostrey 1,828,939, October 27, 1931; Fairweather (Br.) 17,892, November 15, 1909; and stated:

“The essential features of applicant’s design reside in the keyboard and space bar of a typewriter, as shown in full lines on the drawing. The key tops and the space bar are without surface ornamentation and therefore patentability must of necessity reside in the configuration of these elements. Applicant states that his ‘key tops are straight across the front and curved at the rear’. In this connection attention is directed to the key tops of the Lentz patent which applicant admits have ‘rounded front edges or faces and straight rear edges or faces’. It is held that it would not amount to invention to make these key tops slightly thinner and turn them around on the keyboard, especially in view of the thickness of the key tops as shown by the Fairweather patent.
“As to. the configuration of the space bar, it is held that it does not show invention over the configuration of the space bar as shown by the Ostrey patent which has beveled corners. Also, attention is directed to the configuration of ■ the space bar shown in the broken lines in the Bills patent. It is believed that anyone skilled in the art could produce a keyboard for a typewriter having key tops and a space bar of the configurations as shown without being entitled to a patent monopoly thereon. In this connection attention is directed to the decisions of Knapp v. Will & Baumer Co. [2 Cir.], 273 F. 380; In re Eppinger, 94 F.2d 401, 25 C.C.P.A. [Patents], 843; 1938 C.D. 257; and In re Hall, 69 F.2d 660, 21 C.C.P.A., Patents, 937, 1934 C.D. 283.
“It is thought that the rejection on the art should stand.”

Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals it had the following to say:

“We consider applicant’s design to be so different in appearance from that of Lentz as not to be anticipated thereby.
“The question as we see it is whether applicant’s keyboard is so different in appearance from a keyboard having the key tops of the British patent as to constitute a patentable difference in design. The principal difference is that the key tops of the British patent are relatively straight across the back edge and curved at the front ahd applicant’s key tops are relatively straight across the front edges and curved at the back. We do not think such turning about of the key tops creates any substantial difference in the ornamental appearance of the keyboard. The two wider key tops at each end of applicant’s keyboard do not materially affect the appearance of the design as a whole. The space bar is the same in appearance as that of Bills, and also does not materially affect the design as a whole.
“We agree with the examiner that applicant’s design does not constitute invention over the disclosures of the references cited.
“The decision of the examiner is affirmed.”

*390 From this decision of the board affirming the rejection of the examiner appellant has here appealed.

Since the decisions below emphasize the question of appearance, as do most design patent decisions, it is thought proper to reproduce here appellant’s design and the designs disclosed in the references with the exception of the Ostrey patent.

Appellant contends that the decision of the board, in effect, reversed that of the erence, Lentz, and therefore urges that it be given no consideration here. The Solicitor for the Patent Office did not discuss this question. It is not very clear just what effect should be given to the board’s decision in this respect because it will be examiner as to the applicability of the ref- *391 noticed that the examiner, in discussing the Lentz reference, considered it in connection with the Fairweather patent. It is true the board stated that the Lentz patent did not anticipate appellant’s design and made no further reference to the Lentz patent except to say that applicant’s design does not constitute invention over the disclosures of the references cited. We are of the opinion that the board did not intend to hold that the examiner regarded the Lentz patent as completely anticipatory of appellant’s design, nor do we think it intended to eliminate a consideration of the Lentz patent for whatever it might be worth. The gist of the decision of the board rests upon the proposition that what appellant has done did not so . materially affect the appearance of the design as a whole when considered in connection with the prior art and did not constitute invention so as to warrant the issuing of a patent to appellant.

Under well-settled practice of the Patent Office, if a design patent is sought upon the keyboard of a typewriter it is necessary to claim this improvement in connection with a typewriter as a whole, the machine being shown, with the exception of the keyboard, in dotted lines.

Appellant, in his application, states that the dominant feature of his design resides in the portion of the machine shown in solid lines on the drawing.

It will be observed that appellant’s design shows, the key tops with straight front edges and straight and parallel side edges connected to the front edges by rounded corners, and widely curved convex rear edges, and that the keys at the corners of the keyboard are wider than the other keys and have straight rear portions extending between rounded rear corners. The elongated space bar has a straight rear edge and a straight front edge central portion and smoothly curbed front edge end portions.

Appellant’s space bar is almost identical with that disclosed on the Bills design patent, and the Lentz patent shows the keys with the, straight edges in the rear and the rounded edges in front. Ostrey shows a space bar comparable- to appellant’s except that it has its ends tapered along the rear longitudinal edge. The latter is a mechanical patent and relates to the keyboard alone.

The British patent to Fairweather shows key tops with rounded front while the back edge of the key tops is concave.

Appellant has argued at considerable length here that his design is new and novel and that the tribunals of the Patent Office have not found to the contrary; nor, he contends, did .they deny that it was ornamental. He states that he did not follow the teaching of any of the references but conceived a design which the ordinary skilled worker in the art would not have been able to produce by merely drawing upon the teachings of the reference. He calls attention to the fact that the back line of the Fairweather key is not a straight line as stated by the board. In effect, appellant urges that the Patent Office tribunals erred in the consolidation of certain features of the prior art to justify its holding that appellant’s design was not intentive over the cited prior art.

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155 F.2d 388, 33 C.C.P.A. 1065, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 541, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-faustmann-ccpa-1946.