In Re Koehring

37 F.2d 421, 17 C.C.P.A. 774
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1930
DocketPatent Appeal 2167
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 421 (In Re Koehring) 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 Koehring, 37 F.2d 421, 17 C.C.P.A. 774 (ccpa 1930).

Opinions

BLAND, Judge.

This appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents, refusing a patent for a design for a concrete mixer truck body and frame, presents as its main issue the very interesting, and of times troublesome, question as to what articles of manufacture may constitute the subject-matter of design patents.

The Commissioner, largely unon the authority of Ex parte Steck, 1902 C. D. 9, 98 O. G. 228, held that a machine with movable parte is not an “article of manufacture” within the meaning of the design patent law, the pertinent portion of which reads as follows: “Any person who' has invented any new, original, and ornamental design for an article of manufacture * * * may * * * obtain a patent therefor.”

The Commissioner, also as a ground of refusal, under the authority of Smith v. Whitman Saddle Co., 1893 C. D. 324, and Northrup v. Adams, 1877 C. D. 322, held that the design involved in this ease was not ornamental and that the same belonged “to the mechanical arts and not the aesthetic or fine arts.” The Commissioner, without discussion, also seems to have agreed with another reason ■assigned for denial of patent by the examiner, that the design is not a “unitary design”; that is, that the items of the design are not a unit in appearance.

Before us the Commissioner further urges that the question as to whether the concrete mixing machinery involved is a proper subject-matter for a design patent need not be [422]*422decided by this court) since it must be held, under In re Stimpson, 58 App. D. C. 86, 24 F.(2d) 1012, 369 O. G. 731, that this character of machine is not “inventively ornamental.” We think that we must decide both issues.

The riveting machine in controversy in the Stimpson Case was held not to be ornamental, because the drawing showed that it was “purely utilitarian, and without ornamentation of any kind,” and for the further reason that “there is nothing about the assembled mechanical device which serves to beautify, embellish, or adorn it. The several parts of the mechanism, whether circular, curved, rounded, or spiral, are assembled into an entirety which is lacking in symmetry, wanting in grace, and destitute of any appeal to the senses or emotions. The design has no human interest, other than that aroused by the utilitarian nature of the machine.”

We will dispose of this contention by saying that, if we were willing to follow the strict letter of the language of this decision, we would not regard it as a bar for holding that the machine in issue here possesses ornamentation, since the appearance and general characteristics of the machines radically differ.

Upon the proposition as to what is “an article of manufacture,” within the meaning of the design patent law, there have been many decisions of the Patent Office and the courts, some of which are apparently in conflict, but it is readily observable that it has become the settled law that tools and mechanisms which are patentable because of their utilitarian qualities may also properly be the subject-matter for design patents if they possess certain qualities which the law requires.

In our view of the case, the beauty and ornamentation requisite in design patents is not confined to such as may be found in the “{esthetic or fine arts.” It is not reasonable to presume that Congress, in basing a patent right upon the ornamentation or beauty of a tool or mechanical device, intended that such beauty and ornamentation should he limited to such as is found in paintings, sculpture, land artistic objects, and which excites the {esthetic sense of artists alone.

In declaring that, by the enactment of the design patent law, Congress expressed a desire to promote more beauty, grace, and ornamentation in things used, observed, and enjoyed by our people, the courts have not omitted on frequent occasions to mention the fact that such ornamentation as was intended was an element in the salability of the article. Franklin Knitting Mills, Inc. v. Gropper Knitting Mills, Inc. (C. C. A.) 15 F.(2d) 375. Notwithstanding the frequency of ju■dicial declaration concerning “attractiveness to purchasers” and increased “salability,” it is also a well-settled principle that a design patent may not be used for the purpose of a trade-mark. North British Rubber Co. v. Racine Rubber Tire Co. (C. C. A.) 271 F. 936.

Appellant’s design of a truck body' and frame for a concrete mixer shows the frame to be so designed as to place the different elements of the whole machine, including the hood, gas tank, mixer, etc., into a more symmetrical and compact whole than was known in the prior art. Aside from this arrangement, which removes much of the unsightliness from the machine, the covering of the motor is made to resemble, in appearance, an automobile hood, and the angular bars and framework of the same are given a rounded or oval appearance. By the plan of assembly of the more or less rounded hood, round gas tank, and rounded frame comers into a compact and more symmetrical whole, an article, possessing more grace and pleasing appearance than existed in the prior art, has been produced. This effect in the design as a whole is ornamental and inventive.

Since it is clear that Congress meant the design patent law to apply to tools and mechanisms of utilitarian character, it follows, we think, that it had in mind the elimination of much of the unsightly repulsiveness that characterizes many machines and mechanical devices whieh have a tendency to depress rather than excite the esthetic sense. In this mechanical age, when machines, engines, and various kinds of mechanisms are transported.on our public highways and streets and moved by their own momentum from place to place, it is certainly not undesirable that some of the unsightliness- — and, as frequently occurs, frightfulness — of such contrivances be eliminated, if possible. To conclude that Congress, in the enactment of the design patent law, had such a result in contemplation is not unreasonable, since such a purpose-is in entire harmony with the declared aim of the Legislature.

The law seems to be well settled that the term “an article of manufacture” does not include every article of manufacture. The courts have declared that certain articles which are more or less hidden from view when in use are not the proper subject-matter for design patents. In Rowe v. Blodgett & Clapp Co. (C. C. A.) 112 F. 61, a horseshoe calk, in Bradley v. Eccles (C. C. A.) 126 F. 945, a washer for a thill-coupling, and in [423]*423Pashek v. Dunlop Tyre & Rubber Co. (D. C.) 8 F.(2d) 640, an automobile tire tread, were held not to be patentable under the design patent law. Neither do the purposes of the act embrace articles, the ornamentation of whieh, owing to their nature, could be a matter of concern to no one. North British Rubber Co. v. Racine Rubber Tire Co., supra; Theodore W. Foster & Bro. Co. v. Tilden-Thurber Co. (C. C. A.) 200 F. 54, 56. In the last-cited ease, in referring to this class of articles, the court said: “It is also true now, as before the amendment, that among articles of manufacture there are some incapable of being the subjects of design patents, for want of reason to suppose that their appearance can ever really matter to anybody.” (Italics ours.)

After careful consideration of all the issues and arguments involved in this case, it would seem to us that the only close question involved in arriving at the correct conclusion is the applicability of the last-quoted rule. The answer to the query,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 421, 17 C.C.P.A. 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-koehring-ccpa-1930.