In re Lawson

36 F.2d 525, 17 C.C.P.A. 743, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 149
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1929
DocketNo. 2164
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 F.2d 525 (In re Lawson) 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 Lawson, 36 F.2d 525, 17 C.C.P.A. 743, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 149 (ccpa 1929).

Opinion

LeNROot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office, affirming the action of the examiner in rejecting all of appellant’s claims, 47 in number.

The specification is very lengthy and the drawings are very intricate. The decision of the Board of Appeals is so complete and so well considered, and so completely covers the issues in the case, that we reproduce it in full. It reads as follows:

This is an appeal from a final rejection of all claims in the application, 47 in number. Claims 1,17, and 21 are reproduced for illustrative purposes:
1. A tubular knitted fabric characterized by the formation of partial courses united in a seam or seams extending transverse to the direction of said courses, said seam or seams and fabric external thereto being of substantially equal elasticity.
17. That method of forming a knitted, tubular, fine-gauge fabric, which consists in causing a circular series of spring beard needles to function both for rotary work and for reciprocating split work, and in feeding two distinct yarns thereto at relatively widely spaced points by presenting said yarns to the shanks of the needles very close to the same below the points of the beards under the latter and so as to lie against a multiplicity of said, shanks before reaching the knitting point and in both directions of reciprocation, but presenting said yarns sufficiently low to effect the imprisonment of the yarns within the needle beards when depressed notwithstanding the opposing strains from the two fabric sections at the said seams, so as to form from said yarns a fabric of partial courses united in two relatively widely spaced seams of knitted loops formed of said yarns, and in causing said needles to co-act to form said tubular fabric including said seams of substantially uniform appearance and elasticity throughout.
21. A circular split-work hosiery knitting machine having a circular series of independently movable spring beard needles, independent pressers therefor, primary and auxiliary sets of knitting cams, at substantially opposite sides of the machine, means to rotate and to reciprocate said needles and cams relatively to each other, and means cooperating with said knitting cams at both sides of the machine to eitect the production on said needles of split work, said means including means substantially at said sets of knitting cams respectively and positioned very close to the needle shanks to present yarn substantially simultaneously safely below the beards of all the needles in partial courses including the suture needles, each yarn being under tension and fed in opposition to the strain of the partial course knitted at the other knitting cam set, but not presented too low to fail to be imprisoned by the needle beards, when pressed, said means also including means to connect said partial courses in suture seams through manipulation of needles as suture needles.

The references relied upon are:

Wilcomb, 1131583, March 9, 1915.
Bosworth, 1154169, September 21, 1915.
Ames, 1252983, January 8, 1918.
[745]*745Pigeon, 1266044, May 14, 1918.
Scott, 1373358, March 29, 1921.
Bosworth, 1416257, May 16, 1922.
Jones, 1430814, October 3, 1922.
The claims on appeal are directed to various phases in the production oí ■split-work hosiery. Thus claims 1, 2, 3, and 6 to 16, inclusive, are directed to. a knitted split-work article of manufacture, specifically a stocking, claims 4, 5, 17 to 20, 39, and 40 are directed to a method of knitting the article covered by the preceding group of claims while the remaining claims on appeal cover an apparatus by which the method may be carried out and the claimed article produced.
The basis of the method and apparatus claims and even of. some of the article claims, is the employment of a knitting machine having spring-beard., needles in the production of the article claimed as distinguished from a machine having latch needles. There are certain admitted advantages inherent in spring-beard needle machines. These advantages are set forth in the specification of the application on appeal and are discussed in the statement of the examiner hence no need exists to set them forth here. So far as the prior art, relied on by the examiner on this appeal discloses, with one exception, split foot stockings have heretofore been produced on latch needle machines. The •exception is the patent to Wilcomb, No. 1131583. This patent is for a circular knitting machine of the spring beard type and on page 12 of the specification, lines 94 to 119, there is described rather generally the production of split foot stockings and the employment of two yarn feeds. An instance of a circular latch needle knitting machine employed in the production of split foot hosiery is the patent to Bosworth, No. 1154169. Circular knitting machines of the spring-beard type which the examiner holds might be modified to produce split foot hosiery without invention are the patents to Pigeon, No. 1266044, Scott, No. 1373358, and Bosworth, No. 1416257. Generally speaking, the modification necessary to enable the machines of the last noted patents to produce split foot hosiery would be the provision of a secondary yarn guide spaced from the primary guide and likewise the provision of secondary needle actuating or controlling cams. These features,' i. e. secondary yarn guides and actuating or controlling cams, are usual in circular latch needle knitting machines and are shown in the Bosworth patent No. 1154169, noted above. It is the view of the examiner that with respect to claims which rely primarily on the employment of spring-beard needles to impart patentability thereto it does not involve invention either to substitute spring-beard needles for latch needles in a latch-needle machine or to modify a spring beard needle machine so as to enable it to do split foot work in view of the teachings of patents like Bosworth No. 1154169 for a latch-needle machine.
On page 14 of appellant’s specification reference is made to a difficulty encountered in the development of split foot spring beard needle knitting. Generally speaking, the difficulty has been in the positioning of the infeeding primary and secondary 5rarns at the proper points due to the opposing strains set up in opposite sections of fabric. It is stated in the specification that owing to the opposing strains the yarns may be positioned too’ high or too low with respect to the beards of the needles with a consequent dropping of stitches. In many of the appealed claims the feature of feeding the yarn just at the proper height with respect to the beards of the needles and close to the needles is stressed. This difficulty in yarn feeding is recognized in certain of the patents relied on by the examiner and provision is made for feeding the yarn close to the shanks of the needles. The patents to Scott, Pigeon, and [746]*746Bosworth No. 1416257 are particularly relied on by the examiner in this connection.
Claims 1, 2, 3, and 6 to 16, inclusive, are directed to an article, specified as a knitted fabric and more specifically recited in some of the claims as a split foot stocking.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F.2d 525, 17 C.C.P.A. 743, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lawson-ccpa-1929.