In re Oishel

39 F.2d 697, 17 C.C.P.A. 1064, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 262
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 2198
StatusPublished

This text of 39 F.2d 697 (In re Oishel) 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 Oishel, 39 F.2d 697, 17 C.C.P.A. 1064, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 262 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

Hateibld, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the decision of the examiner denying claims 1 to 6, inclusive, and 8, 9, 11, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 21 of appellants’ application for an alleged invention relating to windshield cleaners, and particularly to the construction of the wiper carrying arms of such devices.

[1065]*1065Claims Y, 10, 12, and 13 of the application were allowed by the examiner. The appealed claims, 2, 4, 5, 11, 15, and 1Y, were withdrawn by counsel for appellants at the time of the oral arguments in this court. Accordingly, the following claims only are before ns for consideration: 1, 3, 6, 8, 9, 14, 16, and 21.

Claims 1, 6, 8, and 14 are illustrative. They read:

1. In a windshield cleaner, a wiper carrying arm, an actuating member for ’ said wiper carrying arm having detachable connection therewith, and a detachable spring connection-securing member having a part connecting said wiper carrying arm to said actuating member and a part exerting .spring pressure on said wiper carrying arm and adapted to maintain said wiper carrying arm connected to said actuating member and to maintain said wiper in resilient contact with the windshield glass.
6. In a windshield cleaner, an operating member extending at an angle to the face plane of the windshield glass, a wiper moving arm pivotally engaging said operating member to swing to positions between positions at an angle to said member and positions alined with the axis of said member, and! a coil spring mounted on and surrounding a portion of said arm and bearing on said arm and having an extension bearing on said member at a point spaced from said point of pivotal engagement for securing the pivotal connection between the arm and member and' resiliently urging said arm toward the windshield glass.
8. In a windshield cleaner, an operating shaft extending at an angle to the face plane of the windshield glass, said operating shaft having a pair of spaced recesses therein, a wiper moving arm having a portion engaged in one of the recesses of said shaft for pivotally connecting said arm to said shaft to swing from a position at a substantial right angle to said shaft to a position substantially alined with the axis of said shaft, a retractile spring removed from the pivotal connection and bearing on said arm and having a part engaged in the other of said recesses at a point spaced from the pivotal connection for resiliently urging said arm toward the windshield glass.
14. In a windshield cleaner, an operating shaft, a wiper moving arm pivotally connected to said shaft to be moved thereby,, said pivotal engagement permitting said wiper moving arm to swing in the direction of the axis of said shaft, a spring carried by one of the aforesaid elements and tensionable in a direction toward said pivotal engagement, and a part connected at one end to the other of the first two named elements at a point spaced from said pivotal engagement, said part having its opposite end connected to said spring and normally holding the same under tension whereby said spring exerts a pulling force on said part and thereby urges said arm into contact with the glass of an adjacent windshield, said part acting to further tension said spring when said arm is swung in a direction away from the adjacent windshield glass.

The references are:

Folberth, 1352504, September 14, 1920.
Oisliei, 1362175, December 14, 1920.
Kelber, 1451698, April 17, 1923.

It appears from the specification and accompanying drawings that the wiper-carrying arm of appellants’ device has a spring coiled [1066]*1066around; it at, and extending a short distance from, its pivotal connection with the operating shaft, with a “ tensioning member ”— an uncoiled projection of the spring extending from the lower end of the coil to, and connected with, the operating shaft at a point “ spaced from ” the pivotal connection of the carrying arm with the operating shaft — “resiliently urging the carrying arm toward the windshield glass.” The' carrying arm and the tensioning member are connected with the operating shaft by inserting bent or hooked ends through openings spaced a short distance apart in the shaft.

In his decision the examiner, among other things, said: .

The invention to which the appealed claims are drawn resides in a novel spring-pressed connection between the rock shaft of the motor and the wiper or squeegee-carrying arm of the ordinary fluid-actuating windshield cleaner, for resiliently pressing the squeegee against the glass.
The reference, Oishei, shows a coiled spring 19 for urging squeegee 16 against the glass; and Kelber shows (sheet 2) at 24 a coil spring for effecting the same function.
It might be stated at the outset that during the prosecution of this case the examiner has interposed objections to appellants’ multiplication of claims differing only in wording, or by functional statements and generalizations. The examiner has allowed four claims which appear to. cover appellants' contribution to the art, and, as slated in Prescott v. Rummler, 1922, C. D. 119, there is no reason for allowing a large number of indefinite and attenuated claims, thus inviting controversy and litigation. In view of the fact that appellants’ device is simple, involving only three elements including the old structure, and the references are pertinent, it is difficult to conceive how 22 patentably different claims can be drawn on the invention.
Claims 1 and 2, above, are typical of claims 1 to 6.
Claim 1 has been rejected as functional and indefinite. * * * Every element of this claim is found, in Kelber (sheet 2) with the exception that Kelber employs a rivet 19 rather than a detachable bolt, and this substitution would not involve invention. The same thing applies to Oishei.
Claim 8 has been indicated as allowable with suggested corrections, which have been declined by appellant. In its present form the-claim is considered unpatentable over Kelber, the end of whose spring 24 may be seated in a notch or recess without invention. The claim fails to set out any relation between the spring and arm, G' which would effect the function stated. It has also been held that the claim as amended is indefinite, line 8, since in Eigure 4 the spring is right on the pivot shaft, and in the elected form (sheet 2), it is shown abutting pivot shaft 11'.
Claim 9 has been rejected as ambiguous as to what is the “ operative ’' position; as being functional; and also as unpatentable over Kelber, as indicated for claims 2 and 4; above.

Claims 14 and 16 were rejected as functional and indefinite. Claim 21 was rejected on the patent to Kelber, and, also, as being-indefinite.

[1067]*1067The following claims were allowed by the examiner :

7.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.2d 697, 17 C.C.P.A. 1064, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oishel-ccpa-1930.