In Re Schnell

46 F.2d 203, 18 C.C.P.A. 812
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1931
DocketPatent Appeal 2543
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 203 (In Re Schnell) 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 Schnell, 46 F.2d 203, 18 C.C.P.A. 812 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.’

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, affirming the decision of the Examiner, rejecting a claim for a design patent as follows:

*204 “The ornamental design for an interior fitting of an automobile body or similar article, substantially as shown.”

There is also a statement in the specification as follows:

“The design, as here shown, is applied to a handle, but it is also applicable to other fittings of an automobile.”
The title suggested by the Examiner and approved by the board was “automobile door handle or similar article.”

Applicant’s drawing shows a side and front view of an automobile body door handle, composed of two parts — a plate to be fastened to the inside of the door and a movable handle which fits into the plate. The handle resembles the ordinary door knocker handle in appearance. The drawing shows the handle to be about four inches lo,ng by one inch wide at the widest place, tapering to less than one-half inch at the lower end, the handhold portion of same being curved downward and inward so as to present the appearance from a side view of about one-fourth- of the circumference of a circle. Aside from the lines, indentations, and raised portions making up the general shape and configuration of the article as a whole, there is but very little ornamentation on the same. It is designed to be placed in a vertical position on the door.

It is admitted that the design claimed is novel and involves invention, but the Examiner and the board held that the design set forth in the claim was “too generic and indicates a wider range of embodiment of the design than the specific article illustrated in the drawing.”

In the decision of the Board is found the following:

“A design must be considered as an entirety and there is no such thing in a design patent as generic and specific claims. The patent is for the embodiment of a design in the form of the specific article illustrated. It may be that an infringer will adopt some definite, integral portion of the design which is’novel and embody it in a different article but it is for the courts to determine whether he shall be held as an infringer.
“All that can be covered by the design patent is- the ornamental form given to the article of manufacture illustrated in the drawing.
,- “The brief points out that in the interior of an automobile there are numerous articles of hardware and that the same design may be adapted to the different articles so that they will present a general resemblance or harmony of design but it is obvious that the design of the handle as a whole cannot be used in a different article like an escutcheon plate or a robe rail, a lamp support or even a different form of handle but it is modified in each ease to adapt it to the article although it still embodies some outstanding feature of the original design which produces a general resemblance throughout the whole set. Whether they are different designs or whether it is an infringement to use a prominent part of the design in an article of different shape and for a different use can be determined only by the court when the matter is brought before it.
“In our opinion the title suggested by the examiner such as 'automobile door handle or similar article’ is as broad as appellant is entitled to. See Ex parte Guinzburg, 1925 C. D. p. 159.”

Questions quite similar, if not identical with the one at bar, have been frequently ruled upon in the Patent Office, many of which rulings are in direct conflict with others. No decision of any court has been cited to or found by us bearing directly upon this question.

It has often been argued that a design patent, under existing law, may consist of a picture, pattern, print, or design for the ornamentation of an article of manufacture, which may be shown on paper without regard to the particular article of manufacture it is to adorn, and be the subject matter of ownership, use, and consequent protection, irrespective of the kind of article of manufacture it is to ornament, and irrespective of the configuration, shape, and appearance the article may have when so ornamented. This contention, carried to its logical conclusion, suggests that such a design patentee is entitled to a patent upon the same without any regard to whether it really improves the appearance of the article to which applied or not, and that the invention is the design per se. In substance, this is the gist of the argument of appellant in a well-prepared brief.

In view of a consideration of the context of the present law and its predecessors, and the history connected with design patent legislation, this line of argument, when subjected to certain limitations and qualifications, is not without force.

The solicitor for the Patent Office defends the action of the board in the ease at bar chiefly with the contention that the ruling is in accordance with the “uniform practice of the Patent Office for many years,” which “is *205 entitled to much weight being the construction adopted by a coordinate branch of the Government,” and, to illustrate the rulings of the Patent Office, which, he says, require “that design patents must be for a single article of manufacture,” cites Ex Parte Schraubstadter, 1904 C. D. 229, 110 O. G. 2015; Ex parte Remington, 1905 C. D. 28, 114 O. G. 761; Ex parte Litle, Jr., 1910 C. D. 227, 160 O. G. 1272; Ex parte Hopkins, Jr., 1923 C. D. 105, 317 O. G. 238. We may dispose of this contention of the solicitor, at this point, by saying that, in view of rulings in certain cases hereinafter referred to, no such uniform practice in the Patent Office in this respect is shown to have prevailed for a very long period of time. Certainly such rulings have not been sufficiently uniform for such a period of time as to justify this court in refusing to construe the language of the statute, when the question is squarely presented, and presented for the first time to any tribunal other than those of the Patent Office.

Congress in 1842, under the authority granted by article 1, § 8, of the Constitution, enacted the first design patent law (Statute II, August 29,1842, c. 263, 5 Stat. 543), section 3 of which law was in part as follows:

“See. 3. * * * Any citizen * * * who by his * * * own industry, genius, efforts, and expense, may have invented or produced any new and original [1] design for a manufacture, whether of metal or other material or materials, or any new and original [2] design for the printing of woollen, silk, cotton, or other fabrics, or any new and original [3] design for a bust, statue, or has relief or composition in alto or basso relievo, or any new and original [4] impression or ornament, or to be placed on any article of manufacture, the same being formed in marble or other material, or any new and useful [5] pattern, or print, or picture, to be either worked into or worked on, or printed or painted or cast or otherwise fixed on, any article of manufacture, or any new and original [6] shape or configuration of any article of manufacture

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 F.2d 203, 18 C.C.P.A. 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schnell-ccpa-1931.