In re Symonds

47 F.2d 972, 18 C.C.P.A. 1128, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1931
DocketNo. 2649
StatusPublished

This text of 47 F.2d 972 (In re Symonds) 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 Symonds, 47 F.2d 972, 18 C.C.P.A. 1128, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 125 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

GaeRett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In this appeal is involved the right of appellant to a patent on five claims, numbered 3, 8, 9, 10, and 11, for “Improvements in Trawl Doors.”

The claims being rejected by the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office, by an affirmance of the decision of the examiner, appeal was taken to this court.

[1129]*1129Two claims, numbered 6 and 7, seem to Have been allowed by the examiner, and are not before us.

The alleged invention relates to doors such as are used for keeping the mouths of trawl nets open, and the principal feature here involved appears to be that of a door “ reversible in the sense that it can be readily adapted for use either as the right-hand or the left-hand door of a pair.”

The claims read as follows:

3. A trawl door comprising a body portion liaving provisions for attaching a net thereto at either of its ends, and towing connections located on the front face of the body portion, said connections being reversible with respect to the ends of the door.
S. A trawl door comprising a body portion, a reinforcing structure secured to its back face, a towing bracket located on the front face of the body portion and connected through the latter to the reinforcing structure, said towing bracket being reversible with respect to the ends of the door, and provisions for attaching a net to the door at either of its ends.
9. A trawl door comprising a body portion, a reinforcing structure secured to its back face and extending to each of the four corners thereof, a towing bracket located on the front face of the body portion and connected through the latter to the reinforcing structure, said towing bracket being reversible with respect to the ends of the door, and provisions for attaching the net to the reinforcing structure at either of its ends.
10. A trawl door comprising a body portion, a reinforcing structure secured to its back face and including longitudinally-extending members located between the center line of the body portion and its upper and lower edges, respectively, and diagonal members diverging towards adjacent corners of the body portion, means for attaching a net to the diagonal members, and towing connections located on the front face of the body portion and attached directly to the longitudinal members of the reinforcing structure by connections passing through the body portion.
11. A trawl door provided with a shoe consisting of a metal plate attached at its upper edge to the lower edge of the door and having a cross-sectional curvature such that the greater portion of the shoe is located behind the rear face of the door, with its convex side presented to the direction of the forward movement of the door.

Three references are cited from the prior art:

Halliwell et al., British, 15501, December 28, 1895.
ITairweather et al., British, 2455, August 14, 1913.
Waldie et al., British, 174251, January 26, 1922.

It is the contention of appellant that he is the first to devise and construct a trawl net door which may be used upon either the right or the left of the mouth of the net, with the necessary reinforcing structure properly arranged and attached to the door in a manner that enables the towing cable to be fastened to the bracket or brackets in whichever position (left or right) the door may be placed; that by so doing he has developed a device both useful and patentably novel; that, until the creation of his reversible doors, trawl .doors [1130]*1130have always been made in pairs, one for the left and one for the •right; that in operation, the net being towed in such a manner as that it drags upon the sea bottom, there is rough . usage which frequently causes one door of a pair to be torn away and lost; that this necessitates theré being carried upon trawl-using fishing vessels, as spares, a number of extra doors to replace any that may be lost; that they have heretofore had to be carried in pairs, but that now, by reason of his invention, it is necessary to carry, as spares, only half the number formerly essential; and that the arrangement of the shoe as provided in claim 11 “ adapts the door to tip forward and ride over obstructions on the sea bottom ”; all these things to the manifest advantage of the art.

The allowed claims are set out in appellant’s brief and, from an examination of these, it does not appear that any patent has been granted upon the reversible feature of his doors, or the arrangement of the elements essential to render such reversal practical. The tribunals of the Patent Office held that the patent to Waldie

shows a trawl door similar to appellant’s but no extra holes were provided nor is any suggestion found in the specification that the cable connection could be shifted to the other end of the door to permit it to be employed on the opposite side of the net. There is no question but that this simple expedient is advantageous. We agree with the examiner, however, that it is not a patentable difference.

This same patent shows-longitudinal reinforcing ribs but these are upon the face of the door rather than upon the back, as called for by appellant’s claim 10. Diagonal ribs also called for by claim 10, appear to be shown by Halliwell, but these also are on the front rather than the back.

The tribunals of the Patent Office felt that the peculiar, or particular, structure of the runners disclosed in claim 11 does not constitute invention, or, as the board expresses it, requires nothing “ more than mechanical skill.”

There can be no doubt, we think, about appellant having conceived and devised an arrangement of parts which has contributed a device of great value to the 'art of fishing. Its commercial success we understand to be virtually conceded.

It is true that these elements alone do not render the claims patentable. Invention must be present.

The Solicitor for the Patent Office cites us to the case of In re Iwan, 17 App. D. C. 566, wherein it was held that making a handle for a hay knife reversible on the head of the shank to which the blade is attached did not involve invention, the court saying:

Tbe claims for which those patents (the references) were granted are substantially, though not in every particular, the same in mechanical construction, [1131]*1131as the device described in claims 1, 2, 3, and 5 of tbis case. It is true there is some difference in form, and, in the two patents referred to it .is not stated that the handle attachment is reversible. But to make the handle reversible on the head of the shank to. which the blade of the knife is attached it is only necessary to * * *, and this does not require anything more than ordinary mechanical ingenuity. * * *
* * * There is nothing, therefore,'patentable in the device of readjustment and reversible attachment of the handle on the shank of the knife so as to affect the manner of its operation as described by the appellant.

The solicitor’s brief then continues:

The only change in the Waldie et al. device necessary to make it completely anticipate claims 3 and 8 is to drill a few holes on the opposite side of the center line.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 972, 18 C.C.P.A. 1128, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-symonds-ccpa-1931.