Smith v. Place

84 F.2d 196, 23 C.C.P.A. 1260, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1936
DocketNo. 3655
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 F.2d 196 (Smith v. Place) 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
Smith v. Place, 84 F.2d 196, 23 C.C.P.A. 1260, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 128 (ccpa 1936).

Opinion

Lenboot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in an interference proceeding wherein the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirmed a decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention upon all the counts in issue to appellee.

The counts are numbered from 1 to 11, inclusive, of which counts 1 and 2 are illustrative and read as follows:

1. A snap fastener stud formed from wire and having a clip-like attaching portion provided with arms spaced apart to receive a support between them and a snap fastener stud portion extending directly from one of said arms and substantially perpendicular thereto, said attaching portion comprising two U-shaped parts spaced from-each other to engage the support in such a manner as to prevent tipping of the fastener relative to the support and said stud portion comprising opposed diverging and converging socket engaging parts.
2. The combination with a metallic supporting structure having a stud-receiving aperture therein of fixed size, a trim panel superposed upon said supporting structure and having a relatively thin cardboard and the like foundation provided with an aperture located at a greater distance from the edge than the aperture in the supporting structure, thereby leaving an imper-forate portion of the foundation between the edge and the aperture of sufficient strength to prevent breaking and tearing under normal use, and a snap fastener stud member having a yieldable portion entered into the aperture in the supporting structure and also having an attaching portion passing through the aperture in the foundation and bearing against the outer face to press the foundation against the supporting structure and to hold the fastener stud in position relative to the foundation.

The involved invention is concisely described in the decision of

•the Board of Appeals as follows:

The invention relates to a snap fastener intended for use in securing a trim •panel to a supporting metallic structure. Fasteners of this type are commonly employed in securing trim panels to doors and other portions of automobile bodies. More particularly, the improvement relates to the construction given the head portion of the fastener. The latter comprises U-shaped parts, one branch of which is inserted through an opening in the trim panel and the other branch of which has at its outer end the shank portion of the fastener. The latter is insertable in an opening in the metallic supporting structure and is located in offset relation with respect to the material connecting the two branches of the U-shaped head, the latter being positioned in. the opening of the trim panel. This offset relationship permits the openings in the panel to be positioned a greater distance from the edge of the panel than was possible with the use of prior art snap fasteners such as shown, for instance, in the Place patent No. 1,679,266.

The interference arises between an application of appellant filed May 29, 1930, and an application of appellee filed June 20, 1930. Appellee therefore is the junior party

[1262]*1262Both parties took testimony. The Examiner of Interferences and the Board of Appeals concurred in finding that appellee conceived the invention and reduced it to practice not later than February, 1930. Appellant in his preliminary statement alleged that he conceived the invention on March 29, 1930. This date being subsequent to the date awarded appellee for conception and reduction to practice of the invention, the proofs offered by appellant respecting his conception and reduction to practice of the invention were not considered by the Patent Office tribunals.

The testimony discloses that appellee is an inventor and sales engineer; that he had received patents upon certain forms of snap fasteners; that the invention here involved is an improvement upon the devices for which he had secured patents; that he had assigned a one-half interest in said patents to the Gagnier Fibre Products Company, hereinafter called the Gagnier' Company, and that in 1929 and 1930 he was in the employ of said company. The testimony further discloses that appellant is a salesman by occupation; that for many years he was in the employ of the Ford Motor Company, ■resigning from such service on February 8, 1930, and that on March 10, 1930, he entered the employ of Woodall Industries, Incorporated, a competitor of said Gagnier Company.

According to the testimony on behalf of appellee, the Gagnier Company, during the latter part of 1929 and the early part of 1930, •was supplying the Ford Motor Company (and also the Briggs Manufacturing Company, which was manufacturing automobile bodies for the Ford Motor Company) with trim panels equipped .with snap fasteners covered by one of appellee’s patents; that it was found that such panels had a tendency to shrink and, due to such shrinkage, the panels in many instances did not properly fit the door frames of automobiles and caused a serious difficulty in the ■use of the snap fasteners which were employed in connection therewith. Upon this point appellee testified as follows:

Q. 19. What difficulties, if' any, arose in connection with the use of the foundations thus supplied?
A. In the fall of -1929 the Gagnier Fibre Products Company was developing ■ a new fibre which had a great tendency to shrink. This, by reason of the fact .that the openings in the panels were so very near the edges of the fibre, created a serious difficulty in the use of the panels and fasteners by reason of the fact ■ that a slight shrinkage in the size of the panel would cause the edges of the heads of the fasteners to project beyond the edge or edges of the fibre panels.
Q. 20. Will you explain a little more in detail why the shrinkage in the size of the panel caused the edges of the heads of the fasteners to project beyond the edge or edges of the. panel?
A. The fasteners were applied into a T-shaped opening or slot having a round •portion one quarter inch in diameter the center of which was spaced approximately three-eighths of an inch from the. ed'ge of tlie fiber panel, thus leaving an actual space of but one-quarter "inch between the edge of the opening into [1263]*1263which the fastener was assembled and the edge of the fibre panel. As the .heads of the fasteners were one-half inch in diameter and as the holding ele- . ments or prongs of the fasteners were located slightly to one side of the center of the head, it created a condition so that if the fastener happened to be in.serted 80> that the wide side of the head was toward the edge of the panel the rim of the fastener would project over the edge of the panel slightly and if the panel shrank, as we found they generally did, the edges of the heads would project proportionately farther according to the amount of the shrinkage. This by reason of the fact that the holes in the supporting structure into which the fasteners were applied were constant in their position; therefore, regardless of the shrinkage of the panel, the fastener when inserted in the process of assembly must necessarily take a certain fixed location.

The Ford Company made complaints about the panels so furnished by the Gagnier Company, and certain lots of panels were rejected.

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Bluebook (online)
84 F.2d 196, 23 C.C.P.A. 1260, 1936 CCPA LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-place-ccpa-1936.