Timothy G. Meulenberg and Robert L. Redmond v. Robert E. Scott

314 F.2d 538, 50 C.C.P.A. 1058
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6832
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 314 F.2d 538 (Timothy G. Meulenberg and Robert L. Redmond v. Robert E. Scott) 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
Timothy G. Meulenberg and Robert L. Redmond v. Robert E. Scott, 314 F.2d 538, 50 C.C.P.A. 1058 (ccpa 1963).

Opinions

SMITH, Judge.

Appellants, the junior party, have appealed from a decision of the Board of Patent Interferences, adhered to on reconsideration, which awarded priority ■of invention to the senior party, Scott, on all five counts in interference. Appellants’ application1 for patent was declared to be in interference with a Scott patent2 from .which appellants had ■copied the claims which became counts 1-4 of this interference. Later the interference was reformed to include Scott’s application3 for reissue of his patent and a claim which became count ■5, was copied from the application for reissue, and added to the interference.

The invention in issue relates to improvements in snap fasteners which are used, inter alia, to detachably secure trim strips to automobile bodies. In this use, the projecting resilient legs of the fastener project through holes provided in a portion of the automobile body and exert a clamping action between the trim strip, which is engaged by the head portion of the fastener, and the contacting surfaces of the automobile body and the trim strip. The particular improvement here in issue relates to a resilient sealing element on the snap fastener which is effective to provide a water tight plug in the holes in the automobile body when the fastener legs are inserted therein.

Count 1 describes the subject matter of the interference as follows:

“1. A fastening device for removably attaching members together, comprising a snap fastener having a head shaped to provide an open border frame engageable with one member and having a shank joined to and projecting transversely from said head, said shank being positioned substantially centrally of the head for projection through an opening in another member, a resilient body of thermoplastic material having a base surrounded and confined in its entirety by the inner side of said border frame and having the outer side of said base bonded to the inner side of the border frame, said border frame having exposed surfaces projecting laterally outwardly beyond said base for direct engagement with said one member to securely clamp the latter to the other member, said body of thermoplastic material having a portion projecting from said base in the direction of said shank for sealing engagement with the marginal edges of the opening through which the shank is adapted to project, and said portion completely enclosing and bonded to the portion of the shank joined to said head.”

The invention, as indicated by the above-quoted count, requires that the snap fastener have a head shaped to pro[540]*540vide an open border frame engageable with a first member (the trim strip, for example) to be fastened to a second member (the automobile body in the example described) and a flexible shank joined to and projecting transversely from the head (the resilient legs) for projection through an opening formed in said second member. The resilient sealing member as called for by count 1; comprises a resilient body of thermoplastic material which has a base surrounded and confined in its entirety by the inner side of the border frame and has, in addition, a portion which encloses and is bonded to the portion of the shank where it joins the head. The resilient sealing member projects from the base in the direction of the shank to provide a portion which enters into and plugs the opening in the said second member through which the shank projects.

The fastener, without the sealing material, was admittedly known before either party claims to have conceived the invention covered by the counts of the interference. It is therefore the resilient sealing element or plug which is the particular feature of the device here in issue. The problem which the device sought to solve is that of the water leakage through the holes in the automobile body which caused rust and corrosion to form rapidly at and adjacent to the fastening holes and permitted water seepage inside the body panels. One attempted prior solution was to have a sealing compound (“dumdum”) placed on the spring clips by the production line assemblers before insertion of the clip into the retaining hole. This and other attempted solutions were not satisfactory due to the difficulties in assuring proper application of the sealing material under conditions which prevail on the automobile body assembly lines. The invention defined by the counts herein proposes the use of a pre-formed thermoplastic body which is bonded to the clip so that it could simply and effectively plug the body holes to effect a water-tight seal and thus obviate the unreliable “dumdum” application on the assembly line.

Three issues are presented to us by this appeal:

(1) Was the board correct in holding that none of the counts read on Meulenberg and Redmond’s exhibits 1 and 4?
(2) If we find that any of the five counts do read upon these exhibits 1 and 4, was the board correct in holding that the junior party’s testimony established a reduction to-practice prior to the senior party’s filing date?
(3) If the second issue is answered affirmatively, was the board: correct in its decision on reconsideration that the senior party’s proofs-failed to show a reduction to practice-of a clip satisfying the counts prior to its filing date, or prior to the junior party’s proven reduction to-practice ?

Both parties took testimony. The testimony on behalf of the junior party, Meulenberg and Redmond, chiefly concerned the development of a satisfactory clip having a soft rubber base. The various witnesses testified that a molding clip of the type shown in Fig. 6 of the junior party’s application was successfully produced “in the winter of 1949”. These witnesses specifically referred to a clip identical to Meulenberg and Redmond’s exhibits 1 and 4. Exhibit 1 was a sample clip and exhibit 4, a production drawing, was related to exhibit 1 by witness Donald Koza as follows:

“Q42. How does Exhibit 1 compare with the drawing, Exhibit 4? A. Well, to my knowledge, I would say this is the 5050 part number, but now without mic-ing [sic] or laying it out, I would say it is the style of button and it is the style of clip that was set up, in my opinion, as this 5050 clip, and the sponge pad, or sponge button is identical with this drawing (indicating).”

A major difficulty to overcome in perfecting the resilient base of thermoplastic material was to develop a sponge rub[541]*541ber of such properties that it would effectively seal the hole in the fender and at the same time not interfere with the gripping action of the prongs. This problem was described by witness Paul Funkhouser who testified for the junior party as follows:

“Q25. Speaking of the harder rubber, you say you made tests on this harder rubber.
“A. Yes.
“Q26. And it did not work.
“A. No, it wasn’t satisfactory from the standpoint that in some cases the rubber would not seal the hole, and in other cases it held the molding away from the body.
“Q27. Were those tests on the harder rubber quite extensive?
“A. I would say so, yes. They submitted samples I would say weekly reducing the hardness of the rubber, and we also were experimenting with some sort of sponge rubber that could be applied.”

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Related

Timothy G. Meulenberg and Robert L. Redmond v. Robert E. Scott
314 F.2d 538 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
314 F.2d 538, 50 C.C.P.A. 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-g-meulenberg-and-robert-l-redmond-v-robert-e-scott-ccpa-1963.