DocketNumber: Nos. 2402, 2403
Judges: Buffington, Wooeeey
Filed Date: 12/9/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The two patents here involved concern the construction of a tin cap, at the top of a yearly calendar pad, which by engagement with a slot in a permanent backboard holds such pad in engagement with the backboard. The court below, in an opinion reported in 247 Fed. 962, found the patents valid and infringed. The facts are fully stated in that opinion, and we avoid restatement by reference thereto.
After careful consideration, we are of the opinion these improvements were the natural advance incident to the art. It is true this plaintiff’s cap made a more attractive looking calendar, one which had a firmer connection with the backboard than heretofore, and one which possibly gave a firmer and more effective hold to the sheets, by affording a larger margin on the upper side of the holes by which the sheets were held in place. But all of these improvements were in our judgment but the natural manufacturing advances in an existing art, where improvement was to be expected, in the comfort and attractiveness of office appliances which have in the last few years characterized the surroundings of business and professional work. Regarding the patentee’s improvements as the natural growth to such art, we feel they do not involve invention.
The decrees below are therefore reversed, and the cases remanded, with instructions to dismiss the bills.