Application of Timmerbeil

Decision Date26 July 1963
Docket NumberPatent Appeal No. 6898.
Citation320 F.2d 413,50 CCPA 1514
PartiesApplication of Erich TIMMERBEIL, Hugo Timmerbell and Paul Timmerbeil.
CourtU.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA)

Michael S. Striker, New York City, for appellants.

Clarence W. Moore, Washington, D. C. (Raymond E. Martin, Washington, D. C., of counsel), for the Commissioner of Patents.

Before WORLEY, Chief Judge, and RICH, MARTIN, SMITH, and ALMOND, Judges.

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

All the claims in appellants' application1 for a patent on a "Strapping Band Device and Method of Making Same," were rejected by the examiner as unpatentable over the prior art. In affirming that action, the Board of Appeals stated in part:

The references relied upon by the Examiner are:

                  Holmes et al.              113,518    April 11, 1871
                  Olmsted                    180,910    August 8, 1876
                  Beugler                  1,203,688    November 7, 1916
                  Gibausset et al.           774,167    September 17, 1934
                    (France)
                  Timmerbeil                 417,821    October 12, 1934
                  Titan Eisenwarenfabrik     648,535    August 3, 1937
                    (Germany)
                
"The appealed claims relate to a band for securing bales, the bands having manually operable interlocking means.
"Claim 2 is rejected by the Examiner as unpatentable over Gibausset et al., Timmerbeil or Titan Eisenwarenfabrik. Claims 4 to 6 and 8 to 10 are rejected by the Examiner as unpatentable over the same references, each in view of either Olmsted or Beugler. Claim 11 is rejected by the Examiner as unpatentable over the references applied to claim 2 taken with Holmes et al."

Appellant appeals from that decision. The statute governing appeals to this court2 requires that:

"When an appeal is taken to the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, the appellant shall give notice thereof to the Commissioner, and shall file in the Patent Office his reasons of appeal, specifically set forth in writing, within such time after the date of the decision appealed from, not less than sixty days, as the Commissioner appoints." (Emphasis supplied.)

Appellants' attempted compliance with that statute consists of the following reasons of appeal:

"1. It was error to affirm the decision of the Examiner in his rejection of claims 2, 4 to 6 and 8 to 11.
"2. It was error to refuse to allow the rejected claims."

The solicitor argues that those reasons do not satisfy the statute and that the appeal should be dismissed, relying on In re Dichter, 110 F.2d 664, 27 CCPA 1060, and cases cited therein.

In In re Gruschwitz, Patent Appeal 6885, CCPA, 320 F.2d 401, decided concurrently, the same counsel made much the same argument and relied on the same decisions as here. We hold here, as there, that the reasons of appeal are merely broad allegations that the board erred, clearly lacking the specificity the statute requires. The appeal is dismissed.

Dismissed.

MARTIN, Judge (concurring).

As I stated in PA 6885, CCPA, 320 F.2d 401, which has identical reasons of appeal,1 it should be remembered that the question of whether specific reasons of appeal are adequate depends upon the factual situation in the appeal in which the particular reasons are filed. Where in one case the reasons of appeal set forth by appellant would be sufficient, the same reasons in another appeal involving a different set of facts might not be adequate.

Therefore, when an appeal is dismissed, I believe it is incumbent upon us to state specifically wherein the reasons of appeal are insufficient. Here, it seems to me that since several references have been cited by the examiner and the board as the basis for the rejection of the appealed claims, appellants failed to comply with the provisions of 35 U.S. C. § 142 in not setting forth their position as to these references in their reasons of appeal. Under these circumstances I would dismiss this appeal.

RICH, Judge (dissenting).

For reasons stated in No. 6885, CCPA, 320 F.2d 401, decided concurrently herewith, we should decide this case on its merits.

SMITH, Judge (dissenting).

This appeal and the appeal in In re Gruschwitz et al. (PA 6885), CCPA, 320 F.2d 401, decided concurrently herewith, have been dismissed by the majority because they find that appellants' reasons of appeal do not meet the requirements of 35 U.S.C. § 142. Unlike the situation in In re LePage's Inc., 312 F.2d 455, 50 CCPA 852, where no reason of appeal was filed, appellants here have filed the two reasons of appeal quoted in the majority opinion. These reasons of appeal, as do the reasons of appeal in the Gruschwitz case, conform in content to reasons of appeal accepted by this court in a number of other cases which Judge Rich has cited in his dissenting opinion in the Gruschwitz case, with which I concur.

In April of this year a majority of the court accepted as adequate a reason of appeal reading as follows:

"1. It was error to affirm the decision of the Examiner in his rejection of claims 18 to 28."1

Having joined in the majority opinion in that case, it is difficult for me to reconcile it with the majority opinion in the present appeal. The majority opinion in the Gruschwitz case and Judge Martin's concurring opinion here suggest that the facts are different. I agree. However, this distinction does not provide a basis which I can accept as explaining the different result reached here. Our concern should be to determine whether the new facts present different legal issues. In my opinion they do not.

Judge Rich in his separate dissenting opinion in the Gruschwitz case has pointed out the often contradictory opinions of this court which present one of the most confused and perplexing situations imaginable.

The present situation recalls those now long forgotten cases involving common law pleading wherein justice depended less on the merits of the cause of action than it did on the niceties of the specific word selection of the pleader. It was the historic subordination of justice to the formal niceties of pleading which forced procedural reforms, which, in federal practice, have been embodied in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The...

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3 cases
  • Application of Gruschwitz, Patent Appeal No. 6885.
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA)
    • 26 Julio 1963
    ...of present procedure, which I explained in the LePage's case. What I say here has equal applicability to the case of In re Timmerbeil et al. (No. 6898), 320 F.2d 413, decided concurrently herewith, so some of my remarks may be directed to statements made in the majority or other opinions in......
  • Application of Castner
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA)
    • 26 Junio 1975
    ...In re Gruschwitz, 320 F.2d 401, 50 CCPA 1498 (1963), cert. denied, 375 U.S. 967, 84 S.Ct. 486, 11 L.Ed.2d 416 (1964); In re Timmerbeil, 320 F.2d 413, 50 CCPA 1514 (1963); In re Wiechert, 370 F.2d 927, 54 CCPA 957 (1967). However, there are, perhaps, an equal number of contrary decisions on ......
  • Application of Grier
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA)
    • 11 Marzo 1965
    ...numerically identified in association with the allegation that the board had committed error in its rejection. As in In re Timmerbeil, 320 F.2d 413, 50 CCPA 1514, no reason whatsoever was assigned except a statement, totally devoid of a modicum of specificity, that the board had committed N......

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