84 F. 170 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1897
This is a suit upon a patent dated January 12, 1897 (Ho. 26,533), issued to Jacob Prank, for “design for a cap.” The specification expressly refers to the accompanying drawings as “forming a part thereof.” It also states that the leading feature of the patentee’s design for a cap is the “rim of the same, with ornamentations thereon.” It is further specified (referring to the drawings) that “on the rim are geometrically-shaped figures, D, and the rosette, E.” Fig. 1 of the accompanying drawings shows a succession of diamond-shaped figures encircling the rim of the cap, together with a single, circular rosette attached to the rim at a point between two of the diamond-shaped figures before mentioned. What is claimed is the “design for a cap, substantially as described and shown.” The position taken by the complainant’s counsel, that this patent should be so construed as to cover any and every kind of geometrically-shaded figure, when applied, for the purpose of ornamentation, to the rim of a child’s can is clearly untenable. The monopoly must be confined to the particular design described and shown, and, being so confined, the design of the defendant cannot be held to conflict with it. The two designs not only are not identical, but they do not present the same impression to the eye; nor can I believe that an ordinary purchaser, giving any attention to the subject of design, would be misled into supposing that that of the defendant is that of