Thе district court in this case held a patent invalid for lack of utility on the ground that the patented invention was designed to deceive customers by imitating another product and thereby increasing sales of a particular good. We reverse and remand.
I
Juicy Whip, Inc., is the assignee of United States Patent No. 5,575,405, which is entitled “Post-Mix Beverage Dispenser With an Associated Simulated Display of Beverage.” A “post-mix” beverage dispenser storеs beverage syrup concentrate and water in separate locations until the beverage is ready to be dispensed. The syrup and water are mixed together immediately before the beverage is dispеnsed, which is usually after the consumer requests the beverage. In contrast, in a “pre-mix” beverage dispenser, the syrup concentrate and water are pre-mixed and the beverage is stored in a display reservоir bowl until it is ready to be dispensed. The display bowl is said to stimulate impulse buying by providing the consumer with a visual beverage display. A pre-mix display bowl, however, has a limited capacity and is subject to contamination by baсteria. It therefore must be refilled and cleaned frequently.
The invention claimed in the ’405 patent is a post-mix beverage dispenser that is designed to look like a pre-mix beverage dispenser. The claims require thе post-mix dispenser to have a transparent bowl that is filled with a fluid that simulates the appearance of the dispensed beverage and is resistant to bacterial growth. The claims also require that the dispensеr create the visual impression that the bowl is the principal source of the dispensed beverage, although in fact the beverage is mixed immediately before it is dispensed, as in conventional post-mix dispensers.
Claim 1 is representative of the claims at issue. It reads as follows:
In a post-mix beverage dispenser of the type having an outlet for discharging beverage components in predetermined proportions tо provide a serving of dispensed beverage, the improvement which comprises:
a transparent bowl having no fluid connection with the outlet and visibly containing a quantity of fluid;
said fluid being resistant to organic growth and simulating the аppearance of the dispensed beverage;
said bowl being positioned relative to the outlet to create the visual impression *1366 that said bowl is the reservoir and principal source of the dispensed beverage from the outlet; and
said bowl and said quantity of fluid visible within said bowl cooperating to create the visual impression that multiple servings of the dispensed beverage are stored within said bowl.
Juicy Whip sued defеndants Orange Bang, Inc., and Unique Beverage Dispensers, Inc., (collectively, “Orange Bang”) in the United States District Court for the Central District of California, alleging that they were infringing the claims of the ’405 patent. Orange Bang moved for summary judgment of invalidity, and the district court granted Orange Bang’s motion on the ground that the invention lacked utility and thus was unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 101.
The court concluded that the invention lacked utility because its purpose was to incrеase sales by deception, i.e., through imitation of another product. The court explained that the purpose of the invention “is to create an illusion, whereby customers believe that the fluid contained in the bоwl is the actual beverage that they are receiving, when of course it is not.” Although the court acknowledged Juicy Whip’s argument that the invention provides an accurate representation of the dispensed beverage for the consumer’s benefit while eliminating the need for retailers to clean their display bowls, the court concluded that those claimed reasons for the patent’s utility “are not independent of its deсeptive purpose, and are thus insufficient to raise a disputed factual issue to present to a jury.” The court further held that the invention lacked utility because it “improves the prior art only to the extent that it increases the salability of beverages dispensed from post-mix dispensers”; an invention lacks utility, the court stated, if it confers no benefit to the public other than the opportunity for making a product more salable. Finally, the court ruled that the invention lacked utility because it “is merely an imitation of the pre-mix dispenser,” and thus does not constitute a new and useful machine.
II
Section 101 of the Patent Act of 1952, 35 U.S.C. § 101, provides that “[wjhoever invents оr discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof,” .may obtain a patent on the invention or discovery. The threshold of utility is nоt high: An invention is “useful” under section 101 if it is capable of providing some identifiable benefit.
See Brenner v. Manson,
383 U.S.
519, 534,
To be sure, since Justice Story’s opinion in
Lowell v. Lewis,
In holding the patent in this case invalid for lack of utility, the district court relied on two Second Circuit cases dating from the еarly years of this century,
Rickard v. Du Bon,
The
Aristo Hosiery
case concerned a patent claiming a seamless stocking with a structure on the back of the stocking that imitated a seamed stoсking. The imitation was commercially useful because at the time of the invention many consumers regarded seams in stockings as an indication of higher quality. The court noted that the imitation seam did not “change or improvе the structure or the utility of the article,” and that the record in the case justified the conclusion that true seamed stockings were superior to the seamless stockings that were the subject of the patent.
See Aristo Hosiery,
We decline to follow Rickard and Aristo Hosiery, as we do not -regard them as representing the correct view of the doctrine of utility under the Patent Act of 1952. The fact that one product can be altered to make it loоk like another is in itself a specific benefit sufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement of utility.
It is not at all unusual for a product to be designed to appear to viewers to be something it is not. For example, cubic zirconium is designed to simulate a diamond, imitation gold leaf is designed to imitate real gold leaf, synthetic fabrics are designed to simulate expensive natural fabrics, and imitation leather is designed to look like real leather. In each case, the invention of the product or process that makes such imitation possible has “utility” within the meaning of the patent statute, and indeed there are numerous patents directed toward making one product imitate another. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,762,968 (method for producing imitation grill marks on food without using heat); U.S. Pat. No. 5,899,038 (laminated flooring imitating wood); U.S. Pat. No. 5,571,545 (imitation hamburger). Much of the value of such products resides.in the fact that they appear to be something they are not. Thus, in this case the claimed post-mix dispenser meets the statutory requirement of utility by embodying the features of a post-mix dispenser while imitating the visual appearance оf a pre-mix dispenser.
The fact that customers may believe they are receiving fluid directly from the display tank does not deprive the invention of utility. Orange Bang has not argued that it is unlawful to display a representation of the beverage in the manner that
*1368
fluid is displayed in the reservoir of the invention, even though the fluid is not what the customer will actually receive. Moreover, even if the use of a reservoir containing fluid that is not dispensеd is considered deceptive, that is not by itself sufficient to render the invention unpatentable. The requirement of “utility” in patent law is not a directive to the Patent and Trademark Office or the courts to serve as arbitеrs of deceptive trade practices. Other agencies, such as the Federal Trade Commission and the Food and Drug Administration, are assigned the task of protecting consumers from fraud and deception in the sаle of food products.
Cf. In re Watson, 517
F.2d
465,
474-76,
Of course, Congress is free to declare particular types of inventions unpatentable for a variety of reasons, including deceptiveness. Cf. 42 U.S.C. § 2181(a) (exempting from patent protection inventions useful solely in сonnection with special nuclear material or atomic weapons). Until such time as Congress does so, however, we find no basis in section 101 to hold that inventions can be ruled unpatentable for lack of utility simply bеcause they have the capacity to fool some members of the public. The district court therefore erred in holding that the invention of the ’405 patent lacks utility because it deceives the public through imitation in a manner that is designed to increase product sales.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
