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# 2115 Material or Article Worked Upon by Apparatus [R-07.2015] | |
**MATERIAL OR ARTICLE WORKED UPON DOES NOT LIMIT APPARATUS CLAIMS** Claim analysis is highly fact-dependent. A claim is only limited by | |
positively recited elements. Thus, "[i]nclusion of the material or article worked upon | |
by a structure being claimed does not impart patentability to the claims." *In | |
re Otto,* 312 F.2d 937, 136 USPQ 458, 459 (CCPA 1963); see also *In | |
re Young,* 75 F.2d 996, 25 USPQ 69 (CCPA 1935). | |
In *Otto,* the claims were directed to a | |
core member for hair curlers (i.e., a particular device) and a method of making the core | |
member (i.e., a particular method of making that device) and "not to a method of curling | |
hair wherein th[e] particular device is used." 312 F.2d at 940. The court held that | |
patentability of the claims cannot be based "upon a certain procedure for curling hair | |
using th[e] device and involving a number of steps in the process." The court noted that | |
"the process is irrelevant as is the recitation involving the hair being wound around | |
the core" in terms of determining patentability of the particular device. | |
*Id.* Therefore, the inclusion of the material or article worked | |
upon by a structure being claimed does not impart patentability to the claims. | |
In *Young,* a claim to a machine for making concrete | |
beams included a limitation to the concrete reinforced members made by the machine as | |
well as the structural elements of the machine itself. The court held that the inclusion | |
of the article formed within the body of the claim did not, without more, make the claim | |
patentable. | |
In *In re Casey,* 370 F.2d 576, 152 USPQ 235 (CCPA | |
1967), an apparatus claim recited "[a] taping machine comprising a supporting structure, | |
a brush attached to said supporting structure, said brush being formed with projecting | |
bristles which terminate in free ends to collectively define a surface to which adhesive | |
tape will detachably adhere, and means for providing relative motion between said brush | |
and said supporting structure while said adhesive tape is adhered to said surface." An | |
obviousness rejection was made over a reference to Kienzle which taught a machine for | |
perforating sheets. The court upheld the rejection stating that "the references in claim | |
1 to adhesive tape handling do not expressly or impliedly require any particular | |
structure in addition to that of Kienzle." *Id.* at 580-81. The | |
perforating device had the structure of the taping device as claimed, the difference was | |
in the use of the device, and "the manner or method in which such machine is to be | |
utilized is not germane to the issue of patentability of the machine itself." | |
*Id.* at 580. | |
Note that this line of cases is limited to claims directed to machinery | |
which works upon an article or material in its intended use. | |
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