Document Fragment View

Matching Fragments

The validity of the design was upheld, Bowen L.J. saying "It seems to me that the novelty and originality in the design, within this section, is not destroyed by its being taken from a source common to mankind...The novelty may consist in the applicability to the article of manufacture of a drawing or design which is taken from a source to which all the world may resort. Otherwise, it would be impossible to take any natural or artistic object and to reduce it into a design applicable to an article of manufacture, without also having this consequence following, that you could not do it at all in the first place unless you were to alter the design so as not to represent exactly the original; otherwise there would be no novelty in it, because it would be said that the thing which was taken was not new. You could not take a tree and put it on a spoon, unless you drew the tree in some shape in which a tree never grew, nor an elephant unless you drew it and carved it of a kind which had never been seen. An illustration, it seems to me, that may be taken about this is what we all know as the Apostles spoons. The figures of the Apostles are figures which have been embodied in sacred art for centuries, and there is nothing new in taking the figures of the Apostles, but the novelty of applying the figures of the Apostles to spoons was in contriving to design the Apostles figures so that they should be applicable to that particular subject-matter. How does a building differ from that? In no sense it seems to me.

It is not permissible to make a mosaic of a number of prior documents for the purpose of attacking novelty. If the attack on novelty is to succeed, the design must be disclosed in the single prior document. If, however, one document contains a reference to another document, the two may be read together." (emphasis supplied) The principle that emerges from the judicial decisions as well as from the authorities on the subject is that, in the event, it is found that the impugned design has substantial identity with the prior published design, it is liable to be cancelled. In order to claim novelty, there has to be a significant change or difference in the design, although, it may have a common source.

In the instant case, it cannot be said that the impugned design is new in its application.

In Saunders v. Wiel reported in Reports of Patent, Design and Trade Mark, Vol. X, No.4, Page 29, it was held that new or original design not previously published did not require novelty in the idea of the design but novelty in the application of the design to some article of manufacturer. It is found that the design is novel in its application, its novelty is not destroyed but it is having been taken from source common to mankind.