Accumulator Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co.

53 F. 793, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 2073
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 13, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 53 F. 793 (Accumulator Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Accumulator Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co., 53 F. 793, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 2073 (circtdnj 1892).

Opinion

GREEN, District Judge.

The defendants are charged with the willful violation of tbe injunction heretofore granted by this court, whereby tbe defendants were commanded and enjoined—

‘■Forever to desist from directly or indirectly making or causing to be made, using or causing to be used, or vending to others to be nsed in any manner, any secondary batteries containing or embodying the invention secured to Joseph Wilson Swan on the 17th day of December, 1889, by letters patent No. 11,017, for an improvement in secondary batteries, which invention was described therein as follows: ‘A jerforated or cellular plate for secondary batteries, having the perforations or cells extending through the plate, and the active material, or materials to become active, packed in said perforations or cells only, substantially as described.’ ”

It is alleged by the complainants that the structure now made, used, and sold by the defendants is practically tbe same structure which they were enjoined from using, making, or selling, and that, if such structure is in any respect whatever different therefrom, the difference is an unsubstantial one, introduced for the very purpose [794]*794of evasion, and, in effect, stiU appropriates the essence of the invention secured to Mr. Swan.

The cause in which the enjoining decree of this court was made was never argued or presented to it for adjudication upon its merits. A suit wholly identical in character, between practically the same parties, touching, the same invention, and alleging the same acts and causes of infringement, was at issue in the circuit court for the southern district of New York, and was there finally determined in favor of the complainants; the decree upholding the letters patent referred to, in all respects, and sustaining the invention thereby secured to Mr. Swan as clearly having patentable novelty. Electrical Accumulator Co. v. New York & H. R. Co., 50 Fed. Rep. 81. As a result of this adjudication, the defendants were duly enjoined by that court from all further infringing acts. This adjudication being brought to the attention of this court, upon the well-known doctrine of comity, it was immediately followed in this circuit; and, practically without any contest, an enjoining decree similar to the one made in New York was made in this circuit. It follows that the construction which the circuit court in the district of New York gave to the letters patent in this case is the construction supposed to be adopted by this court in its action granting the injunction; and such construction will be adhered to in the consideration of this motion. In fact, upon the somewhat hurried examination that has been given to the matters involved on this motion, I cannot see how any other or broader construction could be given to the letters patent than has been given in the suit referred to by his honor, Judge Goxe. The only claim made by the inventor expressly de-' dares that the main characteristic of his invention, consists in a plate for secondary batteries, having cells or perforations extending through the plate, and the active material, or material to become active, packed in said perforations or cells only. The word “only” clearly means “exclusively,” and that the inventor meant, therefore, to say that in his invention the active material, or the material to become active, was to be placed or packed in the perforations or cells of the plate, to the entire exclusion of every other receptacle or part of the plate. Judge Ooxe, in his opinion, tersely says:

“The real invention of Swan was the combination of a support, plate, or grid, a perforated plate, with active material so combined therewith as to exist only in the perforations.”

I concur fully in that conclusion.

Adopting, then, this as the true and legal definition of the invention of Mr. Swan, and which the defendants were enjoined from using, making, or vending, does the structure now made and sold by them in any wise infringe it? If it does, they have undoubtedly violated the mandatory order of this court. If it does not, this motion must go for nothing. The defendants place their sole defense to this serious charge upon the fact that not only do they pack the active material in the perforations of a grid or supporting plate, but, as well, and as an essential part of that structure, pack it upon the surface of the plate; and they insist that grids forming part of a storage battery having active material packed, pressed upon, or [795]*795otherwise affixed to the face of the plate, outside of the perforations, are not to be included within the purview of the injunction. The grid now made by the defendants has been somewhat changed in construction since the injunction was issued. The network of the crossbars within the outer supporting framework, that form the perforated portion, is considerably thinner, measuring in a direction through the thickness of the plate as a finished plate, than in the old grid. The perforations are smaller. There are now 625 perforations in the present grid. In the old grid, there were 400. The outside frame is slightly raised above the level of the inside division or network bars, and the edges of these bars are thinner, and more knife-like, than formerly. But these differences are mere matters of detail, not in any wise affecting the question under considera^ tion. If there were no other explanations given in excuse for the alleged inf ringements than such as are based upon these changes in structure, the defendants would be wholly without justification. But they claim that, not only are the grids differently constructed, but, as well, that the active material which they use is packed or made to adhere to the surface of the grid, and that such a combination of perforated plate and active material, packed outside the perforations, and on the surface of the plate, is not within either the terms of the Swan letters patent, nor the construction placed upon them by the court in New' York.

The complainants deny, in toto, that any of the active material in the defendants’ plates is outside the perforations. On this point, Mr. Vausize, in his affidavit, says:

“Tiie said, batteries [i. e., those made since the injunction by the defendants] are composed of perforated plates of metal, [that is, lead, or an alloy of lead.] The perforations extend completely through the plate, and are substantially equidistant, with respect to each other. The active material is packed in the perforations, and completely fills the perforations, and such active material is packed within the perforations only.” “There is absolutely no difference between the battery plates and the cells of battery formerly manufactured by the defendant company, and adjudged to be an infringement.”

In a later affidavit, he says:

“In most of the plates heretofore examined by me, and referred to in my former affidavit, the active material is substantially confined to the perforations only. There may be isolated points upon the surface of these plates, or imperfections or inaccuracies, which give lodgment to small quantities of the active material; but such active material is not present, in any useful quantity, outside the perforations.”

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Bluebook (online)
53 F. 793, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 2073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/accumulator-co-v-consolidated-electric-storage-co-circtdnj-1892.