American Bell Tel. Co. v. National Tel. Mfg. Co.

119 F. 893, 56 C.C.A. 423, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4814
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1903
DocketNo. 401
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 F. 893 (American Bell Tel. Co. v. National Tel. Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bell Tel. Co. v. National Tel. Mfg. Co., 119 F. 893, 56 C.C.A. 423, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4814 (1st Cir. 1903).

Opinion

CORT, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court dismissing a bill brought for infringement, of letters patent No. 463,569, issued November 17, 1891, to the American Bell Telephone Company as assignee of Emile Berliner. A caveat describing the invention was filed April 14, 1877, and the application for the patent June 4, 1877. The patent is for a battery telephone transmitter of the variable resistance type.

A battery transmitter is one in which a battery or strong current is utilized for the transmission of speech, as distinguished from a magneto transmitter, in which only a feeble current is generated by [894]*894induction. It requires a battery current to transmit speech long distances. The variable resistance type of transmitter utilizes a battery current for the transmission of speech by varying the electrical resistance in the circuit. Variable resistance means simply variable obstruction to the passage of the current. Variable resistance changes the strength or intensity of the current, and, if these changes correspond to the changes in the density of the air caused by sound waves, we have a current whose electrical undulations or vibrations are similar in form to sonorous vibrations or sound waves, and which will transmit speech. In a telephone transmitter variable resistance refers to the changes in resistance which take place at the contact between the two conductors or electrodes, produced by the vibrations of the diaphragm caused by the sound waves.

The Berliner transmitter, covered by his patent in suit, utilizes a battery current for the transmission of speech by varying the electrical resistance in the circuit. The following drawing from the patent shows the Berliner telephone, in which Fig. I is the transmitter in controversy, and Fig. 2 the receiver:

threaded rod, B, which is supported by the bar, d. The pressure of the ball, C, against the plate, A, can be regulated by turning the rod, B. The ball and plate are included in cir.cuit with an electric battery, so that they form electrodes, the current passing from one of them to the other. By making the plate vibrate, the pressure at the point of contact becomes weaker or stronger as often as vibrations occur, and the strength of the current is thereby varied accordingly. [895]*895By placing another instrument capable^ of acting as a telephonic receiver, as shown in Fig. 2, in the same electric circuit, sound uttered against the plate of Fig. 1 will be reproduced by the plate of Fig. 2; for, as the vibrations of the transmitter diaphragm caused by the sound will alternately weaken and strengthen the current as many times as vibrations occur, the diaphragm of the receiver will be caused by these electrical vibrations to vibrate at the same rate and measure. The latter vibrations being communicated to .the surrounding air, the same kind of sound as uttered against the transmitter, Fig. 1, will be reproduced at the receiver, Fig. 2. It is not essential that the plate should be of metal. It may be of any material able to vibrate, if only at the point of contact suitable arrangement is madé so that the current passes through that point. It may be of any shape or size, or other suitable vibratory medium may be used; for example, a wire. ' Any other metallic point, surface, or wire may be substituted for the ball.

From this description in the patent we find that the Berliner transmitter consists of a battery circuit with two electrodes in constant contact. One electrode is composed of a diaphragm or plate of metal or other vibratory material, and the other electrode of a metallic ball or point. Sound uttered against the diaphragm causes it to vibrate. These vibrations vary the pressure between the electrodes at the point of contact so as to strengthen and weaken the contact, and thereby vary the electrical resistance of the circuit.

The following claims are in issue:

“(1) The method of producing in a circuit electrical undulations similar In form to sound waves by causing the sound waves to vary the pressure between electrodes in constant contact so as to strengthen and weaken the contact and thereby increase and diminish the resistance of the circuit, substantially as described.
“(2) An electric speaking telephone transmitter operated by sound waves, and consisting of a plate sensitive to said sound waves, electrodes in constant contact with each other, and forming part of a circuit which includes a battery or .other source of electric energy and adapted to increase and decrease the resistance of the electric circuit by the variation in pressure between them caused by the vibrational movement of said sensitive plate.”

These claims must be- read in connection with the disclaimer of the patent, which declares that the patentee does not claim to be “the first inventor of the art of transmitting vocal and other sounds telegraphically by causing electrical undulations similar in form to the sound waves accompanying said sounds,” nor to be “the first who caused such electrical undulations by varying the resistance of an electric circuit in which a current was passing.”

In view of this disclaimer, the first claim covers only the particular method described for varying the resistance in the circuit to produce electrical undulations similar in form to sound waves, and the second claim covers only the instrument or transmitter which embodies this method.

The complainant mainly relies on the first or method claim. It is contended that the invention covered by this claim was first disclosed by Berliner in his caveat of April 14, 1877. This invention was the method of varying resistance in the circuit by varying the pressure at the point of contact between solid electrodes in constant [896]*896•contact. This way of varying the resistance, it is said, is the same as that disclosed by Prof. Hughes a year later, on May 9, 1878, in a paper read before the Royal Society of London. Hughes called his instrument the microphone. The complainant rests its' case upon the identity of the Berliner and the Hughes methods of varying the •resistance, and upon the priority of invention by Berliner. In the language of complainant’s brief: “It cannot be seriously denied, and none of the witnesses deny, that the Hughes article and the caveat describe the same invention.” “The complainant stakes its case upon the proposition, firmly established by the testimony, that Emile Berliner was the original and first inventor of the microphone.” This position of the complainant is necessary in order to make out infringement. The defendant’s transmitters use carbon electrodes, and, unless Berliner first discovered and disclosed the microphonic method •of varying resistance, his patent must be limited to the metallic electrodes describes in the specification, and the defendants do not infringe. The issue here raised can be more intelligently considered if we briefly review the state of the art at the time Berliner made his invention.

The speech transmitting telephone presents the problem of the reproduction, by means of an electric current, of a succession of vibrations on the receiving diaphragm which shall exactly correspond to the vibrations of the transmitting diaphragm caused by the air vibrations, or sound waves, produced by the voice in speaking. The problem was rendered more difficult for the reason that the air vibrations caused by the vocal organs in articulate speech are very complex in form. •

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119 F. 893, 56 C.C.A. 423, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bell-tel-co-v-national-tel-mfg-co-ca1-1903.