American Graphophone Co. v. Universal Talking Machine Mfg. Co.

145 F. 636, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4785
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 19, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 F. 636 (American Graphophone Co. v. Universal Talking Machine Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Graphophone Co. v. Universal Talking Machine Mfg. Co., 145 F. 636, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4785 (circtsdny 1906).

Opinion

PIAZED, District Judge.

This action relates to the validity and infringement of .patent No. 688,739, dated December 30, 1901, granted to Joseph W. Jones, on application filed November 19, 1897, for production of sound-records. The suit was originally brought by the patentee, but subsequently the American Graphophone Company acquired the absolute ownership of the patent by purchase, and thereupon a supplemental bill was filed bringing in the present complainant. This invention has for its particular object a method of duplicating or producing copies of an original sound-record of the zigzag [637]*637typo, which was especially adapted for use in a talking machine known as the "Gramophone/’ invented by Emile Berliner. At the date of the patent in suit, the phonograph, the invention of Edison, the graphophoue, the invention of Bell & 'fainter, and the gramophone were known to the art and their distinguishing characteristics well understood. A brief summary, therefore, of the different styles of sound-records will suffice. Original sound-records of the Berliner patent, No. 848,623, consist of fiat zinc records having etched on their surfaces a great number of infinitely small undulatory grooves of uniform depth,, representing sound-waves. The sound-record of the invention adapted for use in talking machines, of which Mr. Edison and Messrs. Bell and 'fainter were the inventors, consisted of cylindrical tablets having cut or engraved on their surfaces vertical undulations or irregularities of varying depth. In this controversy, we are not concerned with the construction of a machine or apparatus embodying the reproducing style, the adjustment of the record tablet,, the reproducer diaphragm, the laterally undulating record, nor, indeed, the mechanical steps by which the record is enabled to effectuate the result. The distinctive purpose of the patentee, as stated by him, was the process or method of duplicating or multiplying a sound-record having lateral undulations of even depth. ’ This object involved the method already known of producing the original or master record, tlie subsequent steps of making a metallic matrix by electrolysis, separating the same from the original record, and thereupon repeatedly pressing the matrix into a suitable yielding material so as to produce ■a vendible article. The claims which are descriptive of the alleged invention read as follows:

“(I) Tlie herein described method of producing sound-records, which consists iu cutting or engraving upon a tablet of suitable material, by means of the lateral vibrations of a suitable stylus, a record-groove of appreciable and practically uniform depth and having lateral undulations corresponding to tlie sound-waves, next coating the same with a conducting material, then forming a matrix thereon by electrolysis, and finally separating this matrix and pressing the same into a tablet of suitable material, substantially as described.
"(2) The process of producing commercial sound-records of the type indicated, which consists of first preparing a fiat tablet or disk of soft waxlilce material. then engraving thereon by means of the lateral vibrations of a suitable stylus a record-groove of appreciable, and uniform depth and having lateral undulations corresponding to sound-waves, next rendering the surface thereof electrically conductive, then forming a matrix thereon by electrolysis, next separating the matrix from the original record disk without the use of heat, and finally impressing said matrix into a disk of suitable material to form the ultimate record, substantially as described.”

Claim 2 contains the element of removing the matrix from the master record without the employment of .heat. In other respects it is similar to the first. The defenses interposed are anticipation, non-infringement, want of patentability, in that the process described in the specification is for a mode of operation in which no elemental change is accomplished or chemical action effected. The latter defense will be briefly considered first. Does the process disclose a patentable invention? Assuming that the patent does not involve a chemical effect, though electroplating is one of the elements, it never[638]*638iheless is thought that the series of acts described in the Jones patent produce a definite and useful result essentially different from that described in the patents to Berliner, and one that would be patentable if the steps taken were not fully disclosed in patents of prior date. It is always important in considering a process patent to have in mind the fact that a similarity of machinery used to effectuate the result is wholly immaterial. Carnegie Steel Co. v. Cambria Iron Co., 185 U. S. 403, 22 Sup. Ct. 698, 46 L. Ed. 968. The patent is granted for the way the thing is accomplished, including the series of steps used to produce the article. That an old result brought into existence by a treatment upon certain materials theretofore unknown is entitled to the protection of the patent laws cannot be disputed. Cochrane v. Deener, 94 U. S. 780, 24 L. Ed. 514; Lawther v. Hamilton, 124 U. S. 1, 8 Sup. Ct. 342, 31 L. Ed. 325; Eastern Paper Bag Co. v. Standard Paper Bag Co. (C. C.) 30 Fed. 63; Crane v. Price, 1 Web. Pat. Cas. 626. By analogy, the same principle governs a process which depends upon the correlation of different mechanical elements to accomplish a new and beneficial result. In Kirchberger v. American Acetylene Co. (C. C.) 124 Fed. 764, affirmed 128 Fed. 599, 64 C. C. A. 107, Judge Ray comprehensively stated the rule as follows:

“When a patented process or machine proves a failure, is inoperative, and another follows, and is a success, in its operation, the latter is a new invention and patentable, even though we have the same machinery or parts of machinery, but they are combined or put together in a new way; and this is true even if the latter combination closely follows and resembles the first, provided there be a difference. In such case it is evident that the later patentee has succeeded where the other failed; that he has discovered or invented the desired, thing to accomplish a new and useful result; that his change, however unimportant it may seem to the observer, is the key to the whole situation.”

That a sound-record of the t}>pe in question, and the materials by which the result is attained (except the graving element), separately considered, were familiarly known, is not seriously disputed. Nor is it contended that the patentee was a pioneer in making sound-records. Whether the different steps of the process in suit were old must be ascertained by an examination of the antecedent art. Such art as understood by the patentee is thus stated in the specifications:

“Heretofore, records of this character, generally known as ‘gramophone records,’ have been produced by first tracing the lateral undulations or zigzags in a fatty (inky) film that protects an etching-surface, then etching this tracing into the material to form a groove, then running a blunt stylus through this groove to smooth the ragged etched surface, and finally electroplating this touclied-up surface and pressing the matrix so formed into a suitable material to form the commercial record.”

The above method, at the date of the invention, was concededly practiced to produce the master record of the gramophone, as claimed in patent No.

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Related

Victor Talking Machine Co. v. American Graphophone Co.
189 F. 359 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1911)
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161 F. 219 (N.D. Illinois, 1908)

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145 F. 636, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-graphophone-co-v-universal-talking-machine-mfg-co-circtsdny-1906.