Aurex Corporation, a Corporation, and Walter H. Huth v. Beltone Hearing Aid Company, a Corporation

236 F.2d 644
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 1956
Docket11707
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 236 F.2d 644 (Aurex Corporation, a Corporation, and Walter H. Huth v. Beltone Hearing Aid Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aurex Corporation, a Corporation, and Walter H. Huth v. Beltone Hearing Aid Company, a Corporation, 236 F.2d 644 (7th Cir. 1956).

Opinions

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit, Judge.

Defendant appeals from a judgment entered after a;,hearing by the district court, adjudging claims 1, 2, 15 and 16 of Cubert letters patent No. 2,304,339, [645]*645owned by plaintiffs, valid and infringed by defendant, decreeing that plaintiffs recover from defendant damages resulting from said infringement and costs and expenses, and that defendant be enjoined from further infringement.

Plaintiffs’ counsel state that the invention covered by the patent relates to an improved mounting of a microphone in a wearable hearing aid. They say that Cubert’s invention relates to undesirable noises produced by physical contact of clothing, fingers or other objects with the cord, casing, or some other portion of the hearing aid apparatus, and that it practically eliminates “so-called clothing noises for persons having hearing deficiencies”. They construe the patent as showing “that the [rear of the] microphone is cemented to the center of a sheet of silk or other flexible material which is stretched flat across an opening in a frame so that the microphone has no tight or rigid connection with the frame through which molecularly conducted noises might pass”. They also say that “Cubert, working counter-current to the usual practice, achieved the result which had long evaded the prior workers in the art”, that he found “that the microphone should not be packed tightly in any insulating or cushioning material” and that he “informed the art” that the microphone “should not be held tightly but should be supported in a free floating manner so that it would be freely movable bodily within the hearing aid casing”.

Defendant’s counsel contend that before any of the Cubert activity here in question it was known that microphones should be floatingly mounted to eliminate extraneous sounds. They point to un-contradicted evidence that springs, sponge rubber rings, felt pads or rings and gum rubber type elements were used for this purpose. They say that the accused device does not infringe “because it uses unstressed foam rubber cushions which are the antithesis of the only thing shown in the Cubert patent — the stretched sheet diaphragm.”

Cubert’s patent application was filed April 19, 1940 and the patent was issued December 8, 1942. Prior to April 19, 1940 Cubert, then an engineer for plaintiff Aurex, designed a hearing aid, in which a microphone was weighted by a lead disk affixed on its rear side. Our inspection of the chassis and the casing of this construction shows that the combined lead disk and microphone required a circular opening in the chassis to receive the microphone. Cubert devised a construction to hold the microphone in this opening. He accomplished this by stretching a sheet of silk across the opening in the form of a diaphragm and cemented the sheet to the chassis at the edges of the opening. He then cemented the rear of the microphone to the sheet centered in relation to the opening. He also provided two foam rubber pads, bumpers, cushions or buttons, located on opposite sides on the front of and cemented to the microphone within its outer perimeter, and also a similar structure, round in shape, located and cemented to the sheet so as to place it between the sheet “where the latter was cemented to the back of the microphone and the back of the casing”. These pads, by whatever name described, were admittedly conventional and were for the purpose of preventing shock.

These cushions are not mentioned in the written description of Cubert, although plaintiffs’ witness Drumm testified in the district court that the round pad last above mentioned is shown in figure 4 of the drawings submitted with the application. However, there is no contention that it is in any way described or identified by any legend on the drawing.

Cubert’s claims now in suit are:

1. In a portable microphone instrument to be worn on the person, as a part of a hearing aid apparatus, having an outside casing therefor, a microphone enclosed thereby and freely movable bodily therein and insulated against the communication thereto of vibrations set up [646]*646in the said outside casing by scratching or contact or friction thereon.

2. A structure as specified in claim 1, said microphone having a mounting or support by material having a low degree of vibration-communicating capacity.

15. In a portable microphone instrument to be worn on the person, as a part of a hearing aid apparatus, having an outside casing therefor, a microphone ' enclosed thereby and freely movable bodily therein and insulated against the communication thereto of vibrations set up in the said outside casing, from within or by scratching or contact or friction thereon, or by attachments thereto, said microphone having a casing and a suitably supported sheet of flexible material fastened to the casing of the microphone and mounted on the outside casing.

16. In an amplifier hearing aid: a casing of hard material, of a size and shape that can be easily and conveniently carried in the pocket of a coat or under the clothing; a microphone housed in said casing; and supporting means including sheet elements of flexible material carrying said microphone in a relatively movable position within said casing so as to prevent vibrations imparted to the outside casing by scratching or the like from reaching the microphone.

The patent office examiner rejected claims 1, and 2, inter alia, as fully met by Franzblau1 or Williams,2 whereupon Cubert requested reconsideration because these claims called for a microphone instrument that “has freedom of movement within the outside casing, and this is not true of either one of the references cited.” 3

In Cubert’s said request for reconsideration, in speaking of the silk cloth, he stated that “It can only vibrate mechanically in the manner of a diaphragm, but that is what gives the microphone freedom of motion within the outside casing.”

However, Cubert amended his specifications by adding the language which is quoted in italics in the footnote below,4 wherein are set forth excerpts from the specifications as amended.

In his specifications, as amended, Cubert says that “a sheet of silk is stretched on the back of the chassis or frame” and through the opening in the frame the back of the microphone extends and is cemented to this “thin flexible sheet”. It is specified that this sheet of silk is “stretched on the back of the chassis or frame”.

It is undisputed that prior to the Cubert patent it was known that extra[647]*647neous sounds in microphones could be eliminated or diminished by a floating mounting.

In the accused device the microphone is located in the fore and aft direction by a pair of foam rubber cushions. The front cushion is in the form of a ring which, on one side thereof, is attached to the front edge of the microphone and, on the other side thereof, is attached to the inside of the front casing and around an open grill therein. The rear cushion is in the form of a smaller pad fastened only to the microphone. The district court found that the microphone is suspended by the foam rubber and without any stress upon the mounting member other than the slight weight of the microphone itself.

Defendant achieved its result by floating a microphone by the use of conventional cushions. It did not resort to a diaphragm. It did not use a thin sheet of silk or, in fact, a sheet of any material.

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236 F.2d 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aurex-corporation-a-corporation-and-walter-h-huth-v-beltone-hearing-aid-ca7-1956.