Charles W. Strzalkowski, and Auros Electronic Corporation v. Beltone Electronics Corporation

371 F.2d 237, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 675, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4126
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 1966
Docket15496_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 371 F.2d 237 (Charles W. Strzalkowski, and Auros Electronic Corporation v. Beltone Electronics 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
Charles W. Strzalkowski, and Auros Electronic Corporation v. Beltone Electronics Corporation, 371 F.2d 237, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 675, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4126 (7th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

CASTLE, Circuit Judge.

Charles W. Strzalkowski, the owner of Strzalkowski U.S. Patent No. 3,035,127, 1 and Auros Electronic Corporation, the owner of Holt U.S. Patent No. 2,999,136 2 and the exclusive licensee of the Strzal-kowski patent, plaintiffs-appellants, brought suit in the District Court charging the defendant-appellee, Beltone Electronics Corporation, with infringement of Claim 13 of the ’127 patent and Claims 1, 2, 7 and 13 of the Holt patent. The defendant counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that, among other things, both of the patents are invalid and are not infringed by the defendant’s accused devices. The District Court, following trial of the issues of validity and infringement, filed a memorandum of decision which incorporates the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, and entered an order adjudicating that Claim 13 of the ’127 patent has not been infringed by the defendant, that Claims 1, 2, 7 and 13 of the Holt patent are invalid, and awarding judgment to the defendant ac *238 cordingly. The plaintiffs-appellants appealed.

Both of the patents relate to electrical hearing aids, and the claims in suit are directed to the behind-the-ear type of aid —one in which part or all of the components are contained in a small case worn behind the ear and supported entirely by the ear. The record discloses that the components of such a hearing aid normally include a microphone for picking up the sound, an amplifier circuit, a battery for electrical power, and a receiver or speaker for supplying the amplified sound to the user. A tube conveys the amplified sound from the receiver to the ear canal and through an ear canal insert plug to the ear drum.

Claim 13 of the ’127 patent reads as follows:

“In a hearing aid applicance adapted to be worn by the user to receive support from his outer ear and to deliver sound to his ear canal, the combination with arcuate supporting means for partially encircling the outer ear, of a hearing aid sound reproducer including a microphone, an amplifier, a receiver, and electrical connecting means, and having its receiver mounted on said supporting means, said supporting means having a sound communicating duct so positioned as to lead toward the auditory canal of a person wearing said supporting means upon his outer ear, said duct leading forwardly above the level of the lower end of the outer ear, and an ear canal insert having a flexible sound tube and having an opening extending through the insert, said tube and said supporting means having sound conduit coupling means for detachably connecting said flexible tube in sound-receiving engagement with said duct.”

Claim 1 of the Holt patent is limited to a housing for a behind-the-ear hearing aid and it features a limitation requiring that the housing be elongated and longitudinally curved to conform generally to the back of the ear. Claim 2 brings out that all of the elements of the hearing aid are mounted in a casing in which the means for suspending the easing directly from the ear includes a tubular conduit. Claim 7 defines the housing as comprising a body of substantially rectangular cross section and having an extension and specifies that the back of the body portion includes a removable plate and that the extension is secured to the end of the housing adjacent the removable plate. Claim 13 is similar to Claim 7 with an additional reference to a battery “slide” or drawer adapted to contain a battery and to permit its removal.

The District Court found and concluded, in substance, that the defendant’s accused structures did not infringe Claim 13 of the ’127 patent for the reason that neither of two limitations of Claim 13 (an auricolostomy, or surgical opening through the outer ear, and an atmospheric opening in the ear canal insert or plug) is present in defendant’s devices, and that the disclosures of prior art are such that if Claim 13 is subject to a broader construction which would eliminate these two limitations then the claim is invalid as not constituting a patentable invention because of obviousness; and that the claims in suit of the Holt patent are likewise invalid for obviousness.

The plaintiffs predicate reversible error upon contentions that the trial court erred in reading limitations into Claim 13 of the ’127 patent which are not present therein (and thereby concluding that no infringement existed), and in concluding that absent such limitations the subject matter of the claim is void for obviousness. The plaintiffs assert that the conclusion with respect to the obviousness of Claim 13, and the like conclusion with respect to the invalidity of the claims of the Holt patent, are without factual support in the record.

Critical factual findings of the District Court, supported by substantial evidence, including the testimony of expert witnesses, are that the history of the hearing aid industry is characterized by the constant reduction in the size of hearing aid casings and components to meet the desire of the hard-of-hearing public for *239 hearing aids as small and inconspicuous as possible. Early hearing aids had to be worn on the body due to their large size and weight. Completely self-contained hearing aids adapted to be worn entirely on the head were known at least twenty-five years ago, as exemplified by Cox U.S. Patent No. 2,207,705, which teaches the embodiment of all the component parts of a hearing aid in the frames of eyeglasses. Head-worn aids are advantageous in eliminating the clothing noises associated with body-worn aids. Likewise, it has long been known to support a portion of a head-worn hearing aid behind the ear of the user. Rohr U.S. Patent No. 2,513,746, and French U.S. Patent No. 2,545,731, each disclose hearing aid supports in which the receiver of the hearing aid is located behind the user’s ear and the sound therefrom is carried to the ear canal by means of a sound tube extending over or around the ear. In 1952 the introduction of transistors for use in hearing aids, and the subsequent miniaturization of the other hearing aid components, such as the microphone, receiver, battery, volume control and the like in the years that followed enabled the entire hearing aid assembly and casing to be reduced in size sufficient to be supported entirely within eyeglass temple members or behind the ear, in accordance with the earlier teachings and desires of the prior workers in the hearing aid art. The electrical circuitry and component parts of the hearing aids shown in the patents in suit were old and well known in the prior art and do not form any part of the alleged inventions claimed for either patent. Neither Strzalkow-ski nor Holt made any contribution to the development of transistors or the miniaturization of the other components.

On the basis of evidence concerning the introduction and commercial production of behind-the-ear aids containing all of the components and entirely supported on the ear the court concluded that widespread and contemporaneous marketing of such behind-the-ear aids by the industry established that the commercial realization of these devices resulted from the miniaturization of parts rather than from any contribution made by the pat-entees of the patents in suit.

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Bluebook (online)
371 F.2d 237, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 675, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-w-strzalkowski-and-auros-electronic-corporation-v-beltone-ca7-1966.