Cincinnati Car Co. v. New York Rapid Transit Corp.

32 F.2d 376, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1748
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 19, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 376 (Cincinnati Car Co. v. New York Rapid Transit Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Cincinnati Car Co. v. New York Rapid Transit Corp., 32 F.2d 376, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1748 (E.D.N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

INCH, District Judge.

This is a patent suit. Plaintiff is the owner of three patents, and claims that defendant has infringed each and all of them. These patents are Elliott,. [377]*377No. 1,499,510 (U. S.) applied for February 8, 1923, patent granted July 1, 1924, Ellis No. 1,500,118 (U. S.), applied for December 14, 1923, patent granted July 8, 1924, and Elliott, No. 1,501,325 (U. S.) applied for December 14, 1923, patent granted July 15, 1924.

These patents were all duly assigned by Elliott and Ellis to the plaintiff, and there is no dispute about the ownership.

Elliott thus applied for his first patent (No. 1,499,510) early in 1923, and before a patent was granted he applied for another patent (No. 1,501,325) in the latter part of 1923, so that his applications were copending at the time he received Ms final patent papers on either.

Ellis, the other inventor, is the eMef engineer of plaintiff and has been with the plaintiff for many years.

While these applications of Elliott were thus cop ending and a few days after Elliott applied for'his last patent, Ellis applied for his patent. Elliott received his first patent July 1,1924, Ellis obtained his patent a week later, and Elliott received his second patent a week after that. All these patents relate to the same subject. Before discussing the patents and the alleged infringement it may he helpful to consider what was the problem facing Elliott and Ellis.

The earliest application is that of Elliott (February, 1923). There is no issue on the question, of prior date of the invention.

The problem of making one ear out of two or possibly three in the transportation of passengers had occupied the minds of railway engineers for many years prior to 1923. Apparently the original idea was not so much to make additional accommodation as to afford protection to passengers in passing from one car to another; especially, if not almost entirely, in regard to steam railway transportation. This was accomplished by the familiar bellows type of connection between two cars. Later, and generally speaking, this idea of connecting two ears was applied to the transportation problem in general by Raymond, who applied for a patent in October, 1887, and received his patent January 24, 1888, No. 376,907.

Raymond may be said to have disclosed a new idea; that is, instead of “coupling the cars one to another, he mounted the cars upon double trucks.” This double truck could bo consolidated or closely joined and was adapted to pivotally support the ends of adjacent cars, and in connection with this arrangement he had steps leading to a platform supported at this joined end so that he made one car out of two cars by having wheels at the forward end, wheels at this middle part, and wheels at the rear ends of this combined car. This was all very well and was a step in the art, but its application, practically, to street car and subway car transportation, was without value.

Some years later and in 1920 there was presented what is termed the Milwaukee articulated unit. Here we have the same idea of the elimination of the unnecessary trucks and wheels of separate cars and a center coupling assembly between two cars, but the “vestibule” idea at these coupled ends was far from being perfected. Nevertheless a throe-truck two-car street railway train was put into operation successfully. This also was a step in advance. The street railway engineers, however, were quick to appreciate not only the general idea but the utility of this combination of trolley or subway car.

Colby, superintendent of equipment for the city of Detroit, department of street railways, testifies about articular cars in comparison with the standard trolley car: First, the first cost of the units or parts; second, the lower operating cost expressed in power saving in connection with the weight, then ear maintenance saving; and, finally, the avoidance of the cost of men employed to run and operate the car. There are other advantages also mentioned hy him such as the speed at which such a unit can be loaded. “The doors are oponed and the people can immediately get into an articulated train without hesitating to see which ear is less filled than the other. They can get in knowing that they can circulate freely from one ear to the other.” He then mentions that the riding qualities are good; that the track space is small; that there is a sense of security given to the passengers. These statements of Mr. Colby are supported by actual results in dollars and cents. Mr. Colby stated he was not familiar with the Milwaukee system.

It also appears, and naturally so, that as early as January, 1922, this problem was being looked into by the defendants who were charged with the operation, in the city of New York, of surface and subway ears. This was almost 2% years prior to the Elliott and Ellis patents.

There is no issue, here and no claim made that defendant’s articulated ears were produced prior to the dates of the inventions of Elliott and Ellis; but those facts are mentioned simply for the purpose of showing that railway engineers of great cities were alive to this problem and that entirely independent of plaintiff they were seeking im[378]*378provements by experiment and study of their respective problems.

• Thus it appears that the problem sought to be solved by Elliott and Ellis was not only an important one, but related to improvements of extreme utility, and that defendant’s position is not similar to one simply copying an invention of something unheard of before that time and then claiming either no invention therein, or no infringement thereof.

Before discussing the real issue which must be based on comparison of the patents of plaintiff and the construction of defendant, it may be well to mention briefly certain other matters related to this controversy and which, in a way, make up the entire picture presented by the record.

There is some testimony that before the patents were granted to Ellis and Elliott, defendant’s engineers visited plaintiff’s shops and were there shown blueprints, etc., in the hope of possibly interesting the defendant, which was known to be considering this problem of articulated ears, and therefore a possible buyer of plaintiff’s construction, and these ideas were voluntarily shown defendant’s representatives along that line. From this the inference is sought to be raised by plaintiff that defendant utilized this information to invade plaintiff’s rights.

Aside from the difference in construction and principle between the structures of plaintiff and defendant to which I shall hereafter refer and that indicate that ho such thing happened, I fail to find any proof directly or even by inference that defendant’s engineers took unfair advantage of this voluntary display. “It is well settled that a man cannot have a patent for the function or abstract effect of a machine, but only for the machine which produces if.” Corning v. Burden, 15 How. (56 U. S.) 252, page 268 (14 L. Ed. 683).

What defendant’s engineers were looking for was a commercial article applicable to their problems whether in the making or finished. They would have; of course, no right to copy the ideas of Elliott or Ellis, but they would have the right to consider these ideas and avoid infringement if possible. This right has been stated by the Supreme Court in the following language: “Every man has a right to make an improvement in a machine, and evade a previous patent, provided he does not invade the rights of the patentee.” Burr v. Duryee, 1 Wall. (68 U.

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32 F.2d 376, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-car-co-v-new-york-rapid-transit-corp-nyed-1928.