Collins v. Emerson

10 F. Supp. 885, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1810
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 29, 1935
DocketNo. 3699
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. Supp. 885 (Collins v. Emerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Emerson, 10 F. Supp. 885, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1810 (D. Mass. 1935).

Opinion

McLELLAN, District Judge.

The plaintiffs, Warren E. Collins, Warren E. Collins, Jr., and Walter G. Chick, as individuals and as trustees, and Warren E. Collins, Inc., bring this suit for alleged patent infringement against the defendant, John H. Emerson.

Statements of fact herein are intended as findings of fact, and statements of legal conclusions as rulings of law, under the equity rules.

The individual plaintiffs, as trustees, hold the legal title to the patents, and the corporate plaintiff, a manufacturer of hospital equipment in Boston, is the sole licensee thereunder. The defendant maintains a machine shop in Cambridge for the manufacture of hospital and research equipment, and began the manufacture of respirators in the summer or fall of 1931.

The three patents in suit, numbered 1,-834,580, 1,906,453, and 1,906,844, will be referred to respectively as the first, second, and third patents. All the patents relate to the construction of an apparatus for producing prolonged artificial respiration in human beings. The respirators purporting to have been manufactured under the patents have been known as the “Drinker” respirators and have been used chiefly for victims of infantile paralysis whose lung muscles were affected. Such respirators are useful also in administering artificial respiration wherever, as in the case of gas poisoning, electric shock, drowning, and asphyxia of newborn babies, such artificial respiration is needful or desirable. The Drinker respirators, so called, concededly work admirably, and without considering the contents of the file wrapper, which are inadmissible for such purpose, T find that in 1929 and thereafter there was a considerable demand for Drinker respirators for use in hospitals. These respirators are described in detail hereafter when the patents are discussed.

The defendant’s respirators were first made after the defendant had seen the plaintiffs’ product, and in many respects closely resemble it. The defendant’s apparatus consists of a hollow casing having a bed slidable into the casing through the open end, a removable wall section or cover connected to the bed, a flexible rubber collar made of a sheet of sponge rubber fastened over a hole in the removable wall section, and an adjustable headrest. The interior of the casing is provided with an electric light and a pressure gauge is connected with the interior of the casing. Alternate variations of pressure within the casing are obtained by a diaphragm or bellows located on the closed end of the casing, which may be operated either electrically or by hand. The amount of pressure within the casing is controlled by a leak or escape valve in the side of the casing. A flap valve in the casing prevents positive pressure above atmospheric pressure, but if a pressure higher than [886]*886atmospheric js desired,' this valve may be locked. The respirators have air-tight ports or openings in the side through which an attendant may insert his hands without interrupting the operation of the device.

The First Patent in Suit&emdash;No. 1,834,580.

The application for the first patent, made by Philip Drinker and Louis Agassiz Shaw, assignors to the Consolidated Gas Company of New York, was filed July 23, 1929, and the patent was issued December 1, 1931. It is stated that the primary object of the invention is to provide an apparatus which will simulate natural breathing in the patient, both as to the periods of exhalation and inhalation and as to the quantity of air drawn into the lungs of the patient, thus resulting in artificial breathing which will be regular and rhythmic. A further stated object of the invention is to provide an apparatus in which the patient will be at his ease during the treatment and in which he can breathe naturally, if so inclined, or in which he may be assisted to any desired extent by the apparatus. “It is a further object to provide an apparatus of this character in which the patient can talk, eat and sleep without discomfort and without discontinuing the treatments.”

Annexed hereto and made a part hereof is a copy of the drawing accompanying the application for the first patent in suit: Ac-

cording to the specification, Figure 1 is a side elevational view and Figure 2 a front elevational view of the respirator; Figure 3 is a slightly enlarged plan view of the pressure producing apparatus and alternator; Figure 4 a detailed view of the reduction gears employed for varying the period of the pressure change; Figure 5 a detailed view of one of the exhaust valves; Figure 6 a sectional view on the line 6-6 of Figure 5; and Figure 7 a detailed view of the valve mechanism of the alternator.

The specifications proceed:

"Referring to the details of the drawings, there is provided a relatively strong, air-tight casing 10 of any preferred shap~ which is constructed of sufficient length, height and breadth to accommodate the body of a large man or woman. The casing 10 is supported upon any suitable standard, as indicated for example at 12, whereby the casing is placed at a convenient height for use. One wall of the casing, preferably the front wall 14, is removable to provide access to the interior thereof. As at present constructed, the front wall 14 has an additional support 16 facilitating the movement of the wall 14 toward or away from the casing 10.
"A body support 18, shown as a mattress and its supporting frame, is mounted for movement into or out of the casing 10. Rollers 19 and a cooperating track 20 on the floor of the casing serve to support the [887]*887body rest 18 within the casing and to permit the withdrawal of the body support from the casing when desired. The body support 18 is rigidly attached to the end wall 14 whereby it may be partially supported by the supports 16 for the end wall 14.
“The end wall 14 is provided with an opening 22 which receives a flexible sealing member 24 formed of relatively strong, flexible rubber. The sealing member 24 has a central opening 25 adapted to fit snugly around the neck of the patient. The head of the patient may be passed through the opening 22 due to the resiliency of the material of the sealing member 24. The member 24 is removably attached within the opening 22 and is sealed at its outside edge against the admission of outside air by means of the securing bolts shown. Several different sizes of collars or sealing members 24 may be provided and the one best suited to the size of the patient selected.
“The head of the patient is allowed to rest upon a support 26 positioned just outside of the opening 22 and adjustable vertically to accommodate the particular patient being treated. Any suitable adjustment means may be used for the support 26.
“The casing 10 is provided with various accessories to modify the condition within the same and to indicate such conditions. To this end, the casing is provided with one or more openings 28 closed by means of transparent closures so that the interior of the casing may be inspected. The closure for the opening 28 is preferably of thin aluminum or glass composition, so that X-ray or ordinary pictures may be taken of the patient without removing the body from the casing. A thermometer 30 indicates at all times the temperature within the casing. This temperature is normally maintained at substantially room temperature by the airflow to and from the casing as described below.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. Supp. 885, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-emerson-mad-1935.