Connecticut Telephone & Electric Co. v. Brown & Caine, Inc.

10 F.2d 823, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 960
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 25, 1926
DocketNo. 4750
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 823 (Connecticut Telephone & Electric Co. v. Brown & Caine, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Telephone & Electric Co. v. Brown & Caine, Inc., 10 F.2d 823, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 960 (N.D. Ill. 1926).

Opinion

CARPENTER, District Judge.

This suit involves Wilcox & Lawton United States patent No. 1,113,850; claim 6 being in dispute. The claim is directed particularly to the.double leaf spring which co-operates with the breaker arm of the igniting device described. It involves Wilcox & Cavanagh United States patent No. 1,204,104; claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 11 being in dispute. These claims are directed particularly to the breaker assembly replacement unit, which, carries the parts in permanently assembled-arrangement, and constitutes a unit of reconstruction, replaceable when the contact points .become worn or' burned out. Plaintiff, in addition, relies upon Johnson United States patent No. 1,266,811, claims 1 and 3 of which are directed to the special or peculiar skeletonized formation of the breaker arm; and Stahl and Cavanagh United States patent No. 1,221,239, claims 1, 2, and 3 of which are directed to the slip terminal plug, affording an electrical connection for the igniter.

•The plaintiff is engaged in the sale of automobile ignition systems, which embody and contain the features defined and claimed in the patents in suit. The entire device is designed to control the operation of the electrical contact points. It is essential that when closed the points shall he in perfect contact, and that when separated there shall be a perfect separation. If the points become worn or pitted by burning, due to electrical causes, so that the area of contact is reduced, the device will operate imperfectly, and, if the impairment is considerable, the contact points must be renewed.

The issue in this case centers upon the right of the purchaser of a Connecticut ignition system to recondition the apparatus by a renewal of .the points. It is physically and mechanically possible to introduce new points into a Connecticut igniter in any one of three different ways, and the defendant asserts that it is within its legal rights in choosing the method whereby the Connecticut breaker jnechanism may be reconditioned, namely:

(1) By supplying the contact points separately, to be fitted into place in a genuine Connecticut breaker assembly.
(2) By furnishing movable contact points, already mounted or secured to a breaker arm.
(3) The substitution of the complete breaker assembly, including the base plate, pivot stud, breaker arm, double leaf spring, movable and fixed contact, terminal connections, cam roller, and lever pin, which engages the lever in the housing.

The right to make this entire substitution of parts is insisted upon by the defendant. Here is the crux of this lawsuit. The Connecticut ignition system of plaintiff involves what is well known in the art as an igniter — a timer mechanism alternately to .close and open a battery circuit by the meeting and spreading apart of contact points. It is an instrument of precision,requiring perfect functioning of parts, especially the contact points.

The plaintiff’s patents relate especially to a slip terminal plug, a two-leaf spring, a form of movable breaker arm, and what is herein designated as a breaker arm assembly. The main contention here is upon the breaker arm assembly, as a removable unit, and whether a sale of such a unit constitutes legitimate repair for a damaged or worn-out part of the igniter, or is replacement.

This removable breaker assembly unit is mounted upon a plate, and comprises a fixed and a movable contact point, a two-leaf spring, a slip terminal plug, a special form of movable breaker arm; the movable contact point being mounted on the end of the breaker arm. With the exception of the spring and the contact points (which latter frequently become damaged and require renewal), the life, of the several elements mentioned would ordinarily extend throughout the life of the device as a whole.

The plaintiff admits that any one may remove the breaker assembly unit, remove the [825]*825damaged contact points, or a broken spring, substitute new ones, and replace tbe repaired assembly unit; that this is mechanically possible, and requires but a few minutes. The plaintiff, however, for reasons of its own, which thet defendant charges to be mala fides, has riveted or otherwise so fastened the several parts of the assembled unit that it is in fact difficult to make the substitution of a new or damaged part, without endangering the nicety of adjustment, and without considerable expense. The result is that users generally remove the assembly unit, purchase a new one complete from plaintiff, and install it in the igniter, instead of repairing the old and removed unit. The defendant makes and sells a complete breaker plate assembly as a unit, for use in the Connecticut igniter; also several of the separate elements, such as the breaker arm, the double leaf spring, the slip terminal plug, and a substitute stud bearing.

It is urged by the defendant that the plaintiff, having no claim to the' individual elements, and no claim to the breaker assembly, but only to the assembly as a subeombination of certain of his patented claims, therefore the defendant has a right, not only to make and sell the separate items above noted, but also the assembly unit as a whole, for and as legitimate repairs to a Connecticut igniter. The defendant insists that plaintiff is estopped in equity from maintaining this action (a) because plaintiff does not come into equity with clean hands; and (b) because in certain literature to the trade, to induce sales, plaintiff has instructed the public how to do the very thing here complained of, has invited the public to make the repairs, and has, in effect, licensed the doing of the acts complained of; and particularly so because plaintiff has given no notice of any patent monopoly in so doing,, nor made any assertion or reservation of any exclusive rights in this regard.

The real legal question raised is this: Does a patentee, by making statements in his patent and trade literature concerning the ease with which, and a method by which, the patented device sold may be repaired upon the wearing out of one of its parts, and without reserving the sole right to make the repair-by that specific method, and by using certain mechanical arrangements which make it difficult, although not impossible, for the user to substitute a new part for the part worn out, grant an implied license to the public to use his particular method of reconditioning the patented device, and is plaintiff thereby estopped from maintaining a suit to restrain, an infringement of that character? There seems to be no precedent on .this precise question, and the answer must be reached by application of general principles to specific facts.

The charge that plaintiff does not come into equity with clean hands, and therefore is estopped from seeking redress in equity, is based upon the allegations by defendant that an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not be granted was secured, upon a representation of prior adjudication of the patents in suit, when in fact the prior litigations had resulted in the entry of consent decrees only; and that in the sworn bill of complaint plaintiff made alleged erroneous statements concerning the extent and character of plaintiff’s business in the patented article.

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10 F.2d 823, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-telephone-electric-co-v-brown-caine-inc-ilnd-1926.