Cook Electric Co. v. Persons

60 F. Supp. 124, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 541, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2350
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 17, 1945
DocketCivil Action No. 2468
StatusPublished

This text of 60 F. Supp. 124 (Cook Electric Co. v. Persons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook Electric Co. v. Persons, 60 F. Supp. 124, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 541, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2350 (E.D. Mo. 1945).

Opinion

DUNCAN, District Judge.

The bill of complaint alleges joint infringement by the defendants of Patent No. 1,726,584 for improvement in bellows construction granted September 3, 1929, to the plaintiff as assignee of the defendant Lawrence M. Persons, inventor, and of Patent No. 1,816,610 for methods and means for forming bellows, granted July 28, 1931, to the plaintiff as assignee of the defendant Lawrence M. Persons, as inventor,' and plaintiff seeks to restrain the defendants from further infringement of both patents in suit, and for an accounting.

The plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois, with its principal place of business in the City of Chicago; the defendant L. M. Persons Corporation is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Missouri, with its principal place of business at St. Louis; the defendant Lawrence M. Persons is a resident of the City of St. Louis, Missouri.

In November 1922 the defendant Lawrence M. Persons entered the employ of the Cook Electric Company as engineer in charge of its experimental and development department. Under the terms of his employment, any new devices or methods developed or patents granted to him were to become the property of the plaintiff.

Plaintiff was engaged in the manufacture of mechanical devices, among which were water pumps and other devices requiring the use of diaphragms and bellows. Much difficulty had been experienced by the plaintiff in the use of the type bellows which was then available for use in the pumps manufactured and sold by it. During his efforts to eliminate this mechanical difficulty, defendant Persons discovered what he contended to be a new and improved method of forming a bellows which he contended was greatly superior to any other bellows known. The new method lay in the form of the elements constituting the device and the method of joining such elements by means of solder which greatly lengthened the life of the device.

Application for a patent 1,726,584, the “device” patent, was filed in the name of defendant Lawrence M. Persons and sworn to by him on May 10, 1924. The first paragraph of the application stated:

“My invention relates broadly to bellows construction which has particular application to elastic piston pumps which effect the intake and discharge by the contraction and expansion of the piston. Although I shall refer throughout the present case to this particular adaptation of my invention, it is to be understood that my invention has broader application and may be used wherever bellows are needed for any purpose.

“One aim of my invention is to provide an improved form of bellows construction having a life greatly in excess of bellows heretofore known.”

The application contained twelve claims, each of which referred to “a plurality of sectional parts.” Over the five year period between the filing of the application and the issuance of the patent, many amendments were made to the application — claims were amended, some were withdrawn and others were added. In Patent No. 1,726,584 the language in Claims No. 1 and 3 is typical of all the claims.

“1. A bellows construction of the type described having its side wall divided into a plurality of sectional parts, each of which is fastened to the sections above and below by a circumferential edge engagement, said engagement comprising a gutter in one of the engaging sections and a cooperating flange on the other engaging section.”

“3. A bellows construction of the type described having its side wall divided into a plurality of sectional parts, each of which is fastened to the sections above and below, and is provided with a solder filled gutter for the reception of a flange on one of the adjacent sections.”

On May 14, 1927, Persons filed an amendment to the application, adding Claims 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24, and refers to “sectional parts” as distinguished from “a plurality of sectional parts” for the first time. On September 3, 1929, the patent was granted allowing twenty-four claims.

In June 1941 Persons and others organized the L. M. Persons Corporation of St. Louis, and shortly thereafter it began manufacturing the accused device for use in an electric switch for installation in airplanes manufactured for war purposes. But it is not contended that the contract with the Governmental agency designated a particular make of diaphragm or bellows.

[126]*126The accused device, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 13B, is approximately 9 inches in circumference and Vi inch in diameter. It is constructed of a solid metal base approximately Vi6 inch in thickness, near the outer periphery of which is a V-shaped gutter or trough, the outer wall of which extends perpendicularly approximately Vi inch above the surface of the base. The upper part of the accused device is flexible, about Vis inch in thickness, the outer periphery of which is turned down to form a perpendicular flange designed to fit into the V-shaped gutter or trough in the outer periphery of the rigid element. Molten solder is flowed into the V-shaped gutter or trough in the solid base and the flange of the flexible element is inserted into the solder filled groove in the rigid element, thus forming a solid joint. The solder rises on the inside and the outside of the wall of the flange, thus filling the gutter or trough. The flexible element contains several circumferential corrugations. In the center of the rigid base there is attached a nut or threaded nipple for the attachment of a hose or feed line to convey into the chamber created by joining the elements, the activating substance, causing the diaphragm to expand and collapse. A perpendicular pin is attached to the flexible element in the center thereof, which is designed to come into contact with the mechanism to be controlled by the diaphragm.

The accused device is distinguished from a device manufactured by the plaintiff under its patent and offered in evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibits 44 and 47 in that both the top and bottom elements of plaintiff’s device are flexible instead of a flexible element attached to a rigid base. In Plaintiff’s device both elements are the same thickness. They contain circumferential corrugations and are joined in the same manner. That is, by melting solder into the outer peripheral gutter or trough of one element and inserting therein the perpendicular flange of the upper or opposite element, thus causing the solder to rise on the inside and the outside of the flange in the same manner, and forming identically the same kind of joint or union as that in the accused device, except that the outer wall of the trough of the accused device rises higher than on the plaintiff’s device.

A bellows constructed of a plurality of sectional parts differs from a bellows or diaphragm constructed of a single section or unit only in the number of such units. In constructing a bellows with a plurality of sectional parts, an aperture of desired size is placed in the center of each element or disk, and around the periphery of this aperture is formed a V-shaped trough, just as there is' on the outer periphery, and around the inner periphery of the matching element there is formed a flange corresponding to the flange on the outer periphery. This process may be continued indefinitely to attain the desired expansive capacity for the purpose to which the device is to be put.

Defendants deny infringement. In their answer defendants allege:

“ * * * that after defendant Lawrence M.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F. Supp. 124, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 541, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-electric-co-v-persons-moed-1945.