Crosley Corp. v. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co.

52 F. Supp. 884
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1944
Docket1524
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 F. Supp. 884 (Crosley Corp. v. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosley Corp. v. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co., 52 F. Supp. 884 (W.D. Pa. 1944).

Opinion

GIBSON, District Judge.

The court, after hearing and consideration, makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

Findings of Fact General

1. This suit involves eighteen patents, relating to electric refrigeration, which are owned by the defendant-counterclaimant, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, a corporation of the State of Pennsylvania (hereinafter referred to as “defendant”, or as “Westinghouse”). Defendant has been the owner of all of said patents since they were issued.

2. The plaintiff, the Crosley Corporation, a corporation of the State of Ohio (hereinafter referred to as “plaintiff” or as “Crosley”), was notified by defendant, prior to commencement of this suit, of alleged infringement of each of said patents, except Quimper patent 2,254,780 and Forsthoefel patent 2,254,604, which had not been issued when the complaint herein was filed.

3. The present suit was brought under the Declaratory Judgment Act (Sec. 274d, Judicial Code Title 28 U.S.C.A. § 400) praying that each of said patents, except the two above identified, be declared invalid and/or not infringed. The suit was filed the day after receipt by Crosley of notice from Westinghouse that it was about to bring suit against Crosley for infringement of said patents, which was done (in the Southern District of Ohio) the day after, and without knowledge of, the filing of the present suit.

4. The defendant counterclaimed herein for alleged infringement by plaintiff of all the patents included in the declaratory judgment action and also of said Quimper patent 2,254,780 and said Forsthoefel patent 2,254,604, which had issued between the filing of the complaint and the filing of the counterclaim. An additional infringement suit had been filed against Crosley on the latter patents in Ohio some time before the counterclaim was filed, but Crosley did not amend its complaint herein to include said patents.

5. Westinghouse entered the household refrigerator field in 1930, its refrigerators from the beginning being of the hermetically sealed type, which is the type involved in this litigation. Crosley entered the refrigerator field about 1931 with a so-called “open-type” refrigerator, not here involved, and began making the hermetically sealed type *887 in 1935. Crosley refrigerator Models S-641 and SE-641, which were offered as proof of the alleged infringement of many of the patents in suit, were manufactured and sold by Crosley beginning with its 1941 models.

6. Westinghouse relies upon the following claims of the respective patents with respect to the noted Crosley models:

Patents Claims Model
Forsthoefel 2,166,630 7 & 8 S-641 & SE-641
Yoxsimer 2,242,335 3
Quimper 2,254,780 1, 2 & 6
Anderson Reissue 21,535 1 to 4, incl.
Forsthoefel Reissue 21,178 1 & 3 SE-641
Yoxsimer 2,194,176 1, 3, 4 & 5 SE-641
Kruck Design 112,778 S-641 & SE-641
Ford 1,967,770 1 to 4, incl.
Ashbaugh 2,079,238 2, 3, 4, 8 & 9, 11 & 12
Roberts 2,188,303 1, 4 & 5
Terry 2,007,730 1 to 4, incl. it
Kucher 1,719,807 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24 & 25 it H
Kucher 1,719,820 12, 13 & 14 it tt
Kucher Reissue 19,908 44, 45 & 47 it tt
Terry 2,040,507 7, 8 & 10 tt tt
McCloy 2,181,856 1 to 18, incl. tt

7. The plaintiff was notified of infringement of the following additional claims of said patents which were not relied upon at the trial:

Patents Claims
Forsthoefel Reissue 21,178 2 & 4
Yoxsimer 2,194,176 2
Ashbaugh 2,079,238 6 & 14
Roberts 2,188,303 2, 3 & 6
Kucher 1,719,820 4, 5 & 6

8. Also White reissue patent 21,864 and Forsthoefel patent 2,254,604 were sued upon in the counterclaim but were withdrawn from suit by defendant, the former prior to the trial and the latter after conclusion of plaintiff’s prima facie case.

9. Plaintiff and defendant both began manufacturing electrical household refrigerators about 1930 or 1931. Such refrigerators had been manufactured and sold in large numbers many years prior thereto. As early as 1919 there were thousands of household electric refrigerators in use in the United States.

10. Westinghouse intermittently charged Crosley with infringement of one or more of its patents by reason of Crosley’s manufacture and sale of household refrigerators for a period of seven years prior to the commencement of the present suit.

11. The Stipulation of Facts filed by the parties hereto is now referred to and made part hereof.

Forsthoefel Patent No. 2,166,630

Findings of Fact:

1. The Forsthoefel Patent 2,166,630, Claims 7 and 8 of which are in suit, relates to a refrigerator cabinet construction and particularly, to an improved structure for mounting a heat breaker strip (which minimizes heat flow) between the inner and outer wall members of the cabinet and for retaining it in proper relationship to such wall members.

2. The invention defined in the claims of said patent which are in suit is in the combination of the heat breaker strip, a two-way spring construction and the cabinet elements which cooperate therewith, and not in the breaker strip alone. Therefore the claims are not for an exhausted combination, as alleged by the plaintiff.

3. Claim 8 of said patent, which is alleged by plaintiff to be invalid for indefiniteness because of the definition of certain elements thereof by the term “means”, uses this term, followed by a statement of function, in describing two of the several structural elements of the combination, and does not use it followed by a statement of the result of the invention. The term “means”, as here used, is common in patent claims and does not make the claim in question indefinite.

4. All the essential features of the Forsthoefel invention were fully disclosed in the *888 original application for the patent in suit and were supported by oath of the inventor. No “new matter” was introduced during the prosecution of the Forsthoefel application, such changes as were made being fully consistent with the original application and oath as filed in the Patent Office.

5. The subject matter disclosed in the specification and drawings and covered by the claims of said Forsthoefel patent required for its production the exercise of inventive skill.

6.

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52 F. Supp. 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosley-corp-v-westinghouse-electric-mfg-co-pawd-1944.