Dayton Engineering Laboratories Co. v. Sidney B. Bowman Automobile Co.

220 F. 927, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1737
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 25, 1915
DocketNo. 10-265
StatusPublished

This text of 220 F. 927 (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Co. v. Sidney B. Bowman Automobile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayton Engineering Laboratories Co. v. Sidney B. Bowman Automobile Co., 220 F. 927, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1737 (S.D.N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

SANBORN, District Judge.

Infringement suit on patent No. 745,-157, applied for February 11, 1901, issued November 24, 1903, and' No. 842,827, applied for February 11, 1901, issued January 29, 1907, both running to Clyde J. Coleman. The claims in suit of the first patent are 3, 7, 9, 12, 17, 18, 20, and 24; of the second, 2, 3, 7, 9, 19, and 26.

Complainants produced evidence tending to carry the actual date of Coleman’s inventions back at least to the “Dewey Land Parade,” which was September 30, 1899, long before the effective dates of two supposed prior art patents to Lanchester, which were sealed, respectively, July 25, 1900, and November 28, 1900.

The automatic car-starting apparatus of complainants is called the “Delco,” and defendant’s device the “North East,” because it is made [928]*928by the North East Electric Company, of Rochester, N. Y. The complainant corporation is herein referred to as the Delco Company, and the manufacturer of defendant’s device as the North East Company. The Delco output from 1911 to 1915 has been about 200,000 starters, used on 10 different types of cars.

Each of the patents covers part of an automatic starting system for motor cars. Broadly considered, both patents require the combination of (1) an engine; (2) a prime-mover, which shall be capable of transforming potential energy, of some form, into kinetic energy, or power to start the engine, and also of the reciprocal function of transforming power, derived from the engine, into potential energy; (3) mechanical connections between the engine and the prime-mover, for the reciprocal transfer of power between them; (4) energy-storing means of some kind for receiving energy from, and returning it to, the prime-mover; and (5) connections between the prime-mover and the energy-storing means, these connections depending, for their character, upon the nature, of the energy by which the prime-mover is opera-tiye. In both patents the characteristic features of the apparatus lie in the connections just referred to,' and the distinction between the patents resides in the fact that in the earlier patent it is the connections between the prime-mover and the engine which are involved, ‘while in the later patent it is the connections between the prime-mover and the energy-storing device which are involved.

Both patents show in their drawings a motor-dynamo as the prime-mover, and a storage battery, with the motor-dynamo acting first as a motor to start the engine, and then as a dynamo, run by the engine, to convert mechanical to electrical energy to recharge the battery. But in their specifications and claims these patents show inventions of broad scope, not limited to electrical means, but including the utilization of any form of energy. In this way the prior art is brought in, not only as to storage batteries, generators, and motors, but also as to com-' pressed air and spring devices.

No successful starting apparatus has ever been made which was distinctly under the Coleman patents. It is true that in 1901 a starter was rigged upon a Brewster runabout and used for two weeks, but it was not made strictly in accordance with either of the patents in suit. Mr. Kettering, for the Delco Company, developed its starter before it ever heard of these patents, and was then advised by its attorneys that the apparatus would, in their opinion, infringe these patents. Licenses were then obtained. What is true of Kettering holds good for the North |íast Company, through its engineer, Halbleib. These men attacked the problem at nearly the same time, and each produced a successful and practical apparatus without knowledge of the Coleman disclosures.

In a general way Coleman’s inventive idea was to so connect an engine and electro-magnetic machine that each was adapted to actuate the other, and to put them on a motor car. This had been done in different ways by half a dozen prior inventors, but Coleman was, of course, at liberty to improve on their work by adopting forms of his own. For this purpose he took out the two patents in suit, one in which [929]*929the mechanical idea predominates, the electrical in the other. The main idea of the first patent is the differential gear and clutch mechanism between motor-dynamo and engine; of the second, the change of intensity in the magnetic field of the motor-dynamo from an intense field in starting to a weaker field in charging.

In approaching the problem on its electrical idea Coleman was unfortunate in discarding all the prior art as to variable speed lighting. Charging a battery with a constant speed dynamo is quite a simple thing compared with the variable speed problem. As Mr. Waterman, testifying for defendant, says:

“The variable speed problem is enormously more difficult. It is more difficult to comprehend, to get into the mind, and it is infinitely more difficult to design. When, therefore, a man wants to design a device which shall, operating under widely varying speed, act to charge a storage battery with due regard to conditions of safety to the battery which are imposed, he does not go to a source of information regarding constant speed control. On the contrary, if he is wise, he tries to forget all that he ever knew about constant speed control, and he goes to the arts which have developed variable speed control, and rearranges his ideas, because they have to be essentially rearranged to the altered conditions of variable speed operation.”

This matter had been worked out in 1901, when Coleman filed his applications. Testifying for complainants, Mr. Bentley says that the constant current system of train lighting now in general use dates from 1900, when the first system was put in, which was more or less of an experimental apparatus, but was the present system.

While there are important differences between train lighting, including battery storage, and automobile starting and battery storage, yet the real problem was not, as Coleman conceived it, to use a constant speed engine, and switch in the dynamo only when full normal speed was reached, so as to keep the dynamo-speed constant. That was not the problem solved by Kettering and Halbleib, and has only a distant relation to it. The real difficulty, and in 1901 no doubt a serious one, was to utilize the variable dynamo-speed train lighting system to the variable speed engine and dynamo. Coleman did not address himself to this question; he either dodged it, or thought he could get something better in his own way.

Under the first patent the operation may be thus described: Having-equipped the car with an explosion engine, storage battery, motor-dynamo, differential gearing connecting them with the engine, and a centrifugal governor to control a switch for opening and closing the electrical circuit, his starting and charging operation is this: By a hand-lever the operator closes the circuit, by the same movement opening the fuel supply, and closing the sparking circuit. Current flows from the battery to the motor, through a wiring so arranged as to enable the motor to revolve rapidly, and send a large torque or turning power through the differential gearing to the engine-crank. Assuming that the engine has started, the condition contemplated by Coleman is quite different than at the present time, because he is to use a constant speed engine, which must reach its full speed as soon as possible after starting, since the fuel is all turned on, and there is no need for any throttle. Therefore he leaves the hand-lever in its initial position until the engine is well started, then puts it in its second position, thus

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Bluebook (online)
220 F. 927, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-engineering-laboratories-co-v-sidney-b-bowman-automobile-co-nysd-1915.