Dubilier Condenser Corporation v. Radio Corporation of America

34 F.2d 450, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 273, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1456
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedAugust 12, 1929
Docket663-665
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 450 (Dubilier Condenser Corporation v. Radio Corporation of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dubilier Condenser Corporation v. Radio Corporation of America, 34 F.2d 450, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 273, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1456 (D. Del. 1929).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

These three suits, each based upon a patent having to do with the radio art and now upon final hearing, were tried together. In each, Radio Corporation of America is defendant. In two, the plaintiffs are Dubilier Condenser Corporation, Percival D. Lowell, and Francis-W. Dun-more. In the third, they are the same, save that Lowell is not included. The patents sued upon are No. 1,455,141 to Lowell and Dun-more, No. 1,606,212 to Dunmore and Lowell, and No. 1,635,117 to Dunmore. The corporate plaintiff is the exclusive licensee under each. The claims in issue are 3 and 14 of the first, 2, 3, 4, and 6 of the second, and 9 of the third. The defenses are invalidity; noninfringement; ownership by the United States, in that the alleged inventions were made by the patentees in the employer’s time, with its tools and facilities, while the patentees were employees of the Burean of Standards; and, lastly, dedication by the United States to the public.

Patent No. 1,455,141 discloses and claims means permitting tbe use of alternating current from tbe standard residence-lighting power in lieu of direct current from A and B batteries and storage cells in radio receiving sets having radio frequency amplifiers, a detector, and audio frequency amplifiers. The advantages of a radio receiving set adapted to use alternating current from the house-lighting circuits over one whose circuits are supplied with energy from batteries or storage cells are obvious. But the ordinary 110-volt alternating current used for lighting purposes has, usually, a frequency of 60 cycles a second. Unless prevented from doing so, these continual reversals or alternations produce, in the sound output of a radio receiving set, distortion of the modulation and a strong hum that make the reception unsatisfactory. Consequently the problem with which the patentees were confronted was the *452 elimination in sets of the type described of the disadvantageous effects of alternating current. Their solution of that problem is set out in claim 14 thus:

“14. In an apparatus for the reception of radio signals the combination of a source of signal energy, a plurality of vacuum tubes having grid, filament and plate electrodes, circuits interconnecting said electrodes whereby said tubes amplify said signal energy at radio frequencies, a detector for rectifying said energy, vacuum tubes for amplifying said energy at audio frequencies, a source of alternating current, means for supplying said current to the filaments of said tubes, means for rectifying said current and supplying potential to the plate circuits of said tubes, and separate means in each of said circuits for eliminating the hum of the alternating current in said apparatus.”

The pith of the claim is found in its concluding words, “and separate means in each of said circuits for eliminating the hum of the alternating current in said apparatus,” for the invention, if any, resides, as plaintiffs state, in the combination of separate hum-eliminating means of suitable type in each portion of the type of receiver specified.

The patent discloses separate hum-eliminating means for the radio frequency section, for the detector section, and for the audio frequency section of the receiving set. In the radio frequency section, these means comprise a connection of the grid circuits of the tubes in that portion of the set, through a grid biasing means, to a slider of a resistance or potentiometer bridged across the filament circuit, and, in addition thereto, radio frequency transformers between the radio frequency amplifying tubes and between the last of these tubes and the detector. In the detector part, the means consist of a crystal detector and a condenser placed in a connection between the end of the primary winding of the first audio frequency transformer and the filament circuit. The crystal, though it passes such frequency as is imposed upon it, does not itself create indirect hum, as does a tube. The specification states: “The employment of a crystal detector in place of the electron tube detector reduced the 60-eycle hum very considerably,” but adds that, though the crystal is the preferred type of rectifier, “other forms of rectifiers may be readily employed.” In the audio frequency section, the hum-eliminating means comprise a connection of the grid circuits of that section, through a grid biasing means, to a slider of a resistance bridged across the filament circuit. These grid connections are made to the filament circuit, not at points of maximum potential variation but at points having the average potential of the whole filament. This connection, says the specification, “serves to keep the grid voltage steady with respect to the filaments,” and “forms another of the means for eliminating the alternating current hum from the reproducing telephone receivers.” The filaments of all the tubes are on the same heating circuit. The plate circuits are connected to one leg of the filament circuit.

The hum-eliminating means of Kadiola 17, manufactured by the defendant and charged to be an infringement, differs from the specific means of the patent in several particulars, one of which is that the defendant employs in its receiver three types of tubes, each requiring voltage different from the other two. The filaments of each type are heated by voltage supplied by three different circuits from three separate secondary windings of the transformer. One circuit supplies the energy for heating the filaments of the three radio frequency amplifying tubes and the filament of the first audio frequency amplifying tube, all of which are of the UX 226 type, and require the same voltage. The grid returns of these four tubes are connected with the midpoint of a potentiometer bridged across the heating circuit for the filaments of these tubes.

Another difference is that the detector in defendant's set is a tube, of the UY 227 type, instead of a crystal. In tubes of that type, the cathode is not the filament, but is a thimble, surrounding, but electrically insulated from, the filament. The filament is but the heater for the separate cathode. The grid return of the detector is connected with the midpoint of the resistance' across the heating circuit for the filament of that tube. The cathode of the detector is connected with the midpoint of the potentiometer across the heating circuit for the UX 226 tubes. The last audio frequency amplifier or power tube, of the UX 171 type, like the detector, has a separate heating circuit of its own. The grid return of this tube is connected with the midpoint of a potentiometer in its heating circuit. The plate circuits of the several tubes of defendant’s set are connected to the filament circuits at the same points as are the grid circuits of the respective tubes.

Do the hum-eliminating means of the patent constitute invention, when employed with the remaining elements of the claims in *453 issue, and, if so, does defendant’s receiver infringe those claims? The solution to these problems can be ascertained, not in vacuo, but only in the light of the

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Related

Berghane v. Radio Corp.
116 F. Supp. 200 (D. Delaware, 1953)
Berghane v. Radio Corp. of America
6 F.R.D. 561 (D. Delaware, 1947)
Lowell v. Triplett
17 F. Supp. 996 (D. Maryland, 1937)
Lowell v. Triplett
77 F.2d 556 (Fourth Circuit, 1935)
United States v. Dubilier Condenser Corp.
49 F.2d 306 (D. Delaware, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 450, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 273, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubilier-condenser-corporation-v-radio-corporation-of-america-ded-1929.