Electrical Accumulator Co. v. Julien Electric Co.

38 F. 117, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2122
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedMarch 18, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 38 F. 117 (Electrical Accumulator Co. v. Julien Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electrical Accumulator Co. v. Julien Electric Co., 38 F. 117, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2122 (circtsdny 1889).

Opinion

Coxe, J.

This is an action for the infringement of four letters patent, owned by the complainant, for improvements in secondary electrical batteries. One of these, No. 266,262, granted to Shaw and Rogers, October 17, 1882, has been withdrawn from the consideration of the court. The three in controversy are No. 252,002, granted January 8, 1882, to Camille Alphonse Faure; and Nos. 312,599 and 318,828, granted, respectively, February 17, and May 26, 1885, to Joseph Wilson Swan. The invention of Faure relates to that class of batteries which give no electricity of themselves, and are active only when rendered so by sending a current through them from an independent source of electric energy; batteries which, being included for a time in a circuit generated from an ordinary galvanic battery, for example, become charged so that they subsequently give out electricity on the completion of a proper circuit. [120]*120This process may be repeated an indefinite number of times. When the battery runs down it can be charged again. The inventor describes the secondary batteries of Gaston Planté, in which, by a long and expensive operation.involving weeks, and even months, the plates are formed, but with a comparatively limited capacity. To prevent this waste of time and money, and to construct a more powerful battery, was Faure’s object. His electrodes are made, not by the formation of a porous layer by disintegration in the body of the'metallic plates, but by adding to suitable supports a layer of active material, of the desired depth, in the form of a paint or paste, or otherwise, which is, or at once becomes, spongy or porous. This active layer may be rendered more porous by mixing with the material composing it some inert material, such as crushed coke. “In charging, the electricity acts to produce a reduced mass of porous lead on one electrode and a mass of peroxide of lead on the other. When the battery is discharged, the reduced lead becomes oxidized and the peroxidized lead is reduced, until the equilibrium is restored.” The claims in controversy are the first and the fourth. They are:

“(1) As an improvement in secondary batteries, an electrode consisting of a support coated on one or more faces with an active layer of absorptive substance, such as metal or metallic compound applied thereto in the described condition, so as to be or instantly become spongy, and thus capable of receiving and discharging electricity, as stated, in contradistinction to a metallic plate itself rendered spongy by the disintegrating action of electricity, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.”
“(4) In a secondary battery, a series of cells, comprising each a pair of electrodes with an active spongy layer thereon, combined with non-porous partitions between adjacent cells, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.”

The general defense is want of novelty, which is subdivided as follows: First, prior use; second, anticipation in prior patents and publications; third, public use more than two years prior to the application; fourth, lack of invention; fifth, the claims are too broad, and include well-known prior inventions; sixth, .the patent is ambiguous, and misleading, and does not point out the' inventions; seventh, the original application was unlawfully expanded by amendments. Non-infringement of the fourth claim, if construed to mean that the electrodes must be applied to the partitions, is also alleged.

That the language of the patent is ambiguous, and especially so as it relates to the first claim, seems to be conceded on all hands. If other proof were needed that it is not written in the most perspicuous language, it will be found in the fact that the record contains nearly 2,000 pages, the greater part of which, as well as of the briefs, which aggregate 41L pages, is devoted to an effort to ascertain its meaning, — an effort which has hardly crystalized into a demonstration upon any one of the points in controversy. ■ «

In construing the first claim it should be remembered that it is limited to an improvement upon the well-known batteries of Gaston Planté, .who was the creator of practical secondary batteries. The art began with him. A secondary battery, as distinguished from a primary battery, is, there[121]*121fore, one element of the combination. Telephone Cases, 126 U. S. 572, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 778. A secondary or storage battery is a battery which has no original power of devoloping a current of electricity, and is active only when rendered so by sending a current, elsewhere generated, through it. The current produced by the secondary battery, because of the change in the surface of the plates, will run in an opposite direction to that of the current produced by the independent source of electric energy by which it is charged. A primary battery is a chemical generator of electricity which is active by virtue of the materials of which it is made. The material of at least one electrode passes into solution during the use of the battery. A primary battery is active; a secondary battery, in its inception, is passive. The two differ as a spring differs from a reservoir. In the former the electrodes are dissimilar, and the battery is rendered operative by reason of the attack upon and dissolution of the positive electrode in the battery fluid. The other electrode collects the electric energy from the liquid. In the latter the electrodes are initially similar, or substantially so. They are not acted upon by the liquid, and either may be made the positive or negative electrode by its communication with the charging source of electricity. “A primary battery can only give a certain amount of current in a definite period of time, while in the secondary battery the amount of current which may be obtained from it depends entirely upon the resistance of the conducting wires discharging it.” The current may be much stronger than that obtained from the charging battery. A primary battery which has become exhausted may be restored to partial effectiveness by sending a current through it, always in a reverse direction, from an independent source of electricity, in the same manner, substantially, as a secondary battery is charged. Thus the normal condition of the cell may be approximately, but not wholly, restored, for the battery constantly loses capacity until it ultimately becomes useless. Upon this branch of the controversy, the question regarding which there has been the widest divergence of opinion is whether or not a primary battery, thus treated, becomes a secondary battery. It is insisted on the part of the complainant that it is only a partially regenerated primary battery; that it lacks tbe essential characteristics of a secondary battery. In a secondary battery there are two elements initially alike, or substantially so, in electric properties, and not separated in the electro-motive scale; both are. in the first instance, chemically inactive, and practically insoluble in the electrolytic liquid; either may he connected with the positive pole of the charging battery, and at any time the current may be reversed; the process of charging and discharging may.be repeated indefinitely without loss of force, or undergoing physical change. None of these distinguishing features are found in the restored primary battery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Aero Neck-Band & Collar Co. v. Fenway Fabrics, Inc.
19 F. Supp. 846 (S.D. New York, 1937)
Donner v. Sheer Pharmacal Corporation
64 F.2d 217 (Eighth Circuit, 1933)
Corn Products Refining Co. v. Penick & Ford, Ltd.
63 F.2d 26 (Seventh Circuit, 1932)
Ensten v. Simon, Ascher & Co.
282 U.S. 445 (Supreme Court, 1931)
American Plug Co. v. Hudson Motor Car Co.
19 F.2d 609 (E.D. Michigan, 1927)
Carson v. American Smelting & Refining Co.
4 F.2d 463 (Ninth Circuit, 1925)
A. Schrader's Son, Inc. v. Wein Sales Corp.
3 F.2d 999 (E.D. New York, 1924)
Carson v. American Smelting & Refining Co.
293 F. 771 (W.D. Washington, 1923)
Barber v. Otis Motor Sales Co.
265 F. 675 (N.D. New York, 1920)
Wayman v. Louis Lipp Co.
222 F. 679 (S.D. Ohio, 1912)
Page Mach. Co. v. Dow, Jones & Co.
200 F. 72 (S.D. New York, 1912)
Commercial Acetylene Co. v. Searchlight Gas Co.
188 F. 85 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Illinois, 1911)
Page Mach. Co. v. Dow
168 F. 703 (Second Circuit, 1909)
Electric Storage Battery Co. v. Buffalo Electric Carriage Co.
117 F. 314 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western New York, 1902)
Electric Storage Battery Co. v. Belknap
112 F. 538 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York, 1901)
Bracewell v. Passaic Print Works
107 F. 467 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1901)
King v. Anderson
90 F. 500 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 F. 117, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electrical-accumulator-co-v-julien-electric-co-circtsdny-1889.