Electrical Products Corp. v. Neale, Inc.

48 F.2d 824, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1255
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedApril 3, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 824 (Electrical Products Corp. v. Neale, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electrical Products Corp. v. Neale, Inc., 48 F.2d 824, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1255 (S.D. Cal. 1931).

Opinion

Report of Special Master.

To the Honorable Judges of the District Court pf the United States for the Southern District of California, Southern Division:

The undersigned, David B. Head, appointed special master in the above-entitled cause, pursuant to an order of this court en-r tered September 18, 1928, to take and hear evidence, to make conclusions as to the facts in issue, and recommend the judgment to be entered thereon, herewith submits his report:

Action and Parties. This is an action in equity brought by the Electrical Products Corporation, .an Arizona corporation, against Neale, Inc., a Delaware corporation, and others, for infringement of letters patent No. 1,125,476, with prayer for relief by injunction and an accounting of profits and damages.

The plaintiff sues as the licensee under an exclusive territorial license to manufacture, [825]*825use, and sell the invention of the patent in suit in certain western states, including the state of California.

The original patent was issued to Georges Claude who assigned the same to Claude Neon Lights, Inc., the licensor of the plaintiff.

The master, hy stipulation of the parties, set the ease for the taking of testimony on October 2, 1928. At that time there appeared for the plaintiff Lyon & Lyon, by Leonard S. Lyon, Esq., and Reginald Caugh■ey, Esq., of Los Angeles, and William' Bohleber, Esq., of New York, and for the defendants, Neale, Inc., Edward G. Neale, Thomas N. Neale, and Perry H. Greer, Prank L. A. Graham, and Neil S. McCarthy, Esq., of Los Angeles, Dean S. Edmonds, Esq., of New York, and E. Eldred Boland, Esq., of San Eraneisco.

The testimony was taken from day to day, and on November 1, 1928, all parties rested. The testimony was taken down in shorthand hy Ross Reynolds and C. W. McClain and transcribed by them in four bound volumes.

The Issues. The plaintiff alleges infringement by the defendants of letters patent No. 1,125,476, specifically Claim 1 thereof, by the manufacture, sale, and use of certain structures, to wit, the Schwab sign (Exhibit 33), the barber shop sign (Exhibit 32), the Balboa drug sign (Exhibit 23), the flower sign (Exhibit 24), and a sign installed in front of a theater of the defendant Boulevard Theatre Company, Inc. The defendants allege that the patent in suit is invalid for want of novelty, and that their structures do not infringe. The plaintiff has raised the issue of res adjudicata based on the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in the case of Claude Neon Lights, Inc., v. E. Machlett & Son, 36 F.(2d) 574. An issue on personal liability of the ■defendants Edward G. Neale, Thomas N. Neale, and Perry H. Greer is raised by the evidence.

Reserved Rulings and Amendments. The plaintiff was permitted to amend the bill of complaint during the trial of the case to charge infringement, since the filing of the bill, by the defendants’ tubes of the type of Exhibit 23.

The defendants were permitted to amend their answers to allege anticipation by the publications, Exhibits A-22, 24 and 25.

By leave granted, plaintiff was permitted to amend subsequent to trial, setting up allegations of the decree entered in the New York ease, and to offer the decree. This was done December 8,1928. The motion to amend is allowed, and the decree accepted in evidence.

A ruling was reserved on the admissibility of the Goetze catalogue, which ruling is hereinafter made under the heading '‘Prior- Art.”

All of the structures involved in this suit are electrical discharge tubes. They are de-. signed to be used for illumination, and at the present time their most extensive use is in the field of luminous advertising signs. The phenomena of electrical discharge tubes have been studied for many years, but to a large extent the explanation of these phenomena still lies in the field of scientific hypothesis. Though these hypotheses may be valuable to physicists and represent to them a satisfactory foundation for further research, they cannot safely be made, the basis for a judicial determination. However, it appears to the master that the issues raised in this suit can be determined by known and palpable facts without resort to scientific hypotheses.

It is a characteristic of gases that at low pressure they can be illuminated hy the passing of an electric current through them. This is most readily accomplished by confining the gas at low pressure in a tube provided at either end with an electrode through which the electric current can pass, during which passage the Tariffed gas becomes a part of the electrical circuit. Through a greater portion of the tube, while the current is passing, the gas can be seen to glow with a color characteristic of the spectrum of the gas. The current passes through one electrode known as the anode, and through the gas to the other electrode known as the cathode. The use of alternating current causes each electrode to act alternately as cathode and anode. The division of space in an operating tube can be observed with the eye. Most difficult to distinguish is the cathode dark space which surrounds the cathode and is itself surrounded by a light-colored glow, well defined and easily observed, known as the negative glow. Extending from this glow a short way into the tube is another dark space which physicists have named the Earaday dark space. Extending from the end of the Earaday dark space to a point very close to the anode is the positive column. This is primarily the part of the discharge which gives the light, which in color is characteristic of the spectrum of the gas. Many factors affect the operation of the tube. Gases vary in the amount of light given off in ratio to the amount of current used. Impurities affect [826]*826different gases, especially the inactive gases, both as to color and efficiency.

All of the structures in suit are filled with neon gas, and the patent is confined in its claims to neon-filled tubes. Neon is - one of the rare gases of the atmosphere discovered in 1898 by the English physicists Ramsey and- Travers. It belongs to the same group as helium, argon, krypton, and xenon, which are classified as inactive gases, as distinguished from the active gases, such as oxygen, hydrogen, and others. Neon- is found in the atmosphere in minute quantities, and was not generally available in commercial quantities until shortly before the patent in suit. It has a brilliant orange red spectrum and a high luminous efficiency. As observed by Claude and others, it has a low dielectric cohesion or rigidity, which means that it conducts the electric current easily. This permits the use of lower voltages with an increased factor of safety. It has .a long flat pressure-voltage curve (Graph, Exhibit X, Soddy and MaeKenzie, p. 105, Exhibit A-20), which means that changes in pressure in the tube will not seriously affect its operation over a broad range, as compared with the narrow efficient range of hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and other active gases. Neon shares this characteristic with other inactive gases. Neon is monatomic in structure; that is, it exists in the form of single free atoms and is considered to be chemically inert.

The sensitiveness of neon to impurities is a disadvantage in its commercial application. Certain impurities — hydrogen, for example — -will mask the spectrum of neon in the tube changing the color of the discharge and greatly lowering its luminosity. This is referred to in detail in considering the’ Claude patent.

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48 F.2d 824, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electrical-products-corp-v-neale-inc-casd-1931.