Elkon Works, Inc. v. Welworth Automotive Corp.

25 F.2d 968, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1142
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 4, 1928
DocketNo. 2830
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 F.2d 968 (Elkon Works, Inc. v. Welworth Automotive Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elkon Works, Inc. v. Welworth Automotive Corp., 25 F.2d 968, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1142 (E.D.N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is an action in equity for the alleged infringement of patent No. 1,089,907, dated March 10, 1914, issued to William D. Coolidge, assignor to General Electric Company, for electrical contact, on original application filed March 20, 1912, divided and this application filed December 17,1912.

The defenses are invalidity and noninfringement. The question of title is not raised.

In the bill of complaint four other patents, viz: No. 1,181,742, to Coolidge, dated May 2, 1916; No. 1,155,426, to Liebmann & Megrath, dated October 5, 1915; No. 1,155,-427, to Liebmann & Megrath, dated October 5,1915; No. 1,229,960, to Humphries, dated June 12, 1917 — were set up, but plaintiff has withdrawn them, and we are only concerned with patent No. 1,089,907, which will be described as the patent in suit.

The patent in suit relates to the construction of electrical make-and-break contacts, and the purposes of the patentee’s invention are defined in the patent in suit as follows:

“My invention relates to electrical contacts, particularly for rheotomes or other vibratory circuit making-and-breaking devices, ordinarily used as sparking or igniting contacts for gas engines, as circuit controllers, for regulators, and for other like purposes.”

The evidence on the trial- as to tests was limited to one type of make-and-break contacts, the type used in automobile battery ignition.

This suit was based on all seven claims of the patent in suit, which read as follows:

“1. An electrical make-and-break contact of tungsten.

“2. An electrical make-and-break contact of malleable tungsten.

“3. An electrical make-and-break contact of tungsten, and a backing for the same of a metal of superior electric and thermal conductivity intimately joined thereto.

“4. An electrical make-and-break contact of tungsten integrally joined to a metal backing of superior electric and thermal conductivity.

“5. An electrical make-and-break contact of tungsten, a support for the same and a contact backing of a metal of superior electric and thermal conductivity intervening between the contact and support and integrally joined to both.

“6. An electrical vibratory make-and-break contact of tungsten.

“7. An electrical make-and-break impact of tungsten.”

The defendant interposed the defense of noninfringement, but the evidence conclusive[969]*969ly establishes the fact that defendant's devices, in structure and materials, are identical with those manufactured and sold by tho plaintiff, and follow literally the teachings of the Coolidge patent, and that, if the patent in suit is valid, it is infringed by the defendant.

We thus come to the consideration of tho only other defense, invalidity. The patentee described in tho patent in suit the problems he had to face, as follows:

“In apparatus of this character, vibratory contact terminals of expensive metals, such as platinum and iridium, have heretofore been used, and it was found that these contacts deteriorated and became destroyed, so as to be unfit for further use, within a comparatively short time. The contacts were found to blacken and pit; their contacting surfaces became deformed by the continuous hammering action, and by the formation of irregular and variably distributed small protuberances, due, probably, to the transference of material from the cathode to the anode, whereby the normal distance between the contacts was reduced, and ‘bridges’ were often formed between the two contacts. It was also found that the accidental wetting of the contacts with oil seriously interfered with their operation. In addition to this, the materials heretofore used for vibratory contacts are softened by tho heat of the sparks passing between them, to such an extent as to cause welding, or incipient welding.”

He also stated in the following words his solution of the problem:

“My invention is -designed to overcome these difficulties and it consists broadly in make-and-break contacts of metallic tungsten, preferably in the wrought or malleable form. It is a well-known fact that tungsten, when heated to redness in air, is soon covered with a layer of oxide whieh is practically an insulator, especially in the cold state, and this property of tungsten would seem to make this material unfit for use as contacts. But I have found by experiment that this is not so, and that, by reason of the light powdery or floeeulent condition of the oxide, the same is shaken off almost as quickly as it is formed, so that vibratory contacts of tungsten, and especially of wrought or malleable tungsten, can be used with great advantage.
“I have found that the pitting of the contacts made of tungsten, while theoretically not absent, is practically insignificant; that the normal distance between the contacts remains sensibly constant during a long period; that no welding or incipient welding of the contacts occurs; and that the presence of oil on the contact surfaces does not interfere with their operation. In consequence of these properties of tungsten which I have ascertained by long-continued experiments, contacts of this material have a very much longer life than contacts made of any other material known to me, or of any material that has heretofore been used.
“In a comparative test, I have found that a pair of tungsten contacts, after having made 32,000,000 of makes-and-breaks, were still clean and symmetrical, and apparently as good as new; while a pair of platinum contacts, operated under the same conditions and with the same number of makes-and-breaks, were found to have become so badly pitted, consumed, and deformed as to be unfit for further use. One of a pair of contacts is usually mounted on a resilient support, such as a spring, and the other to a rigid support, and the joinder between the contacts and supports should be very intimate, so that the contacts will not become loose by the hammering action to whieh they are subjected. I secure this result either by fusing to one face of the tungsten contact. a backing of a rather bulky piece of a metal of superior conductivity for heat and electricity, such as copper, silver, or gold, and fasten tho backing to a spring or rigid support by screws or other mechanical means, or I interpose the backing of superior conductivity between the contact and the support by fusion to both; that is to say, by using tlie backing as a solder. In either case, the heat generated in the contact is carried away rapidly.”

Defendant takes issue with the statements of the patentee as to the effect of use on platinum-iridium contacts and contends that the patent ’in suit shows no new structural features but simply a substitution of material. Defendant offered to show the prior state of the art the following patents and publications:

United States patent No. 1,002,618, to Fred B. Corey, for relay contact. The invention of this patent consists in the discovery that molybdenum, when substituted for the platinum contact, gives with the carbon contact in relay devices equally good results at a greatly reduced cost. Tho conditions under which Corey’s relay contacts operate are totally unlike the conditions under whieh the make-and-break contacts of the patent in suit operate.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F.2d 968, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elkon-works-inc-v-welworth-automotive-corp-nyed-1928.