Excelsior Drum Works v. Bortel

190 F. 10, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5328
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedJuly 27, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 F. 10 (Excelsior Drum Works v. Bortel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excelsior Drum Works v. Bortel, 190 F. 10, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5328 (circtndny 1911).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The complainant, Eipman Kaiser, owns United States letters patent to Ruggiero et al., No. 770,024, dated September 13, 1904, and the complainants Eipman Kaiser and Alfred R. Cunnius own the patent to Cunnius, No. 784,385, dated March 7, 1905. The complainant Excelsior Drum Works is sole and exclusive licensee under both patents.

.The defendants are the makers and sellers of horns at Syracuse, Ñ. Y., for phonographic and other similar machines, and the patents in suit relate to horns used for the same purpose. Claim 1 of the Ruggiero patent is in issue here, and reads as follows:

“1. A horn for phonographic and similar machines, composed of separate layers of fibrous material, each of said layers being composed of separate [11]*11longitudinal strips arranged so as to break joints, substantially as shown and described.”

In the specifications the patentees say of their alleged invention:

“This invention relates to horns for phonographic and similar machines and the object thereof is to provide a horn for machines of this class which will do away with the mechanical, vibratory, and metallic sound usually produced in the operation of sueh machines and also produce a full, even, and continuous volume of sound, in which the articulation will be clear, full, and distinct. The invention is fully disclosed in the following specification, of which the accompanying drawings form a, part, in which the separate parts of our improvement are designated by suitable reference characters in each of the views, and in which lfigure 1 is a perspective view of our improved phonographic horn; Fig. 2, an end view thereof, and Fig. 3 a longitudinal section. In the practice of our invention we provide a horn a, composed of separate layers of longitudinally-arranged strips, a^, said strips being preferably composed of wood or similar fibrous material. In the construction shown three of the separate layers are employed, as shown at o», and each of said layers is composed of six of the separate and longitudinally-arranged strips a». The separate layers ft", which make up the horn ft, may be secured together at the edges by glue or in any suitable way, and in practice said layers are preferably formed separately and inserted into each other, or the outer layer is first formed and the second and third layers inserted thereinto, and in this operation the outer surface of the second and third layers are covered with any suitable glue or adhesive material, and the separate parts or layers of the horn are thus securely held together and make, up, iii effect, a single homogeneous construction. Instead of forming the separate layers separately and inserting one within another, as hereinbefore described, the inner layer may first be formed and the separate longitudinal strips of the second layer secured thereon, after which the separate longitudinal strips of the outer layer may be secured in position, and in either event the separate layers are so connected as to break the joints thereof, as clearly shown in Figs. 1 and 2. In the smaller end of the horn a is secured a short tube ft, which is larger at its outer than its inner end, and this tube is also composed of wood or similar fibrous material and is intended to strengthen the smaller end of the horn, and in practice I secure on the smaller end of the horn a sleeve o, which is preferably composed of meta] and which is also intended to give strength to the smaller end of the horn and facilitate the attachment of the horn to the machine without injury to the smaller end of the horn. It will be understood that the general form of the horn may be the same as other devices of this class, and the larger end thereof may be bell-shaped, if desired, and the connections of the horn with the machine is made in the usual manner. By means of our improvement we provide a horn for the purpose specified which will produce a constant and continuous volume of sound, in which the articulation will be clear, full, and distinct and which will not produce the mechanical, vibratory, and metallic sound usually produced by instruments of this class as heretofore constructed.”

Claim 2 of the Ruggiero patent (not in issue here) reads as follows:

“2. A horn for phonographic and similar machines, composed of separate layers of fibrous material, each of said layers being composed of separate longitudinal strips arranged so as to break joints, and the smaller end of the horn being provided with a tube of fibrous material which is secured: therein, substantially as shown and described.”

This differs from claim 1, in that the small end of the horn is provided with a tube of fibrous material.

Claims 1 and 2 of the Cunnius patent are in issue, and read as follows;

[12]*12.„ “1." A trumpet for talking machines, comprising a conically-tapering, body composed of a number of layers, the outer layer being composed of tapering strips separated by spaces tapering inwardly from the larger end of said bqdy, a. reinforcing-rim surrounding the body at said larger end, and filling-pieces retained by said rim and extending inwardly into said tapering spaces.
" “2. A trumpet for talking machines, comprising a conically-tapering body made of layers of tapering strips, the strips of each layer being separated by spaces tapering inwardly from the larger end of the body and breaking joints With the' strips of the adjacent layer, an outer reinforcing-rim surrounding the body at the larger end thereof, filling-pieces retained by said fim and extending inwardly into the tapering spaces of the outer layer, and similar filling-pieces inserted in the spaces between the strips of the inner layer.”

> ‘The patentee says of his invention:

“This invention relates to an improved trumpet for talking machines of all kinds' which, combines lightness with strength and resistance against injury by being dropped or from other causes, always preserving its original shape and appearance; and the invention consists of a trumpet for talking machines comprising a conically-tapering body composed of a number of layers, the outer’layer being composed of tapering strips separated by spaces tapering inwardly from the larger end of said body, a reinforcing-rim surrounding the body, at.sáid larger end, and filling-pieces retained by said rim and extending.inwardly into said tapering spaces. * * * My improved trumpet is made of conical shape and of thin strips, preferably of wood, which taper from the mouth to the inner small end. The body of the trumpet is made of two siiperposed layers of'tapering strips aa’ the strips a of the inner layer breaking joints with the strips a' of the outer layer, as shown clearly in Fig. 2. The tapering strips are diminished in width toward the smaller end of the trumpet, some of them being terminated at some distance from the same, while others run through, so as to form a small tubular end e. The small end of the trumpet is surrounded by a layer d of waterproof material— such as Japan cloth; hard rubber, or other suitable material — which serves as a handle for the trumpet and also for reinforcing the ends of the tapering strips at the small end of the trumpet. The outer end or mouth of' the trumpet is reinforced by an exterior rim r of wood or other suitable material, and the spaces between the exterior strips adjacent the rim ,are ornamented by short rounded-off strips or filling-pieces p,

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Bluebook (online)
190 F. 10, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excelsior-drum-works-v-bortel-circtndny-1911.