General Electric Co. v. Butler Light, Heat & Motor Co.

205 F. 42, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1522
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1913
DocketNo. 45
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 205 F. 42 (General Electric Co. v. Butler Light, Heat & Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Co. v. Butler Light, Heat & Motor Co., 205 F. 42, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1522 (W.D. Pa. 1913).

Opinion

ORR, District Judge.

Ten years has elapsed since this patent suit was instituted in this court. It is now before the court for final hearing upon bill, answer, replication, and proofs. At its inception two patents were involved; now one only is in controversy. The application for the letters patent in suit was filed in the Patent Office of the United States on November 2, 1885. In a period little short of 17 years — that is to say, on April 22, 1902 — there was granted to Elihu Thomson (as assignor), in pursuance of said application, letters patent of the United States No. 698,156 for a “system of electric distribution.” The defenses are invalidity by reason of prior publications and prior use, by reason of lack of patentable novelty or invention, and by reason of the patentee’s delay and laches.

It is proper to quote from the specification enough to show to what the system relates, what is its object, and of what it consists, as follows;

“My present invention relates to means whereby electricity generated at a station and conveyed over mains or distributing circuits may be utilized at different points through the intervention of induction coils in local circuits, each of which may be supplied with currents induced by the action of current on the main and of any desired strength or electromotive force for each different local circuit.”
[43]*43“The object of the invention is principally to permit the employment of currents of comparatively high potential upon the mains loading from the supply station and the utilization of the electric energy of the main in electric energy of lower potential in different local circuits, without, however, interrupting the continuity in any way of the electric main leading from the central station.”
“lly invention consists in a novel system of electric supply, comprising in combination elect lie mains or supply conductors furnished from a suitable supply station with alternating or reverse currents of comparatively high potential, induction coils, or other suitable means for inductively transforming the alternating currents Into induced currents on local circuits; said induction coils being placed with their primaries connected at intervals to the mains, so as to be in multiple arc with one another in relation to said mains, and secondary coils or circuits connected to local circuits and properly proportioned to obtain the desired induced electric energy for operating electric lights, motors, or other electric translating devices.”

The claims of the patent are:

“1. in a system of electric distribution, a'series of secondary circuits of induction coils supplying arc lights or other devices, the primary coils of which induction coils are multiple arc branches of a single primary circuit, or set of mains .1, H, through which alternating or reversed currents are bowing, as described.
"2. In a system of electric distribution, a set of mains A, B, supplied by alternating currents, or alternating electrical impulses, rendering said mains alternately positive and negative with respect to each other, in combination with branch circuits taken from said mains at convenient points, and finally carried through the primary wires or coils of a set or series of induction coils, the secondaries of which are connected to electric lamps, or other apparatus, for utilizing the impulses, generated in said secondaries by induction from the said primaries.
“3. In a system of electric distribution, the combination with the high potential mains, through which alternating or reversed currents are flowing, of electric converters or reducers connected in multiple between said mains, and incandescent lamps or other translating devices supplied from said reducers with currents of lower tension and greater quantity than those circulating in the main circuit coil of the converter.”

.Before distinguishing these claims, it must he observed that all the elements thereof were not new. That induction coils were well known and were of different forms appears from Thomson’s own statement in his specification that:

“The form of induction coil used in the practice of my invention is of little consequence, provided it insure a good economy between the primary and the secondary circuits. A very good form is described in British natent to Valiev, No. 3.059, of 1850.”

An ordinary induction coil is nothing but an iron core with two independent windings of copper wire placed upon it. Through one of these windings an intermittent direct: current or an alternating current passes directly from the source of supply. This winding is called the ‘'primary coil.” When the current is passing through the primary wire, there is generated or induced in the other wire, called the “secondary coil," an alternating current of a different voltage to he used in the various translating devices. It is doubtful whether the force in the core which carries the induction of the current is understood otean be explained in the present state of the art. Induction coils have been called “secondary generators” and are now more often called “transformers.” They may be constructed so that there may be a [44]*44higher voltage in the primary current than in the secondary current, or they may be so constructed that there may be a higher voltage in the secondary current than in the primary. The former is called a “step-down transformer”; the latter, a “step-up transformer.” As an element of the claims, induction coils, therefore, must be considered old in the art.

There was nothing new in causing alternating or reversed currents to flow through a primary wire or circuit. Thomson in his specification expressly refused to limit himself to any form of generator which will produce such currents and said:

“This, however, is a matter well understood in electric engineering and need not here be more fully specified.”

There was nothing new in the multiple arc branches or connections according to the specification of Thomson. He says:

“Connected to the mains A, B, at various points and where desired, and in circuit from one main to the other, are the smaller tap or branch or tap wires a 1> c d e fg h, forming what is ordinarily termed a ‘multiple arc connection’ from one main to the other.”

[3] What is “ordinarily termed” is termed by “established rules or settled method.” See Webster’s Dictionary.

In addition to absence of disclosure as to construction of the induction coils and of the apparatus to generate the current in the primary wire, there is also no disclosure in the patent as. to the construction of the lamps or other translating devices.

Referring again to the claims, it is observed that there is little if any difference between 1 and 2. The latter includes branch circuits from the primary circuit. Neither requires the tension of the current in the primary to be lowered or raised in the secondary. Claim 3 differs from the others in contemplating the use of step-down transformers. The patent in suit rests fundamentally upon the connections of the primary coils of transformers in multiple to the supply main of •a reversed or alternating current circuit.

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205 F. 42, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-butler-light-heat-motor-co-pawd-1913.