General Electric Co. v. De Forest Radio Co.

17 F.2d 90, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 932
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 15, 1927
Docket561
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 F.2d 90 (General Electric Co. v. De Forest Radio Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware 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. De Forest Radio Co., 17 F.2d 90, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 932 (D. Del. 1927).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

On December 30, 1913, United States letters patent No. 1,-082,933, for improvements in tungsten and methods of making the same for use as filaments of incandescent electric lamps and for other purposes, was granted to General Electric Company as assignee of William D. Coolidge. In the suit at bar, instituted by General Electric Company against De Forest Radio Company and Robelen Piano Company, the plaintiff charges De Forest Company with contributory infringement of process claims Nos. 1 to 23, inclusive, 8,13, and 15 excepted, and both defendants with infringement of product claims 24, 26, 27, 28, 33, and 34 of that patent. The alleged infringing acts are the manufacture and sale by the De Forest Company of radio tubes having ductile tungsten filaments made to its order by Mallory Company, an alleged infringing manufacturer of drawn tungsten wire, and the resale of those tubes by Robelen Piano Company, a De Forest distributor. The broad defenses are invalidity and noninfringement.

In General Electric Co. against Independent Lamp & Wire Co., Incorporated (D. C.) 267 F. 824, wherein the particular device alleged to be an infringement was an incandescent electric lamp having a filament formed of ductile tungsten, specifically claimed by the product claims not here in issue, all of *92 the 34 claims of the patent were held by me, sitting under special assignment in the district of New Jersey, valid and infringed. But, because of new specific defenses, new evidence here interposed, and an intervening decision of the House of Lords upon the corresponding British Coolidge tungsten patent, the issue of validity must here be considered anew.

Tungsten is one of the elements. In nature it is found only in combination with other elements. It is isolated in the form of a steel gray to black powder, having a fusing point of about 3200° C. Throughout the century preceding the granting of the patent in issue, chemists and metallurgists asserted that tungsten hot or cold is nonductile. In his specification, the patentee states that up to the time of the invention ah efforts to work the metal had failed, and that no one had succeeded in modifying its characteristic hard, brittle structure, but that, by preparing from the powder a coherent ingot and by hot-working the ingot in accordance with the steps of the patent, he had produced from that metal a wire, miles in length, tough, fibrous, elastic, and of high tensile strength, and, at an intermediate stage of his process, “wrought” tungsten having desirable properties, not found in any tungsten of the prior art.

The product claims in suit are:

“24. A wire formed of ductile tungsten.” “26. Substantially pure tungsten having ductility and high tensile strength.

“27. A ductile tungsten wire having a fibrous structure.

“28. A form of tungsten metal pliable at room temperature.”

“33. The material wrought tungsten, having a specific gravity of approximately 19 or greater, and capable of being forged and worked.

“34. Wrought tungsten, a solid coherent material characterized by the presence of crystals deformed by mechanical working.” Representative process claims are:

“2. The process whieh consists in agglomerating tungsten powder, sintering the body thus formed, subjecting it to repeated hot working, and continuing such hot working until the body remains ductile when cold.”

“5. The process which consists in mechanically working while hot 'tungsten which is brittle at room temperature until it becomes pliable at room temperature.”

“16. The process whieh consists in pro-' dueing tungsten containing beneficial additions, forming it into a billet, sintering it at high temperature, and mechanically working it a great' ¿umber of times at high temperature, and reducing the temperature during the working.”

“21. The method whieh consists in mechanically working at a temperature above approximately 1500 degrees C. a tungsten body which is brittle cold, interrupting the operation before the body is brought into the form ultimately desired, and completing thé mechanical working at a temperature below 1500 degrees C.”

One of the basic defenses upon which invalidity of the product claims is strenuously urged is that of want of patentable subject-matter. In support of this defense the defendants assert that those claims call for a product of nature; .that the. raw material to which the process is applied and the product resulting from that process are, alike, the element tungsten, and that the properties of the product, like those of the starting body are discovered, natural properties, not invented, artificial properties, as was held in the Independent Case. Two subordinate contentions by which the defendants seek to sustain this proposition are, as I understand them, that, before the earliest date claimed for Coolidge, Just & Hanaman, having disclosed by their French patent No. 358,272, issued February 7,1906 (see [C. C. A.] 233 F. 96, 99, 100) how to make a coherent tungsten . ingot, the ascertainment that such ingot could be “wrought” and the temperature at which it could be wrought was but the discovery of a natural and inherent property of such mass of tungsten at the particular temperature, and the subsequent ascertainment that under certain other conditions — after repeated working, for instance — the mass would be malleable, pliable, and ductile cold, was but the discovery of another natural property of the element tungsten.

Next, it is asserted that the single grain or crystal of tungsten is, eoncededly, inherently malleable, pliable, and ductile, even at room temperature, and that at that temperature-the brittleness of the mass is due to the great extent to whieh, at that temperature, the force of the resistance of the grain to deformation exceeds the power of adhesion or strength of union between the grains or crystals of whieh the mass is composed, and that the ascertainment of the temperature at whieh the force of resistance of the crystals to deformation is reduced below the power of adhesion is again but a discovery of a natural property and not an invention, and the ascertainment that, after continued working, the mass becomes ductile cold, was but a second discovery of something in nature.

*93 A third contention is that the product claims are wanting in patentable subject-matter in the sense that they lack invention because of the disclosures of the prior art and because the claimed product does not spring from a creative, inventive act of the patentee, distinct from that required to invent the process by which the product is made. The plaintiff does not deny that the wire or rod of the prior Just & Hanaman patent was a coherent mass of tungsten and as such the starting body called for by the patent in suit. It asserts, however, that, until Coolidge did his work and accomplished his results, it was not known that the Just & Hanaman rod constituted a suitable starting body.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F.2d 90, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-de-forest-radio-co-ded-1927.