General Electric Co. v. Webster & D. St. Ry. Co.

113 F. 756, 51 C.C.A. 446, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 3994
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 1902
DocketNos. 374, 375
StatusPublished

This text of 113 F. 756 (General Electric Co. v. Webster & D. St. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit 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. Webster & D. St. Ry. Co., 113 F. 756, 51 C.C.A. 446, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 3994 (1st Cir. 1902).

Opinion

COLT, Circuit Judge.

The subject-matter of these cross appeals is the Eickemeyer coil or winding for dynamo-electric machines covered by letters patent No. 377,996, dated February 14, 1888. Claims 1, 2, and 4, of the patent are alone in issue; and the only question which arises is whether the defendant’s coil infringes any of these claims. The circuit court held that claims 1 and 2 were not infringed, and that claim 4 was infringed. The form of the coil, with its axial line indicated, is illustrated in Fig. 3 of the drawings of the patent. Other coils shown in the drawings have more convolutions of wire, but all have essentially the same configuration.

[757]*757The two parts of the coil containing the offsets are called the “ends.” They are the inactive portions outside of the magnetic field, and they lie alongside of or adjacent to the ends of the armature core. The two remaining parts opposite the axial line are called the “sides.” They are the active portions, which rest on the periphery of the armature core. It will be noticed that the axial line splits the offsets in the center. It will also be noticed that the coil is divided by its axial line into two unequal halves, and that the relative dimensions of the two halves are such that the smaller half may pass into and through the larger half, or, what is the same thing, the short side through the long side. In describing this structural feature, the patentee uses several synonymous forms of expression: The coil “at one side of what may be termed its axial line is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the opposite portion.” Again: “Each [coil] having substantially one half thereof of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the other half.” Again:. “Thus making one side of the coil longer than the other side, so_ that the short side of any one coil may be passed into and through the long sides of other coils.” Again: “In each coil there is a long side, b, and a short side, b', and in each case the short side can be passed into or through the long side.”

The claims in issue are as follows.

“(1) A dynamo-electric armature coil or winding, which at one side of what may be termed ‘its axial line’ is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the opposite portion, both of said portions being alike in contour, substantially as described. (2) In s dynamo-electric armature-winding, a series of coils which are counterparts in contour, each complete and separable from the others, and each having substantially one half thereof of lesser external dimensions than the interna! dimensions of the other half, substantially as described, whereby portions of each of said coils overlie and other portions underlie appropriate portions of other coils. (4) In a.dynamo-electric armature, a winding composed of detachable counterpart coils, each of which is placed in immediate contact with the periphery of tha armature core at one side only, substantially as described.”

The first claim is for the novel coil. The second claim is for a winding composed of a series of such coils. The fourth claim is for a winding in which the coils are placed in a particular* way on the periphery of the armature drum. These claims are carefully drawn. They are expressed in dear and unambiguous terms. The first two define with accuracy and exactness Eickemeyer’s main invention. Read in connection with the specification and drawings of the patent, their meaning is plain, unmistakable, and certain. Eickemeyer had a problem to solve, and he solved it, as is common with real inventors, by the application of a simple principle. The problem was the construction of a practical form-wound drum-armature winding for dynamo-electric machines, especially of the bipolar type, composed of detachable, interchangeable, counterpart coils. This problem he solved by the simple method of making the two halves of the coil of such unequal dimensions that the smaller half of one coil may pass into and through the larger halves of other coils. In this conception lay the Eickemeyer invention. Where this construction and mode of opera[758]*758tion are present, there is present the Eickemeyer invention; and where this construction and mode of operation are absent, the Eickemeyer invention is absent. The lesser external and greater internal dimensions of the two halves of the Eickemeyer coil are made the sole test and criterion of the invention on every page of the drawings and specification of the patent, whether the coil be adapted to bipolar or multipolar machines, or to single or double layer windings. It is the one, fundamental, essential, fixed, and unvarying characteristic of the Eickemeyer coil. The first claim declares that the coil “at one side of what may be termed its ‘axial line’ is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the opposite portion.” The second claim declares that each coil has “substantially one half thereof of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the other half.” Taking in the hand an Eickemeyer coil, we see at a glance the lesser external and greater internal dimensions of its two halves. Turning to the drawings of the patent, the same characteristic feature is always apparent, It is also stamped on every page of the specification, as sufficiently appears from the following extracts:

“Whether my colls or windings are adapted for use In bipolar or In multipolar machines, they are novel, in that each at one side of what may be termed Its ‘axial line’ is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of its opposite portion, and both of said portions are substantially alike in contour, so that they can be symmetrically assembled upon a drum or core, and enable at the ends of said core one portion of each coil to overlie and the other portion to underlie appropriate portions of other coils.” “In this armature [referring to Figs. 1 and 2] there are thirty-six counterpart coils, D, of conducting wire, and each coil at one side of its axial line (indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 3) is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the opposite portion, and both of said portions are substantially alike in contour, and this characteristic feature is always maintained by me regardless of the number of windings in the coil and of variations in the form of the armature to be covered.” “In each coil there ls< a long side, b, and a short side, b', and in each case the short side can be passed into or through the long side, because for the first time a portion of each coil which is at one side of its axial line is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the opposite portion of the coil, although both portions are substantially alike in contour.”

The inspection of an Eickemeyer coil, the examination of the drawings of the patent, and the reading of the specification, leave no room for doubt as to the meaning of the first two claims, and the novelty and scope of the invention therein described. The patentee expressly declares that his coil is “novel” in that one portion “at one side of what may be termed its ‘axial line’ is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of its opposite portion”; that “this characteristic feature is always maintained”; and that “for the first time, a portion of each coil which is at one side of its axial line is of lesser external dimensions than the internal dimensions of the opposite portion of the coil.”

The defendant’s coil, with its axial line corresponding to Fig. 3 of the Eickemeyer patent, is shown in the following cut:

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Bluebook (online)
113 F. 756, 51 C.C.A. 446, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 3994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-webster-d-st-ry-co-ca1-1902.