General Radio Company v. The Superior Electric Company

321 F.2d 857
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 1963
Docket14077
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 321 F.2d 857 (General Radio Company v. The Superior Electric Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Radio Company v. The Superior Electric Company, 321 F.2d 857 (3d Cir. 1963).

Opinion

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, having been notified that an article of its manufacture infringed' a patent owned by the defendant, brought this action under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202„ seeking an adjudication of the controversy. The defendant filed an answer and counterclaim charging the plaintiff' with patent infringement and unfair com?petition. The plaintiff filed a reply in which it pleaded the usual defenses. The present appeal is from a judgment in fav- or of the plaintiff on the issues of patent validity and unfair competition. 1

PATENT VALIDITY

The defendant is admittedly the owner of Patent No. 2,949,592, which issued on the application of one Gilbert Smiley. The patent covers an article of manufacture therein described as an “adjustable autotransformer” which, like the ordinary transformer, is used to control, current and voltage in alternating current electric circuits. The autotrans-former is placed across the supply circuit, and is so disposed between it and the load circuit as to permit the adjustment of current and voltage, either upwardly or downwardly, to the requirements of the load circuit. It differs from the ordinary transformer in that one of the windings is connected in series with the other, thereby forming the equivalent of a single winding.

*859 The patent contains a single claim which describes the alleged invention as follows:

“A variable-impedance auto-transformer having, in combination, a copper-wire single-layer substantially toroidal winding wound in successively disposed turns about an annular core to provide along the exterior of the winding a track extending across the successively disposed turns, there being bonded to the turns along the track coatings selected from the group consisting of gold, platinum, palladium, rhodium, silver and nickel, means for connecting the winding to a source of voltage, the winding being adapted to be connected also with a load circuit to exchange current with the load circuit at values not greater than a predetermined safe value above which the winding would become damaged by such exchange of current, and a carboniferous or graphitic resistive brush actuable along the track in contact with the coatings and adapted for connection with the load circuit, the width of the brush being greater than the distance between two successive turns of the winding in order that the brush may establish contact with the coating bonded to a turn before breaking contact with the coating bonded to the adjacently disposed turn with which it last contacted, thereby to prevent interruption of the current in the load circuit into the brush, means for connecting a point of the winding and "the brush to the load circuit, and the brush being rotatable about the axis of the toroidal ivinding along the said track in engagement with the coatings of the successively disposed turns, the coatings maintaining the resistance between the brush and the track, during passage of the current of the predetermined safe value between them, substantially constant.” (Emphasis added).

The alleged invention is essentially an improvement on the invention described in Patent No. 2,009,013, granted to Ed-uard Karplus and William Tuttle, to which specific reference is made in the patent in suit. This patent had expired at the time this action was brought.

The alleged invention is comprised of the following structural elements: (a) an impedance or choke coil consisting of insulated copper wire toroidally wound in successively disposed turns about an annular core or iron or laminated steel, the adjacent turns being sufficiently spaced to prevent contact with each other; (b) a circumferential commutator track produced by removing the insulation from the adjacent turns of the coil so as to permit brush-to-track contact at successive radial positions around the track; (c) a coating made of an alloy of any one of several oxidation-resistant metals such as silver, gold, platinum, rhodium and nickel, bonded to the exposed turns of the track; (d) a “carbon brush,” 2 wider than the space between the adjacent turns, rota-tably mounted on an axial shaft and so disposed in relation to the commutator track as to permit brush-to-track contact at successive radial positions.

The claim to patentable invention necessarily rests, as the defendant concedes, on the utilization of an oxidation-resistant coating on the exposed turns of the winding as a means to prevent the formation of cupric oxide which adversely affects the stability of brush-to-track resistance essential to the efficient operation of the autotransformer. Except for this feature, the patent in suit covers nothing more than an assemblage of structural elements, fully described in the patent to Karplus and Tuttle, in an autotransformer in which they perform no functions different from those there *860 tofore performed in earlier devices. The patent in suit must therefore be scrutinized “with a care proportioned to the difficulty and improbability of finding invention” in such an assemblage. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company v. Supermarket Corp., 340 U.S. 147, 71 S.Ct. 127, 95 L.Ed. 162 (1950). The claim to invention must be appraised here in the light of the prior art considered in its entirety. Ibid.

The British patent to Sedgfield, issued on March 22, 1949, more than two years prior to the application for the patent in suit, relates to an improved potentiometer. This is an instrument for measuring galvanometrically electromotive force, the force which causes the movement of current through a conductor. While the potentiometer differs from the autotransformer in function and operation, it is comprised of structural elements similar to those of the autotrans-former, to wit, (a) an impedance coil of low resistance wire made of an alloy of nickel, platinum, gold or silver, known to be resistant to oxidation; (b) a commutator track produced by removing the insulation from the adjacent turns of the coil so as to permit wiper-to-track contact; (c) a “wire wiper,” known in the art, made of wire of suitable conductivity and so disposed with relation to the track as to permit contact. It is essential to the operation of the instrument that the wiper-to-track resistance be stabilized at a low level.

It was apparently known prior to Sedg-field that the sensitivity of the potentiometer, and consequently its accuracy, was adversely affected by the formation of tarnish on the commutator track. 3 Sedg-field discovered and recommended that this condition could be prevented by electroplating the exposed turns of the impedance coil with an alloy of rhodium, an element of the platinum group.

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321 F.2d 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-radio-company-v-the-superior-electric-company-ca3-1963.