Gold & Stock Telegraph Co. v. Commercial Telegram Co.

23 F. 340, 23 Blatchf. 199, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1925
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedApril 1, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 F. 340 (Gold & Stock Telegraph Co. v. Commercial Telegram Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gold & Stock Telegraph Co. v. Commercial Telegram Co., 23 F. 340, 23 Blatchf. 199, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1925 (circtsdny 1885).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is a bill in equity to restrain the defendants from the infringement of reissued letters patent No. 3,810, granted to the plaintiff, as assignee of Edward A. Calaban, January 25, 1870, for an improvement in telegraphic printing instruments for registering the prices of gold and stocks. The original patent was dated April 21,1868. Upon the trial of the case, infringement of the second claim only of the reissue was alleged. . The claim is in these words:

“Two or more type-wheels moving independently and controlled by magnetism, and arranged so as to'print jointly or separately upon one strip of paper in two or more lines, substantially as specified. ”

To understand and construe the claim which is in controversy, it is important to know the state of the art at the date of the invention. In this case the defendants too*k no testimony, and therefore the history of the art, so far as it relates to this claim, is to be learned from the reference which was made to it in the cross-examination and subsequent examination of the plaintiffs! expert. The Theiler, French, and the Johnson, English, patent, for the Theiler invention, which seems to be conceded to have embodied the state of the art at the time of the Calahan invention, are not in evidence; hut a general statement, and one which will be sufficient, can he given of the extent of the advance which Calahan made.

Theiler had a two-wheel instrument, the wheels being moved by one electro-magnet, and being geared together, and necessarily rotating together. Letters were placed upon one wheel, and figures were placed upon the other, and the letters were printed upon on& line, and the figures were printed upon another line, of the same tape by depressing the corresponding type-wheel. But it was necessary to [341]*341have complicated mechanism, so as to prevent impressions from one wheel when the other alone was being printed from. Calaban printed letters in one line, and figures in another line, of a tape by the aid of two type-wheels, one of which could be rotated to the exclusion of the other, and a single press-pad. His wheels moved or rotated independently of each other, while in the Theiler machine one wheel could not be moved without rotating the other. He says in his specification that Ilia invention was intended, among other things, to dispense with the complicated mechanism theretofore made use of to cause an impression to bo made when the typo-wheel had been brought to a. proper position, and describes his device as follows:

“A magnet and armature are employed in effecting the movement of the type-wheel, so that the samo is turned to the required position, and then, by an independent motion separately controlled from that of the type-wheel, the impression is made, so that the type-wheel can remain after it is adjusted, or be again moved previous to the impression being made. The impression is made on a strip of paper by tuvo typo-wheels, so that the printing is in two lines, and the figures ¡mil fractions for denoting the ¡trices or quotations are contained upon a wheel, and combined therewith. .Letters are provided Imprinting on the same strip of paper, to denote the article to which the quotations relate. As the different machines will generally be but a short distance apart, it is preferred to make usa of two or.more wires communicating through the entire circuit of machines. One of those wires transmits the pulsations of electricity that act upon a magnet, and adjust the typo-wheel to the proper letter or number. The other wire transmits the pulsations of electricity which, aiding in a magnet, produce the impression upon the paper. In the drawings three circuit wires are represented: one for the alphabet-wheel, another for the number, or figure, wheel, and the third for giving the impression; but the number of wires employed is unlimited. * * * The two type-wheels, A and l, although on separate shafts, stand contiguous to each other, so as to be impressed separately or jointly upon the same strip of paper that is fed along beneath them, the impression from the respective wheels forming two different lines of printing. * * * Bach of the wheels,-1 and A, has a blank space, that is turned towards the paper while the other wheel, only, is being printed from.”

This blank space prevents the wheel, which for the time being it is not desired to print from, from mailing impressions on the paper.

The independent rotation of the type-wheels, as distinguished from typo-wheels which must continuously and necessarily rota,to together, is the principal feature of the invention of the second claim, and it is not a prerequisite to this independence of rotation that each wheel should be under the control of its own independent magnet. This is a feature of the Calaban machino, but it is not a part of the second claim. The claim requires that each type-wheel shall move or rotate by magnetic action independently of the other, and that it shall not' be necessary to the movement of one that the other should at the same time be rotated also, and that a strip of paper and one impression-pad shall be moved up against the typo-wheels by a magnet, so that impressions from the characters upon either or both wheels, may be made upon the strip of paper, and thus a message may be printed [342]*342exclusively from one wheel, or may be printed in two lines from the characters on both wheels,—that is, by the united or joint action of both wheels,—but it is not a requisite that this printing shall be done simultaneously.

The great contest in this case was in regard to the meaning of the word “jointly, ” the defendants insisting that it meant simultaneously, and the plaintiff insisting that it meant by united action, or acting in co-operation, and thus, that when there was occasion to use both letters and figures upon a single strip, as is usually the case in transmitting stock quotations, such printing could be done in two lines by the-united or joint action of the two wheels. The latter is, in my opinion, the correct interpretation of the claim, for three reasons:

(1) The improvement, or the advance in the art, did not, in fact, consist in simultaneous printing. . It did not remedy an existing evil, and was not the thing which the patentee apparently wanted to accomplish. (2) The patent does not mention simultaneous printing as a thing which the instrument was necessarily to do; it points out that the wheels were so arranged with reference to each other that they could be used on one strip of paper jointly or separately; that is, either or both could be used to make one message; and when both were used, the impression from the respective wheels formed different lines. The idea which the specification and the claim convey, is that the operator can use both wheels, and so a double-line message can be produced by their joint action, but there was no requirement that they must be used simultaneously. (3) While the Calahan instrument, before a unison device was added to it, had the capacity of simultaneous printing, such printing is not and was not supposed to be of practical value.

The defendants’, or the Field, instrument has two wheels, one a figure wheel, and the other a letter wheel, on separate shafts, both controlled by magnetism, and each moving independently. The wheels print by their united action, in two lines, upon one strip of paper moved up by a press-pad, and can print by the use of either wheel separately.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. 340, 23 Blatchf. 199, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-stock-telegraph-co-v-commercial-telegram-co-circtsdny-1885.