Hazeltine Corporation v. Radio Corporation of America

52 F.2d 504, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1659
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 504 (Hazeltine Corporation v. Radio Corporation of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hazeltine Corporation v. Radio Corporation of America, 52 F.2d 504, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1659 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

I hold that claims Nos. 1, 2, 5, 9, 11, 12, 14, and 16 of United States patent No. 1,- *505 533,858, the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent, are valid and have been infringed by-the defendant.

I hold that claims Nos. 1, 2, 3, 14, 15, 17, 18, and 21 of United States patent No. 1,-648,808, the Conductance Ratio patent, are invalid for want of invention.

As each party has prevailed on one of the patents in suit, costs will not be granted to either party.

I. This is a suit under the patent law; consequently the jurisdiction of this court is obvious. There are not any questions involved as to venue or as to ownership of the patents by the plaintiff.

The question of the validity of the claims, here involved, of both patents, and of the infringement thereof, if valid, is raised by the defendant, and has been fully dealt with on the trial, on the argument, in the admirable briefs and also in the proposed findings of fact which have been filed herein by counsel.

II. Because of the novelty to me of the subject-matter of the two patents on which this suit is based, the questions involved have seemed to me to be of very considerable difficulty, except in so far as I have been able to turn from an attempt to get some understanding of the laws of electricity, to the decisions of the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit in cognate cases covering the same claims of the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent as are here involved. But, with the thoroughness and patience which are proverbial characteristics of the leaders of the Patent Bar, all counsel for both parties have done everything possible to malee my task as easy as it might be in this my first trial of a patent suit involving issues of the validity and infringement of claims, and I should be lacking in my manners if I did not, as I hereby do, express to them my appreciation and gratitude.

III. United States patent No. 1,533,858, the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent:

A. The validity of the claims, here involved, of the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent, United States patent No. 1,533,858, were sustained by a divided court in the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit. Hazeltine Corporation v. Wildermuth, 34 F.(2d) 635, decided July 1, 1929, affirming an unreported decision of Judge Moseowitz.

After that decision, Wildermuth, the unsuccessful defendant-appellant, made application to the Circuit Court of Appeals for leave to reopen the ease on the ground that he had discovered an amplifier made by the United States Signal Corps in 1919, known as B C-fffi'-A, which, it was claimed, showed plate circuit neutralization, and was, consequently, an anticipation of Hazeltine’s patent.

On November 4, 1929-, the Court of Appeals handed down an opinion holding that it would not reopen a patent ease on the ground of newly discovered evidence, but would allow to he inserted in its mandate a provision giving permission to the District Court of the Eastern District of New York, whence the appeal had come, to entertain an application for a rehearing of the case on that ground. Hazeltine Corporation v. Wildermuth, 35 F.(2d) 733.

Before this application was decided, the instant suit was tried before me, and the same B C-59-A amplifier, as was referred to in this application for rehearing, was offered in evidence before me as an anticipation of Ilazoltine’s Plate Circuit Neutralization patent, and marked herein Defendant’s Exhibit B.

I made up my mind at the time of the trial that the proof offered about this exhibit was not sufficient satisfactorily to maintain the burden laid on the defendant of showing its identity as a B C-59-A amplifier built in 1919, its history since then, and, if I may so phrase it, the integrity of its condition since it was built, and, indeed, whether, if all those facts were established, it actually had any plate circuit neutralization unless by accident and unknown to its makers.

As this Exhibit B was the only new evidence on which to challenge the validity of the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent already established by the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the Wildermuth Caso, I felt, at the end of the trial, that the only question really before me on the first patent was the question of infringement.

Since the decisions of February 2, 1931, of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of Hazeltine Corp. v. National Carbon Co., Inc., 47 F.(2d) 573, again affirming Judge Moseowitz in upholding the validity of Hazeltine’s Plate Neutralization patent in a ease where he had the B C-59-A amplifier before him and repudiated it, and also affirming him, without opinion, in his refusal of a rehearing (also based on the B C-59-A amplifier) in the remanded Wildermuth Case, Hazeltine Corporation v. Wildermuth (C. C. A.) 46 F.(2d) 1015,1 feel that the mueh liti *506 gated question of the validity of the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent is settled at least for this circuit, and that the B 0-59^ set may properly be banished from consideration here.

I gather, furthermore, from the comments made by counsel for the defendant on the plaintiff’s proposed fin dings of fact in connection with the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent, that defendant’s counsel now, in invitum, concedes its validity.

In any event, I hold that B C-59-A amplifier is not established as'an anticipation of the claims of plaintiff’s Plate Circuit Neutralization patent here in suit, and, with the failure of this only bit of evidence — different from what the Circuit Court of Appeals had before it in the Wildermuth Case —I must necessarily hold that the claims of the Plate Circuit Neutralization patent here asserted axe valid, and I do so hold. Cf. Judge Mayer’s remarks in General Electric Co. v. P. R. Mallory & Co. (D. C.) 286 F. 175, 178, 180, and Id. (D. C.) 2,94 F. 562, 563, affirmed (C. C. A. 2) 298 F. 579.

B. When I take up the question of infringement of the plaintiff’s Plate Circuit Neutralization patent by the defendant’s Radiolas models 16 and 17, I am met at the threshold of my investigation .of the facts by the question of the scope of the claims' here involved, as defined by the Circuit Court of Appeals in Hazeltine Corporation v. Wildermuth, 34 F.(2d) 635, for in that ease the court had the same claims before it as I have here.

In the Wildermuth Case, Judge Manton, writing for the majority of the Court of Appeals, said, 34 F.(2d) at page 638 (italics mine): “The claims relied upon are in no way limited by close coupling. It is contended that the only -distinction between Hazel-tine and Rice is the closeness of coupling; that Hazeltine’s patent cannot be expanded by ignoring the express limitations of close coupling, which it is said is the essential feature of the Hazeltine method. In narrowing his claims in distinguishing his invention from Rice, who had a ‘grid circuit neutralization,’ Hazeltine <Md consent to close coupling in so far as the grid circuit neutralization claims were concerned, but broadly he secured a patent for plate circuit, neutralization over and above Rice, who is the nearest in the prior art.”

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52 F.2d 504, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazeltine-corporation-v-radio-corporation-of-america-nysd-1931.