Hespe v. Corning Glass Works, Inc.

37 F.2d 587, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1785
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 37 F.2d 587 (Hespe v. Corning Glass Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hespe v. Corning Glass Works, Inc., 37 F.2d 587, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1785 (W.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

• HAZEL, District Judge.

The two patents in suit were granted November 17, 1925, No. 1,561,925 (app. filed January 10, 1922), and No. 1,561,926 (app. filed January 6, 1925), respectively, both relating to thermometer tubing as an article of manufacture. The defendant Taylor Companies deals in thermometers of the type alleged to infringe plaintiff’s two patents, while the Coming Glass Works, Inc., is the manufacturer thereof. In the specification of the first patent, the patentee substantially declares that in the use of thermometers to indicate temperature, it has ever been difficult to accurately and rapidly determine the results of their varied uses in industries and in clinics; and, in prior art thermometers, it was always troublesome to rightly discover at a glance at the lens the precise location of the upper end of the mercury column. Close scrutiny and examination of the lens was necessary before the resultant indications could be ascertained, owing to the brilliancy of the glass tubes and the luster of the mereury surface contained therein, producing light reflection and making it difficult to read the mereury in its channel. Moreover, it was not easy to discern the mereury column, since its diameter was extremely small in comparison with the oval or rounded contour portions of the glass tube. To eliminate these hindrances, the patentee conceived the idea of vividly coloring the tubular space or perforation wherein the mercury contracts and expands. He designed to utilize the entire length of the bore in the tube by molding a colored strip of glass into .the wall, as shown in Figs. 14 — 3 to 6 of the patent drawings. The colored part, red, pink, or yellow, contrasted with the appeár.ance of the magnified mercury and practically ■became a part of the back wall of the tube’s 'bore, separating it from an intervening light shield (Fig. 14), without any portion appearing at either side of the mercury column. By ¡his preferred adaptation, the colored part is blotted out by the rise of the mereury and re^ appears upon its fall. Plaintiff claims, and the evidence supports the claim, that by his invention he conceived a patentable departure from prior art patents wherein the mercury rises in a field of colored glass, or where the colored part is wider than the width of the mereury; and that by his improvement, the top and length of the mercury column is quickly discovered for reading. •'

The defenses, as to both patents, are invalidity, limitation of claims, prior use of the second patent, and noninfringement.

The proofs show that thermometers with a white background or stem for industrial and clinical uses were very old. It was also old to place in the glass back-tubing of a thermometer, a light shield spaced between the walls of the perforation or bore and the outer part of the tube or stem above the bulb. Indeed, capillary thermometers of this common type had been produced and sold in large quantities by defendant Taylor Instrument Companies long before the inventions in suit. Reference to the prior art discloses that the British Hicks & Salt patent, No. 4212, of 1888, described a clinical thermometer with a colored layer of ruby or other colored glass applied to an opaque, enameled, white shield positioned back of the wall-of the tubing and slightly away from the bore to make the ruby brighter and more distinct. The purpose of the inventors was similar to Hespe’s, namely, to construct the thermometer in such a way as to facilitate readily reading the mereury on its appearance above the colored glass. In structures of this ruby type, however, the mereury rises entirely in the red or colored field without any change of color in the bore; and, as the front of the lens is visualized, the colored glass extends from one side to the other — the very thing the patentee regarded as an objection and sought to overcome by his invention. The bore of the mercury path, as it rises in these structures, is not of different color from the major part of the thermometer. In fact, none of the devices wherein the mercury rises in an expanse of red or contrasting color on the face of the instrument, or in which the contrasting tinge is wider than the path of the mereury are anticipatory, or based upon the principle of the Hespe patents in suit. Nor is the Gauge glass (Exhibit 16-M), covered by the Clark British patent No. 4960, describing a red stripe beyond the bore on an opaque background, of importance, since, in such a device, the stripe of red is widened by the entry of water in the tube. [589]*589Such arrangement would not be adaptable in a mercury thermometer, though its use is suggested;' but the patent does not describe any method by which such a result may be obtained. Neither the Clark patent nor the Guilbert Martin patent for a like device is based on the principle of the patents in suit, and therefore is not anticipatory or of sufficient importance to warrant a limitation of the claims. The Jena type of clinical thermometer shows a color strip back of the bore, but, like the ruby type already mentioned, is wider than the bore, with the result that the mercury functions in a field of color.

Reliance is placed on the prior Erankenburg patent, No. 744,325, granted November 17,1903, which is put forth as a complete disclosure of plaintiff’s second patent, though it was also cited against the first patent in suit. Erankenburg’s object was to facilitate accurate reading of thermometers, more particularly fever thermometers. To accomplish his purpose he introduced parallel streaks of different color in the glass tube, and arranged a red stripe on the inner side of an opaque layer B at a distance apart corresponding, he says, approximately to the width of the magnified mercury thread and leaving uncovered a central band of the opaque layer. The model in evidence (Defendant’s Exhibit H) is claimed to follow the disclosure of the patents. It is apparent that Frankenburg by the introduction of colored streaks on a white background, or a yellow streak on a red background, desired to create a contrast to the visual color of the mercury in the column, so that its top end might be speedily determined. I am not convinced of the complete similarity of construction and appearance of plaintiff’s and Erankenburg’s thermometers. The conception of the patentee was to avoid features of construction, shown by Erankenburg, which deterred or tended to deter easy reading. So far as the reeord shows, Erankenburg’s patent, though granted fully 25 years before the involved patents, failed to attract any attention after its grant. It evidently did not successfully accomplish the intended purpose. It did not result in facilitating the reading of the thermometer more readily or comfortably. That the red or other colored band extended to the sides of the bore is readily discerned upon scanning Eig. 2 of the drawing. It is true that, as the mercury rises, its upper part shows a colored streak, but the colored part was not confined to the bore; the mercury, in rising and falling, having, as already stated, color on both longitudinal sides of the column. Defendant’s Exhibit H discloses a c'omparatively small portion of red lengthwise of the mercury, while the drawings indicate a wider band which persuasively indicates that Erankenburg’s error consisted of having a width of red baek of the bore corresponding to the width of the bore, resulting in a fairly conspicuous field of red which impaired rapid reading. The exhibit represents an elliptical bore instead of a round bore, as shown in the patent, which, it is thought, allowed a narrower strip than the width of the bore, and did not produce the effect of the Hespe patents.

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 587, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 230, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hespe-v-corning-glass-works-inc-nywd-1929.