Irving Air Chute Co. v. Russell Parachute Co.

47 F.2d 130, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 53, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3408
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 3, 1931
DocketNo. 4478
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 130 (Irving Air Chute Co. v. Russell Parachute Co.) 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
Irving Air Chute Co. v. Russell Parachute Co., 47 F.2d 130, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 53, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3408 (3d Cir. 1931).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

This ease concerns balloon parachutes. As their name indicates, they are in form collapsible umbrellas. They are spread by the air in their descent. So far as shape, texture, and the like, their use for descent and their form of construction have been unchanged for a long time. Parachutes, as we shall see later, are of two kinds, those which are attached by cord to a balloon or aircraft and whose spread is caused by such attaching cord being drawn taut and broken when the parachute is used for descent, and those which are not attached. This attached type has long been known and has been employed in exhibition descents, carefully planned, from stationary balloons or slow-moving aircraft. But when the swift-moving air craft came into the World War, the parachute was not used by them. For while that war rapidly and tremendously developed the airplane, it is a fact that no accompanying development of the use of the parachute was made by the combined air forces of the Allies. The aviator was furnished with no means of escape, and, if anything happened to his machine in the way of fire, engine failure, bombing, or shooting, he had no means of escape, but was forced to face the inevitable» drop to earth. The number of aviators thus killed or mutilated made a situation which called, not alone on individual inventors, but on governments, for betterment. But there was no answer to this S. O. S. call. So late as 1916 the Scientific American stated that there was no definite progress over the parachute models of 1850. Two years later, when an inquiry was made in Parliament to the British Air Ministry whether the government had taken up the question of parachute protection, the reply was: “Experiments are proceeding, but no parachute suitable for use from an airplane has been arrived at.” As we now know and appreciate the subsequent birth and de>-velopment of the life-saving parachute art, we can see clearly the reason why, even in the exigencies of the World War, no use could be made of the parachute on swiftly moving aircraft. In the first place, the parachute as then existing was attached by cord or rope to the aircraft. When the latter was disabled, it began falling to earth, and, if the aviator succeeded in starting with his parachute, he and it fell to earth at the same speed with the ear. Now it is clear that where car and enclosed parachute travel at the same speed, the cord by which the parachute is attached to the car neither lightens nor breaks, with the result that there is no parachute spread. Moreover, when it was attempted to use the parachute as then attached, there was a possibility of its shroud lines becoming entangled in the airplane and [131]*131thus rendering its instant use impossible. These momentous objections, pregnant with death to the aviator, are shown in the record. In the principal patent in suit, hereafter referred to, the specification, referring to these attached parachutes, properly says: “This type of parachute has a decided disadvantage, in that it depends on the aviator being able to jump and drop away from the airplane in order to extend the parachute and cause it to open. If the airplane is falling and the ■aviator away from it, he may then merely fall with the plane.” In other words, both plane and parachute dropping at the same speed, the attaching cord will not break, and consequently the parachute will not spread.

We here take occasion to say, as we shall hereafter see, that at the-conclusion of the war there had been no solution of this frightful menace to the lives of aviators. We are now referred to a patent granted by the French government to one Baeque in 1914 — a patent which found lodgment in the mind of the cburt below and from which, in part, it drew the conclusion that the life-saving device hereafter referred to, and which is the disclosure of the patent here in suit, could largely have been evolved from Baeque. But in spite of this inference of the learned judge, drawn years after, the fact remains that, notwithstanding the tragic calls of the Allies for a life-saving parachute, Baeque and all prior patentees, designers, and users, and, indeed, although this Baeque patent was granted by the French government and France was the field of work of the aviators, no use was made by that government of Baeqne’s device, nor indeed by any one else, until long after the present effective life-saving device was disclosed, and then twenty odd years after Bac-que’s patent was granted, it was posthumously exhumed from its deserved obscurity and nonuse and used by experts to befog, belittle, and discredit the life-saving device here involved. But the situation does not rest here alone.

After the United States entered the war and it was realized by our scientific authorities in France that efforts must be made to meet the emergency, that body cabled home that the matter should be taken up here, and that Smith, the present patentee, who was then in the air service of the United States, be set to work making a life saving parachute. Now while the idea of an unattached parachute — that is, one that had no rope or cord attaching it to the airchaft — was, of course, not new with Smith, and the possibilities of such an unattached one had been discussed and attempts made to construct one, the fact remains that no one had solved it, and the proofs show that no one had made a free jump, that is, one where the aviator jumped into space, with no cord attached to the aircraft, and trusted to the mechanism he carried to- insure his safety. Smith testified that the death of Roland Gargle, an aviator, which was caused by the fouling of his drop line, led him to devise an unattached pack. Ho says: “Being familiar with parachute packs, I conceived the idea of a pack that would not open when you left the plane; that you could drive a plane into an enemy plane and before you hit it, drop a distance of several hundred feet, or drop some distance before you released the parachute. Next to that, I had found that all that was required of a parachute was to release it in the air; that would open it. When you release the parachute, there is one thing that opens the parachute, that is the air that is blowing in it. The parachutes I knew, or the only ones I saw, I believe, in those days, were the attached type of packs, the cennect-ing rope attached to part of the pack and the other end of that rope attached to the airship you were dropping or jumping from. That was nominally known as the automatic type parachute, the person only had to jump and was not required to do anything else. But the limitations of that were that you had to jump or fall, and it was generally restricted as to ways yon could get away; there was generally only one way you could jump or fall, because if you jumped the wrong way around the strut or wire or something, • then you would have to fall the whole length of your parachute around that before you could get free from the chute.”

Smith’s developing work was done in connection with the United States Aeronautic group, which took up the matter in response to the order from France-. That body collected all known devices, some fifteen in number, and found nothing in them, individually or collectively, which solved the problem. These tests were of a most thorough character, one of the witnesses taking part in them testifying as follows: “My attention is called to Chapter 2 of the Manual, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 10, which is headed ‘History of development of parachutes’, and it starts on page 12.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 130, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 53, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irving-air-chute-co-v-russell-parachute-co-ca3-1931.