Johns-Pratt Co. v. E. H. Freeman Electric Co.

201 F. 356, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1027
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedDecember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 201 F. 356 (Johns-Pratt Co. v. E. H. Freeman Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johns-Pratt Co. v. E. H. Freeman Electric Co., 201 F. 356, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1027 (D.N.J. 1912).

Opinion

CROSS, District Judge.

The complainant is the undisputed owner by assignment from one Joseph Sachs of letters patent No. 660,341, bearing date October 23, 1900, for a safety-fuse. This patent the complainant by its bill of complaint herein alleges the defendant has infringed. This allegation the defendant denies, and it also denies the validity of the complainant’s patent. Sachs, the patentee, in his application, speaking of the prior art and generally of the nature and character of his invention, says:

' “Safety-fuses have usually been heretofore inclosed in a tubular case, and surrounded with a filling of nonconducting material. These fuses have consisted of a wire which, when fused by an excess current, was maintained in place in a melted state by the surrounding filling material, and the fused metal still served to carry the current for a period until the same gradually became dispersed in the interstices of the filling and the circuit broken. The fuse-wires used in such fuses have been of lead or lead-tin alloy, and, since this metal has a low conductivity, a very large section of metal was used for the fuse-wires to carry the current, and this large section when fused was difficult to disperse in the filling material. This hanging of the fuse-wire in a melted state made such fuses inaccurate as to their carrying capacity. I have discovered that the nonarcing qualities or action of a fuse depends upon the disposition, character, and amount of the metal, and that for this purpose a fuse-strip having a relatively small quantity of metal will give the [357]*357best results. I have also discovered that the best results are obtained from the use of a metal which when melted or fused rapidly oxidizes even if the melting point of the metal is not comparatively low.
“My invention relates to a safety-fuse of metal made thin and fine and disposed through an appreciable area of the tube-section, and the same preferably .consists of a flat thin strip held between terminals having a better conductivity than the fuse itself, said strip being preferably of a rapidly oxidizing metal. A fuse of tbis character placed in a tubular case and surrounded with a nonconducting filling and fused by an excess current will not only rapidly oxidize, but become quickly dispersed in the interstices of the filling material. Where the surrounding material combines with the fused wire, the combination is more readily accomplished because of the greater surface of material exposed in the fuse-wire and in contact with the surrounding material. I have found that zinc or an alloy of zinc is best suited to my purpose, and that the thinner and finer the metal and the greater the spread thereof, the better. When the nonconducting filling material is of a’ character to combine with the fuse-strip when melted, the thin strip of increased melting point is an advantage. The thin fine strip of metal is distributed through a larger section of the inclosed filling, and thus on disruption more readily dispersed through the interstices of the filling than if the strip were of compact sectional area.”

Later, and speaking more particularly of the fuse-strip, he adds:

“The strip c is of a very thin flat metal, occupying considerable area across the case, and in the same there is a relatively small quantity of metal, and the metal is preferably one that rapidly oxidizes. This I prefer to be a strip of zinc or an alloy of zinc, the terminals d, connected therewith, being of greater size and better conductivity, and, of course, being so far distant from one another within the case that when the strip o is fused and disperses in the interstices of the filling said terminals are too far apart for the passage of any current or spark or for the existence of any arcing condition. If this thin strip is melted by an excess current instead of remaining in place in the filling, as would a wire of compact section, it is dispersed quickly in the interstices of the filling upon either side 'of the thin strip, so that the circuit is broken immediately.”

The patent has six claims, all of , which it is alleged have been infringed by the defendant. It will be unnecessary, however, to set forth more than the second of them, in order to give a sufficiently clear conception of them all. That claim is as follows:

“2. The combination in a safety-fuse with a tubular case and a nonconducting filling material, of end terminals within the case of relatively ample conductivity, and a fuse-strip of thin flat metal of extended area connected to and between the said terminals, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.”

The patent in suit was indirectly considered by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in Johns-Pratt Co. v. Sachs Co. et al., 175 Fed. 70, 99 C. C. A. 92, in which Sachs was a defendant, as was also a corporation organized by him, and in which he was found to have been a large stockholder and a moving spirit. The defendants therein were alleged to have infringed the Sachs patent, an allegation which they denied; but inasmuch as Sachs, the patentee, had assigned his patent for a valuable consideration to the complainant, he was held to be estopped from denying its validity, thereby rendering it unnecessary to adjudicate that point. Consequently whatever was said by the court in relation thereto was entirely obiter. Nevertheless its high standing and reputation necessarily give great weight. [358]*358to all of its utterances. It is not surprising, therefore, that the defendant’s counsel at the argument urged upon the attention of this court the following expression by Judge Lacombe, who delivered the opinion of the court in the case referred to, and who, after quoting from the specification of the patent and setting forth its various claims, added:

“Eliminating these preferential, it is manifest that the novelty which the patentee sought to secure consisted in making the fuse-strip of thin flat metal of extended area instead of a wire or other strip having a compact sectional area; the object being to increase the surface of the metal with which the filling is in contact, so as to insure its immediate dispersion, when fused, in the filling material. The difference between such a strip thus brought in contact over an extended surface and wires, and strips of compact cross-sections which were found in the earlier art, was emphasized in correspondence with the examiner, who allowed the claims after requiring the applicant to withdraw an alternative form in which the fuse-strip consisted of a series of slender wire-like strands, the members of which were parallel with one another forming a flat series. The examiner evidently considered that form not patentably different from the wires of the prior art, and pointed out that the filling could not with such a structure be brought in contact with the metal over an extended area.
“We do not find it necessary in this suit to seai’ch the prior art to see if it discloses the existence of a thin flat metal fuse-strip of extended area in contact over its surface with nonconducting filling, because, if such a structure were shown to be old, there would be no patentable novelty in the device described in the specifications and passed by the Patent Office, and the patent would be void for lack of invention.”

[1]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Spencer
47 F.2d 806 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1931)
Ladd v. W. & H. Walker, Inc.
7 F.2d 72 (Third Circuit, 1925)
Lemley v. Dobson-Evans Co.
243 F. 391 (Sixth Circuit, 1917)
Johns-Pratt Co. v. Economy Fuse & Mfg. Co.
216 F. 639 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1914)
Johns-Pratt Co. v. Snow
214 F. 110 (Second Circuit, 1914)
Johns-Pratt Co. v. Snow
212 F. 173 (W.D. New York, 1913)
E. H. Freeman Electric Co. v. Johns-Pratt Co.
204 F. 288 (Third Circuit, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 F. 356, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-pratt-co-v-e-h-freeman-electric-co-njd-1912.