Jones v. Freed-Eisemann Radio Corp.

47 F.2d 174, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 294, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3421
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNos. 29, 30
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 174 (Jones v. Freed-Eisemann Radio Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Freed-Eisemann Radio Corp., 47 F.2d 174, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 294, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3421 (2d Cir. 1931).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

Appellant sues for infringement of patents No. 1,658,804, claims 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11, and No. 1,658,805,- claims 1 to 16, inclusive. The patents were issued February 14, 1928, and relate to the neutralization of capacity coupling, in whole or in part, of vacuum tubes employed in the circuits of a radio receiver. They are claimed to be optional divisions of an original application filed December .15, 1922. Divisional application for No. 1,658,804 was filed September 21, 1926; No. 1,658,805 was filed March 15, 1927. They were not filed as a requirement of the Patent Office, and therefore are regarded as optional divisions.

The first of the patents in suit was not issued for the first divisional application, but on the second, as the first application was filed December 13, 1923, and resulted in patent No. 1,641,438, the specification of which is substantially identical with the original application of December 15, 1922. Before the application for the first patent in suit, No. 1,658,804, which was about three years and nine months after filing the parent application, the appellee had its neutrodyne radio set on the market for about three years and seven months. The second application, resulting in No. 1,658,805, was filed about four years and three months after the filing of the parent application, and four years after the appearance of the appellee’s neu-trodyne set on the market.

The appellee manufactures and sells its neutrodyne radio receiver which is charged with infringement of the patents in suit. It has a license under the Hazeltine neutrodyne patent, No. 1,533,858 and the Hazeltine Corporation, owner of that patent, at its own expense, is defending this suit.

The Hazeltine patent, No. 1,533,858 is for plate circuit neutralization in a radio receiver. We held it valid in Hazeltine Corp. v. Wildermuth, 34 F.(2d) 635, 640, and said it was brought forth in December, 1922, and that, after that date, plate circuit neutralization was used in all neutrodyne sets which were made, and “it was the first time that squeals and whistles were eliminated.” The patents in suit were in interference with the Hazeltine patent in the Patent Office, and claims were allowed over Hazeltine for the degree of coupling obtained with the limitation to a coupling “substantially less than unity” and “less than unity” coupling.

On this appeal, appellant’s counsel states that “the broad issue of plate circuit neutralization is not involved in this suit; and the Hazeltine patents No. 1,489,228 .and 1,533,858 may be (and have been) here assumed or considered as prior art.” And appellant contends that the essence of the inventions in suit is teaching a new interrelation between three coils, marked P, A, and S, to secure neutralization particularly as applied to tuned radio frequency receivers. The alleged invention, illustrated in Fig. 1 of the drawings, shows a neutralized tuned radio receiver, and wherein the tuned grid circuit comprises a tuning condenser 15 with an inductance coil or inductor 14, which coil may be coupled for energy reception to an inductance coil of an antenna circuit and wherein the plate or output circuit is provided with an external or output impedance 18 which comprises the primary of an air core transformer (coil P), and which is coupled to the secondary 22 (the secondary coil S) of the said transformer, the said secondary receiving at resonance the amplified energy for further amplification if desired, resonance being obtained by the condenser 15a. For controllably reducing or entirely eliminating the effect of a feed-back charge carried from the plate to the grid due to normally unshieldable capacity between the plate 13 and the grid .12 of the tube, the inventor provides means for either controlling or entirely eliminating the feed-back charge. In the explanations he refers to the transformer designs of the coils P, A, and S. He says that one manner of accomplishing the result is to make the potential created equal in phase and amplitude and opposite in sign to the potential on the plate, and to make the capacity connected to the grid preferably equal to the measured capacity between the plate and the grid. To these ends, the inventor provides additional impedance 23 (the auxiliary A) which comprises a coil wound in the same direction as the output impedance coil (primary P), and which has a number of turns equal to the number of turns in the winding 18 (primary P); the said additional impedance being connected to the neutralizing condenser (25), which in turn is connected with the grid end of the grid or [176]*176input circuit of- the tube. This additional impedance (coil A), which is preferably closely coupled with the output impedance (coil P), is said'to-produce potential equal in phase and amplitude and opposite in sign to the potential on plate 13; these potentials being taken with reference to the filament potential. ■ .

The equal impedances -P- and A are not only shown as similarly or- equally coupled to the secondary S, but are shown as uncoupled from each other, and, - to overcome this unbalancing effect of a plate component of voltage in the plate coil P, he says he proposes “to minimize in a practical way any unbalance that results -from t]ie plate component of voltage in the plate circuit, the output impedance and the added impedance are closely coupled. * * * ” The maximum points of potential difference in the controlled circuit are the opposite points of coils P and A, and the coupling, therefore, was one between these coils P and A to the power source. The power source to which these coils are thus coupled is the secondary coil S.- ■ Appellant says, that he taught that, in addition to the two rules of separately and closely coupling the coils P-and A to S, and of preferably closely-coupling..-the coils P and A together, the coupling eóefficients PS and .AS should be equal. He claims to haVe accomplished the equation of .the coupling coefficients PS and AS by symmetrically arranging the coils P and A with respect to the coil S as clearly depicted in Figs. 1 and 2 of the drawings and by winding coil A in the same direction as coil P, and by imparting to the coil A the number of turns equal to the number of turns in coil P. The •result, he says, is that equalizing impedance A to coil P, both being symmetrically disposed with respect to and closely coupled to the coil S, creates a potential opposite to the potential on the plate 13 of the tube. Further, he claims that thus constructing a transformer design teaches it is sufficient if coils P and A are separately and closely coupled to the secondary S of the transformer; that the coils P-and A should preferably be closely coupled to.minimize any unbalance that results from the plate component of voltage in the. plate circuit, and that the coupling coefficients PS and AS should be equal.

Appellant has not shown invention over Hazeltine’s patent. In the Wildermuth Case we said:

“The first patent, No. 1,450,080, was for this unsymmetrieal - arrangement' of closely coupled neutralized ■ circuits generally, the maintenance of proper ratio of turns to capacity. The subject-matter of the second patent, No. 1,489,228, is the electric circuit arrangements for neutralizing grid plate capacity coupling of an audion characterized by a degree of close coupling substantially equal to unity. The subject-matter of the claims of the patent in suit [No..1,533,858] is plate circuit-neutralization.” 34 F.(2d) 635, 639.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 174, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 294, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-freed-eisemann-radio-corp-ca2-1931.