Jones v. Freed-Eisemann Radio Corp.

48 F.2d 300, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1144
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 7, 1929
DocketNo. 3674
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 300 (Jones v. Freed-Eisemann Radio Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York 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., 48 F.2d 300, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1144 (E.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is an action in equity for the alleged infringement of patent No. 1,658,804, issued to the plaintiff for Capacitive-Coupling Control System, dated February 14, 1928; and patent No. 1,658,805, issued to plaintiff for Capacitive-Coupling Control System, dated February 14, 1928.

The original application was filed December 15, 1922.

The alleged divisional application of patent No. 1,658,804 was filed September 21, 1926.

The alleged divisional application of patent No. 1,658,805 was filed March 15, 1927.

The said alleged divisional applications for the patents in suit were not filed as a •result of a requirement for division by the Patent Office, but were optional divisions.

The defendant, Freed-Eisemann Radio ■Corporation, is the manufacturer of FreedEisemann Neutrodyne radio receivers, and ■has been continuously since December 5, 1922, utilizing the Hazeltine Neutrodyne patents under which it has been licensed.

The instant suit is being defended by and .at the expense of the Hazeltine Corporation, the owner of said Hazeltine Neutrodyne patents.

The two Jones patents in suit relate to the neutralization of capacity-coupling, in whole or in part, of vacuum tubes employed in the circuits of a radio receiver.

The first of the patents in suit was not issued on the first alleged divisional application, but on the second, as the first alleged divisional application was filed December 13, 1923, and resulted in patent No. 1,641,438, the specification of which is substantially identical with the original Jones application, filed December 15, 1922.

The first patent in suit, No. 1,658,804, was not filed until September 21, 1926, about three years and nine months after the filing date of the parent application, and about three years and seven months after the FreedEisemann Neutrodyne appeared on the market; but during the interval between March 16, 1923, and September 21, 1926, plaintiff filed twenty-one patent applications, one of which, filed March 6, 1926, now patent No. •1,620,261, relates to an alternative to the method of the parent application, filed December 15,1922.

The second patent in suit, No. 1,658,805, was not filed -until March 15, 1927, about four years and three months after the filing date of the parent application, and about four years after the advent of. the FreedEisemann Neutrodyne on the market; but during the interval between September 21, 1926, and March 15,1927, plaintiff filed seven patent applications.

The structure of the transformer coils P, A, and S, and the coupling and circuit connections of Defendant’s Exhibit W, as originally built and operated as early as December 7,1922, is substantially identical with the circuit arrangements of the Freed-Eisemann alleged infringing receiver, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 8, and there was no change in the design of the sets after the Jones Meleo Supremo radio receivers came on the market.

Any suggestion which the plaintiff intended to convey that such a change was made was without any knowledge to support it, because if his testimony, with regard to his knowledge of the defendant’s receiver, be accepted as true, we must believe that although there was delivered to him, by the defendant, during July 1923, a Freed-Eisemann N R 5 Neutrodyne receiver' for the express purpose of inspection, and that he was familiar with various neutrodyne receivers on the market during the period 1923 to 1926, he never examined any of the coupling transformers [301]*301of such neutrodyne receivers until about April, 1928. Therefore, of course, he could not tell if any such change had been made.

All during this period the Hazeltine licensed manufacturers were making and selling neutrodynes, having arrangements which are described by the claims of the patents in suit, as now interpreted by plaintiff.

The claims in suit are of a different character and scope than those presented in the plaintiff’s original case of December 15, 1922, and the parent application did not suggest that Jones regarded the features now alleged to be covered by the claims in- suit of importance, or that he meant to claim such features, because it was not until the amendments of October 29, 1927, and December 29, 1927, that we find the plaintiff giving importance to couplings less than unity, substantially less than unity, separately and closely, equally, and that range of couplings that can be obtained with air cored transformers, although such features might have been described and claimed in the first divisional application of December 13,1923, now patent No. 1,641,438, and it was not until the trial that there appears to have been any contention raised as to the importance of the so-called reflected feed-back phenomenon.

The original application of Jones, filed December 15, 1922, was involved in an interference in the Patent Office with the “plate circuit neutralization” patent of Hazeltine, No. 1,533,858, owned by the Hazeltine Corporation.

The Patent Office tribunals unanimously awarded priority of this important invention to Hazeltine, and accorded to him the benefit of his filing date of December 28,1920.

Patent No. 1,533,858, to Hazeltine, was originally filed December 28, 1920, and issued on April 14,.1925, on a divisional application filed in response to a requirement of the Patent Office on December 28, 1923.

The parent patent No. 1,489,228 was issued on April 1, 1924, at which time the drawing and specification, which were identical with those of patent No. 1,533,858, became available to the public.

The plaintiff is not corroborated by Priess, the only person to whom it is contended that he disclosed the work he said he did in 1917; in fact, Priess testified that plaintiff made no such disclosure, and that as late as 1919, the usual form of neutralizing arrangements was not known to him, Priess.

The invention of plate circuit neutralization by Hazeltine was considered of sufficient importance by the Navy Department to keep a complete file with reference thereto, and yet not even one of the superior officers of Jones, the plaintiff, has appeared to testify that Jones made any report to him of work done by Jones along these lines in 1917, much less that Jones made any disclosure to him, and there is nothing found in any files of Jones’ work along these lines in 1917.

Freed, the president of the defendant, showed Jones, the plaintiff, a sketeh of Hazeltine’s plate circuit neutralization arrangement, as embodied in a receiver, on December 10, 1922 (Exhibit A).

The plaintiff says the sketeh (Exhibit A) is incomplete, but he also says that Freed told him, on December 10, 1922, that he (Freed) had seen a model apparatus embodying the Hazeltine circuit, that such apparatus did not operate satisfactorily at first, and that Freed, by moving a connection, succeeded in securing better results. There can, therefore, be no question that Freed, prior to December 10, 1922, had constructed a model apparatus embodying the Hazeltine circuit, which operated, and had shown a sketeh to the plaintiff before plaintiff filed his application for the parent patent.

This was five days prior to the plaintiff’s filing date of his parent application of December 15, 1922.

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48 F.2d 310 (E.D. New York, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
48 F.2d 300, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-freed-eisemann-radio-corp-nyed-1929.