Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co. v. Dean Electric Co.

168 F. 549, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5484
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio
DecidedAugust 11, 1908
DocketNo. 6,869
StatusPublished

This text of 168 F. 549 (Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co. v. Dean Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co. v. Dean Electric Co., 168 F. 549, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5484 (circtndoh 1908).

Opinion

TAYEER, District Judge.

This is a suit for the infringement of patent No. 723,212, issued'March 10, 1903, to the complainant, the Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Company, as assignee of William W. Dean. Infringement is claimed by the use of a device made in accordance with patent No. 818,897, granted April 24, 1906, to Ray H. Manson.

This patent refers to the method of controlling in the subscriber’s télephone circuit the energizing current, sometimes called “steady current,” which comes from the central station. -This current, if permitted to" pass unimpeded through the receiver, injures that delicate instrument. Under the old system of local batteries, this difficulty was avoided by having an independent battery at the subscriber’s station of much lower intensity or strength than the central station battery, this battery being located in a closed circuit, including the transmitter and the primary winding of an induction coil. The patent was intended to cover a device whereby a small part only of the steady current originating at the central station should be permitted to pass through the receiver.

When a person talks into a telephone transmitter, the vibrations of its diaphragm produce undulations or changes of strength in the current. These changing conditions in the strength of a current .furnish one of the most interesting phases or manifestations of electricity, and constitute an important element in scientifically considering this question, but it need not be further discussed in an opinion of this character. It is sufficient to say that, on account of the undulating or alternating character of what is called the “voice current,” different qualities as to conductivity attach to different materials and different arrangements and constructions of devices for conducting or interfering with the conduction of the electric current from those which arise where there is a steady current.

■ Now, since the unimpeded passage of the steady current, the energizing current from the central station, through the receiver, would require a' receiver very much larger and more expensive than such receivers as are in ordinary use, and, indeed, would be very much less desirable in every way than to continue the use of a local or independent circuit and battery at the subscriber’s station, resort is had to well-understood principles applicable to the different, degrees of opposition furnished to steady currents and to voice or undulating currents, whereby the steady or stronger current is diverted from the receiver, and only the lighter or voice currents permitted to pass through it. The principles just referred to are these: That voice or undulating currents are choked or checked by what are called “impedance coils,” and steady currents pass through impedance coils freely. On the other hand, what are known as “condensers” present almost complete resistance to steady currents, while at the same [551]*551time offering apparently'slight resistance to the flow of alternating or voice currents.

Now, it becomes apparent that if the energizing or steady current is permitted to pass freely through the circuit, except the receiver, and the voice current freely passes through the receiver, a situation arises where the receiver is unaffected by the strong or steady current, and the end sought for is attained. .It was this which the patent in suit undertook to accomplish; and it was the principles just announced which the inventor undertook to apply and did apply to accomplish lhat result.

The following quotations from the patent will show the inventor’s own idea of the scope and character of his invention. On page 1, from line 14 to line 65, the object and character of the invention are stated in general terms, as follows:

“In telephone systems of the common-battery or central-energy type, wherein current is supplied from the central station to the microphone at the substation, it has been the common practice to include the telephone receiver in series with the microphone, so that the energizing current which traverses the microphone also passes through the coils of the telephone receiver. This is objectionable, for various reasons. It frequently happens that the polarity of the source of energy at the central station is reversed often by the reversal of the line-wires by a lineman, and the energizing current is thus sent through the coil of the receiver in such a direction as to demagnetize the permanent magnet of the receiver, thereby destroying the efficiency and effective operation of the receiver. Moreover, since the coils of the receiver must carry the energizing current, the coils must be made of wire larger in cross-section than would need to be employed were the coils traversed only by the talking currents. Due to the employment of the larger wire, the coils cannot be as efficiently disposed upon the magnet-cores as would otherwise bo possible, and, again, the passage of the energizing current through the coils subjects the diaphragm to a constant pull or tension. To counteract this constant pull or tension, the diaphragm must be made of increased rigidity or inflexibility, and a considerable air space must be left between the diaphragm and the ends of the magnet-poles, thereby decreasing the efficiency of the receiver.
“It is the object of the present invention to remove the receiver entirely from the influence of the energizing current traversing the microphone, whereby the several objections above enumerated are obviated.
“In accordance with the present invention, the receiver is included in a path which is opaque to the passage of the energizing current, which is usually continuous, while a parallel path is provided around the receiver, which is opaque, to the passage of the talking currents, while permitting the energizing current to pass freely therethrough. In practice, I usually include a condenser in the path containing the receiver, and an impedance or choking coil in the path which is parallel thereto.”

On page 2, lines 82 to 97, the term “opaque,” as used in the patent, is distinguished and specifically defined as follows:

“By the term ‘opaque,’ as employed herein in defining a circuit in its relation to the energizing current, I contemplate a circuit containing a condenser or equivalent device which prevents the passage through the circuit of an appreciable or substantial amount of current — that is, a sufficient amount to affect the operation of the system to an objectionable degree — and by the term ‘opaque,’ when referring to the talking currents, i contemplate that characteristic of the circuit which will prevent the passage of the talking currents therethrough in sufficient amount to materially affect the transmission of the talking currents through the path containing the telephone receiver.”

[552]*552In some of the claims the word “opaque” is used in describing1 the two parallel paths, as in claim 14, which is in these words:

“(14) A telephone substation circuit and apparatus comprising a main circuit, said circuit having two parallel paths, one path opaque to voice currents but permitting the flow of steady currents, and the other opaque to steady currents but permitting the flow of voice currents, a receiver in the latter path responsive to the voice currents thereover, a transmitter in the main circuit outside of said parallel paths, and a switch-hook automatically controlling the circuit through the said paths in the use of the apparatus, substantially as described.”

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Bluebook (online)
168 F. 549, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellogg-switchboard-supply-co-v-dean-electric-co-circtndoh-1908.