Kintner v. Atlantic Communication Co.

240 F. 716, 153 C.C.A. 514, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2427
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 20, 1917
DocketNo. 76
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 240 F. 716 (Kintner v. Atlantic Communication Co.) 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
Kintner v. Atlantic Communication Co., 240 F. 716, 153 C.C.A. 514, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2427 (2d Cir. 1917).

Opinion

HOUGH, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). This court is not required to give, and the parties may be spared, any description or history of the art of radio communication, as a preface to the consideration of this appeal. The case at bar does not raise for decision questions affecting the fundamentals of that art; and in so far as it does attack defendant’s right to use a certain method of producing ether waves, the historical relation of the method in question to the art in general, and many details of commercial practice said to prove or disprove infringement, are sufficiently treated in the opinion of Judge Mayer. In that careful and illuminating review of a record unusually extended, the efforts of counsel have pointed out no omissions, however divergent their arguments as to the force or probative value of the facts there summarized.

[1] In expressing agreement with the result, below we shall confine ourselves to (1) a consideration of the scope and meaning of the patent in suit, (a) from its own language and office history, (b) from the circumstances surrounding the efforts or experiments said to have given it birth; and (2) a comparison of the statement or theory of invention now insisted upon, with (a) that urged in the Third circuit and our own views derived from the above described sources, and (b) the proven acts of others, antedating the patentee’s invention, whether such acts consisted in the practical use of radio appliances or prior patents or publications.

[2] 1. (a) The specification, drawings, and claims of the patent, considered alone, offer no difficulties to the investigator, and the patentee is conclusively presumed to have known what he invented or discovered, better than did any one else, at the time he applied for a patent. This is true, even though subsequent students may perceive, through the imperfect or ignorant language of the applicant, that he disclosed methods, means, or processes having capabilities surpassing the inventor’s dreams at the time attempt was made to put achievements into words.

Fessenden describes and pictures an arrangement of radio appliances not unfamiliar at date of application, and for which he claims no patentable novelty; he then states as the problem successfully attacked by him the “annulment” or “prevention of atmospheric and other disturbances,” which in the “tropics” and “even in the more northern climates” cause “great difficulty * * * in wireless signaling.”

[718]*718This means that he had overcome “static,” and is plain enough, though inaccurate; for no one has prevented, or as yet can prevent, the electrical phenomena accompanying, e. g., a thunderstorm, in sultry weather. The conditions are inherent in nature; what Mr. Fessenden desired was to minimize or overcome the observed effects of such disturbances upon radio communication.

To accomplish his purpose he suggests as a voltage source an “alternating current dynamo” giving its voltage “at a frequency of 500 periods per second,” and both justifies the suggestion, and explains his method, by disclosing that while “experimenting with a high frequency alternator” he had noted that, when “the trains [of waves] succeeded each other at a frequency above the normal frequencies used for alternating current work, the signals became mote distibct in the presence of atmospheric disturbances”; and especially had he observed that signals given with a spark frequency of 250 per second were useless under conditions that permitted the operator to “easily read” them “when the spark frequency was raised to 900.”

It being understood that “reading signals” presupposes the production of sounds, depending for their nature and existence upon a chain of natural phenomena starting with the generation of ether waves by the sparks resulting from condenser discharges, the statement quoted' from the specification plainly means that, the more sparks per second were produced, the more easily the resulting sounds were heard.

To explain this ease, it is further taken as understood that “the low1 er noises” are made by “atmospheric disturbances,” while “higher notes” resulted from “higher, frequencies,” which means that high frequency in sparks, when translated or transmuted into sound waves, gave a higher pitch than low frequency similarly translated, _ for the equally understood reason that rapid oscillations of ether became (so to speak) correspondingly rapid vibrations of the atmosphere, and the more rapid such vibration the higher the note, within the limitations of the auditory nerves of man.

The patentee then assigns, as a reason for the asserted ease in hearing the sounds which represented sparks with a frequency of 900, the “physiological phenomenon” that a hearer could “concentrate” his “attention” on higher notes, so that the lower noises of static “ceased to-affect consciousness.” This is called a “novel physiological effect, discovered by the applicant”; but, however dressed out in long words, it is no more than an observation in acoustics familiar to any one who has heard the whistle of a fire engine dominating and piercing through the rumble of a city and the roar of a crowded street.

This “freedom from disturbance” the patentee calls “selectivity,” and states that his “physiological method of selectivity” renders tuning, either electrical or mechanical, “not always advantageous” and he expressly excludes it from his “present invention”; that is, he uses for hearing or receiving purposes an ordinary telephone receiver.

Upon these quite simple disclosures, Of which the inaccuracies or overstatements above noted would not affect the substantial facts, are based the two claims in suit, which may fairly be compressed into the following statement of invention, viz.: A method of overcoming or [719]*719dominating static consisting of signal production by ether waves of-definite frequency, having á definite group frequency1 of not less than 250 per second, and preferably approximately 1,000 per second, and then reading said signals with or by an ordinary telephone receiver. The file wrapper shows that the original application nowhere used the word “definite,” expressed a preference for a receiver tuned both electrically and mechanically, and asked to cover by claim “the production of signals by groups of impulses having a group frequency higher than commercially used alternating current frequencies,” which means (as explained by the specification) that Mr. Fessenden thought himself the first to “get through” static by means of frequencies rising to about 900 per second, or at any rate exceeding 250.

The application stood substantially thus until March 13, 1909, when, in order to “bring out more clearly the distinction between applicant’s invention and the method” of the references cited by the examiner, the specification and claims took their final form, the patentee arguing that the receivers of the references accomplished “selectivity by rendering the receiver responsive to only one definite group frequency” (that is, they were tuned, at least partially, as Fessenden preferred to have his tuned when he filed the application); but, as changed by the amendment of 1909, the patentee declared that he attained “selectivity by utilizing the physiological discovery referred to in the specification.”

[3]

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Kintner v. Atlantic Communication Co.
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Bluebook (online)
240 F. 716, 153 C.C.A. 514, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kintner-v-atlantic-communication-co-ca2-1917.