Luellen v. Baldwin Locomotive Works

11 F.2d 390, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 997
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 1926
DocketNo. 2771
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 F.2d 390 (Luellen v. Baldwin Locomotive Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luellen v. Baldwin Locomotive Works, 11 F.2d 390, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 997 (E.D. Pa. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of letters patent No. 1,244,431, granted October 23, 1917, for a system of mobile armament, upon application filed November 23,1915, by C. F. Dawson and L. W. Luellen. Before the issuance of the patent, Dawson executed an assignment of all his rights in the patent to Luellen. The bill was filed June 21, 1923, and after answer was filed, on October 10, 1923, Luellen executed an assignment of all his right, title, and interest in and to the letters patent, together with all rights of actionj claims, and demands for past infringement, to Luellen Railway Artillery, Incorporated.Thereupon, on November 27, 1923, the Luellen Railway Artillery, Incorporated, with leave of court, filed a bill in the nature of a supplemental bill, setting out the issuing of the patent, the acts of infringement complained of, and the assignment from Luellen, to which, the defendant filed its answer January 4, 1924.

The purpose of the invention, as set forth in the specification, may be briefly stated to be a combination providing a means by which heavy armament, consisting of guns of long range and large caliber, may be mobilized by mounting them upon ears adapted for transportation on railroads, and by providing, at any desired point or points upon the railroads to be used for the purpose, gun emplacements constructed of sufficient strength at and alongside of the roadbeds and tracks, to anchor the gun mount upon such prearranged emplacements, so that the gun may be fired from such emplacements, so that the shoek and force of recoil in firing will be communicated to the earth through the fixed emplacement, without strain upon the trucks or wheels of the transporting car.

A further purpose of the patent, in order to provide that the highest degree of mobility of the mounted gun may be retained at all times, is thus expressed in the specification: “With our invention it will be seen that guns of the heaviest caliber may be transported from place to place, and may be mounted in firing position in such a way that they are adequately supported, and the shocks of recoil are fully taken care of, and that, at the same time, this may be done without removing the guns or gun mounts from the running gear,' or displacing the same from the tracks or roadways. In this way the highest degree of mobility^ is retained at all times, and the guns, while firmly supported during firing, may be almost instantly shifted from one location to another as conditions may require. Thus no delay is incurred in getting the guns in condition to fire, and at the same time, in case of the necessity for retreat, the guns can be quickly withdrawn to positions of safety. This is a very important consideration, as it permits the artillery to he used effectually up to the last possible moment, without danger of its loss.”

In order that this high degree of mobil[391]*391ity may. be retained, the specification and drawings of the patent clearly show that the conception in the minds of the inventors was that the ear, with, the gun mount and gun mounted thereon, should remain intact, without disengagement from the frame or body of the car of its trucks or wheels, and that the running gear of the car should be left without displacement from the railway tracks. The gun is mounted, in the drawings and specification, upon a turntable supported by a platform in the shape of a cradle, upon the central and depressed portion of which the gun rests upon its turntable, and the extensions of the cradle-shaped platforms on the higher elevation are supported, at either end, upon the trucks. A pair of side beams, forming part of this platform construction, “situated in parallel relation at the sides of the carriage, are supported by the upper ends of knuckle joints disposed at opposite ends of the vehicle; the lower arms of the knuckle joints being supported by pivotal'means on the trucks.” The purpose of the knuckle joints is, through their operation, when bent at the joint, to lower the platform carrying the gun, so that the depressed part of the side beams of the platform will come into engagement with and rest upon I-beams embedded in the concrete of the previously constructed emplacement, while the elevated extensions of the platform continue to rest at each end upon the trucks, and the running gear upon the railroad track.

As stated in the plaintiff’s brief, the invention involves the combination of two essential elements:

“(I) Supporting means or foundations adapted to be embedded in the earth under or at the sides of the track at the firing point; and (2) a car carrying heavy ordnance, and adapted to co-operate with the supporting means while still in transportation position over the track, in such a way that the ear is anchored in fixed position and the shocks incident to firing are transmitted to the earth through the supporting means, and not through the car running gear.

“Thus the invention provides a gun ear that is freely movable from point to point over ordinary railroads, but which, by easy manipulation and without the necessity of removing the gun from the car, or of removing either from position over the track, may be anchored in fixed and rigid relation to supporting means or foundations embedded in the ground, so that in such position the gun is as solidly emplaced as if it were in a permanent fixed fortification. When the gun. car of this invention is secured to the foundation, its weight is entirely removed from the rails and from the running gear. It retains its transportation position with respect to the rails and running gear, so that it may readily resume its mobility, but it is otherwise independent of them. No part or component of the firing shocks is transmitted through the running gear to the earth. On the other hand, when the weight of the gun car has been returned to the running gear and tracks, and the supports between the ear and the foundation removed, the car is freely mobile as a railroad car, and is independent of the foundation. It may then be moved to a new firing position or transported wherever desired.”

The emplacement shown in the drawings and described in the specification is constructed by filling a hollow in the roadbed beneath the track with concrete, in which are embedded the ties for the rails, and also embedded therein in lateral position are I-beams, outside of and parallel with the rails, the upper channels being vacant, and free' to receive the rectangular framework of the mobile carriage when the latter is lowered into supporting position, the sides of the carriage being provided with a series of laterally extending bolt brackets, with which swiveled belts, pivoted to an anchorage secured alongside of the outer side of the I-beams, are arranged to be swung upwardly into position within the slots of the bolt brackets. The swiveled bolts are provided with nuts, and, when they are engaged with the brackets and the nuts tightened, the platform, with the gun mounted thereon, is anchored in position.

No novelty is claimed in any of the constituent elements of the combination, nor in any of the various parts of the mechanism of its construction.’ With this brief outline of the system of mobile armament, as described in the specification and shown in the drawings of the patent in suit, we will state the acts of the defendant which, it is claimed, constitute infringement.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F.2d 390, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luellen-v-baldwin-locomotive-works-paed-1926.