Mershon v. O'Neill

3 F. Supp. 26, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1469
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 22, 1932
DocketNo. 5405
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 F. Supp. 26 (Mershon v. O'Neill) 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
Mershon v. O'Neill, 3 F. Supp. 26, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1469 (E.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

The plaintiffs sue in equity for alleged infringement of United States Letters Patent No. 1,141,402, issued June 1, 1915 (application filed June 19, 1913), and No. 1,-784,674, issued December 9, 1930 (application filed July 14, 1923). For convenience, these will be referred to hereinafter as the first and second patents.

Both were issued to the plaintiff Mershon, who, in turn, licensed the corporate plaintiff’s predecessor to make, use and sell the inventions covered by the said patents.

The device involved is known as an electrolytic condenser, and, in the form presently involved, is used in the. so-called power pack of a radio reeeiying set in domestic use.

The office of the device is to remove the so-called hum incident to the employment of alternating current, which hum is loud enough to he incompatible with the kinds of noise which it is the purpose of the radio to reproduce.

The purpose is accomplished by passing the current into the condenser in the condition in which it emerges from the rectifier. The alternating current as it is received into the power pack is characterized by the two phases peculiar to such a current, which are due to its origin; in the rectifier, the polarity of the current is rendered unidirectional, but it is still a pulsating current, and these pulsations eause the hum.

The electrolytic condenser receives the rectified current, and so delivers it that the pulsations are flattened out, and the current may he visualized as almost a straight line of unidirectional constituency.

The device has been successful in the practical and commercial sense; otherwise this litigation would not have arisen.

The Electro Formation, Inc., is the successor to Amrad Corporation to which the Mershon licenses were granted; the latter company was financially embarrassed, and during the year 1926 it was manufacturing an electrolytic condenser on a very small scale, and its property and assets were taken over by the interests which now control .the Electro Formation, Inc., during the winter of 1926-27. The precise steps by which this result has been accomplished are of no importance, but the fact is that, beginning in 1927, such a condenser was manufactured and sold by the Amrad Corporation in substantial volume; that is to say: 77,000 in the year 1927; 422,000 in the year 1928; 741.000 in 1929; 651,000 in 1930, and over 1.700.000 in 1931.

During the second half of 1929, the defendant corporation, through its representative and present President, Mr. Robert C. [27]*27Sprague, interviewed the then active head of the Amrad Corporation, Mr. Hahn, on two or three occasions, with respect to a possible license to the defendant company, to enable it to manufacture the plaintiffs’ condenser.

During the latter part of the same period of time, a member of the laboratory staff of the then Amrad Corporation, Mr. Appleton, and Mr. Sprague had a conversation, following which Mr. Appleton entered the employ of the defendant.

Mr. Petrie, one of the Amrad salesmen, was hired by the defendant company during 1930.

Mr. Clark, described as a “sales engineer," left the Amrad Corporation around the 1st of October, 1929, and was employed by the defendant company.

Mr. Gasset, who is said to have related that he had been temporarily laid off by the Amrad Corporation, was hired by the defendant; the precise time is not stated, but he is said to have had charge, of the mechanical assembly of the different parts of the defendant’s device since entering its employ.

Mr. Conrad was in the employ of the Amrad Corporation, as foreman in electrolytic condenser production, and left because of failing health in the fall of 1928; about one year later, he entered the employ of the defendant company, and remained for eighteen months or so. His duty consisted in setting up equipment and general work on making samples of electrolytic condensers.

As to the first four of the above named, the evidence is in conflict as to whether the hiring was the cause of the breaking off of the negotiations for a license or not. Mr. Hahn, testifying for the plaintiff, said that it was; Mr. Sprague, testifying for the defendant, said that negotiations came to nothing because of delay on the part of Mr. Hahn in reaching a definite conclusion. It is clear, at least, that prior connection with the plaintiff was not regarded as a disqualification for later employment of these several persons by the defendant.

Samples of the defendant’s product were circulated among the trade-in January, 1930, and production began at their plant in North Adams, Mass., on or about April 1, 1930,' and since that time the competition between the two companies has been active and sustained.

The similarity of the devices is so marked that little or no argument was made on the -subject of infringement. ■ ■ , .

The defendant relies on two major propositions: (a) that neither the plaintiffs’ nor the defendant's device is an embodiment of-either, patent, and (b) that the patents in suit are invalid for lack of invention.

. The outward appearance of the two devices is strikingly similar. Plaintiffs’ exhibits 6, 7, 8 and 9 are the defendant’s product, and are copper cylinders, about 4% inches in height, having a diameter of about 1% inches, the bottom being enclosed in a brass cap having apertures at its base, and the top presenting the appearance of a black disk with a projecting member about Via of an inch in height, for connection to an electrical circuit.

Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 12 and defendant’s Exhibit A are the plaintiffs’ device, namely, a copper cylinder about 5%0 inches in height, having a diameter of 1% inches; the bottom consists of a copper cap having apertures at its base. The construction at the top presents a slightly different appearance from that of the defendant’s product, in that the connecting member projects about % of an inch. The plaintiffs’ device is labeled, and the defendant’s in evidence is not.

It will be convenient to examine the first contention, because manifestly, if the plaintiffs’ device does not embody the patents in suit, there can be no basis for relief.

The first patent, No. 1,141,402, has to do with certain improvements in electrolytic apparatus employing filmed electrodes. Claim 5, upon which the plaintiffs rely, reads as follows: “5. An electrolytic condenser comprising a containing vessel; aluminum electrodes therein, coated with heat-resistant electrolytic films; and an original electrolyte in the vessel, containing borax and a free acid.”

The patent was issued June 1, 1915, and a disclaimer was filed November 19, 1929, by the patentee, the licensee, the Amrad Corporation, acquiescing, thus: the patentee “therefore disclaims from the scope of said Letters Patent any acidulated electrolyte which is not acidulated with an inorganic acid such as boric or phosphoric acid.”

The evidence demonstrates that, at the time of the issuance of this patent, an electrolytic condenser for use in the power pack of the receiving set of a radio was not in demand; nor was such demand anticipated.

The requirement which the condenser was designed to meet had to do solely with other employment of alternating current.

The application of the condenser princi[28]*28pie to the radio receiving set was the direct result of the attachment thereof to the ordinary household source of alternating current.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F. Supp. 26, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mershon-v-oneill-nyed-1932.