Mershon v. Sprague Specialties Co.

14 F. Supp. 361, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1313
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 2, 1936
DocketNo. 3608
StatusPublished

This text of 14 F. Supp. 361 (Mershon v. Sprague Specialties Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mershon v. Sprague Specialties Co., 14 F. Supp. 361, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1313 (D. Mass. 1936).

Opinion

McLELLAN, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of two patents to Ralph D. Mershon, No. 1,141,-402 and No. 1,784,674. The first of these, a patent for improvements in electrolytic apparatus employing filmed electrodes, was issued on June 1, 1915, on an application filed on June 19, 1913. The second, a patent for film-formation and operation of electrolytic condensers and other apparatus, was issued on December 9, 1930, on an application filed on July 14, 1923. The first patent expired during the pendency of this suit, and as to it the plaintiffs seek only an accounting; as to the second patent they seek both an injunction and an accounting. The two plaintiffs are respectively the patentee and his licensee under the patents. The defenses are invalidity and noninfringement.

Statements of fact in this opinion are intended as findings of fact and statements of legal conclusions as rulings of law, under the equity rules.

So far as the present litigation is concerned, the two patents may be considered as patents for electrolytic condensers. The first patent seems to have had no commercial success until the advent of the modern radio receiving set which requires for its operation the conversion of the alternating current of an ordinary electric light circuit into direct current. In this conversion the condenser performs an important although secondary part. As happily put by Judge Byers in his consideration of the two patents in suit, it removes the hum which is “incompatible with the kinds of noise which it is the purpose of the radio to reproduce.” For this use the-devices manufactured under the two patents in suit have been commercially successful, as they are compact, taking up little of the limited space in the radio set* and withstand relatively high temperatures* which gives them a long life of efficient operation.

[362]*362A condenser is among the oldest of electrical devices. In the familiar form of the Leyden jar, it was used by Benjamin Franklin in his famous experiment with the kite.

As might be expected from its early origin, a condenser is a simple device. It consists essentially of two conductors with an intervening nonconductor. Two sheets of metal, separated by a sheet of glass, when connected to a source of current, make a condenser. The conductor which first receives the current condenses or accumulates the electricity. The two conductors are known as electrodes, and the nonconductor between them as the dielectric. To distinguish the two electrodes, the one which first receives the current and is positively charged is called the anode, and the second electrode, negatively charged, through which the current leaves the device, is called the cathode. The efficiency of the condenser varies inversely with the thickness of the dielectric. In the illustration of the sheets of metal and the pane of glass, if the glass is made twice as thick, the capacity of the condenser is half as great. The film on the electrode, which serves as a dielectric in the condensers in suit, is so thin as to be incapable of measurement except by very delicate instruments. Consequently it is exceedingly efficient in giving capacity to the condenser.

Electrolytic condensers are a development from the early forms, but are also old in the art. In the type involved here, the anode is of aluminum, the film on the anode is the dielectric, and the cathode is of unfilmed metal. Both electrodes are immersed in a chemical solution, called the electrolyte, which conveys current from the anode and is in effect a part of the cathode.

The First Patent in Suit.

In the first patent, only claim 5 is in issue. This is 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.”

This claim is to be read in connection with the following excerpt from the specification :

“I have discovered that while electrodes having the heat-resistant films described above can be advantageously used in any electrolyte, in an electrolytic condenser, rectifier, lightning arrester or other apparatus, -they do not evidence to the fullest extent their remarkable property of withstanding high temperature unless they are used (1) in the identical solution, originally acidulated or unacidulated, in which the films were formed or subjected to the heat-treatment; or (2) in some other, but acidulated, electrolyte. That is, if the films are not used in the identical electrolyte of their formation or heat-treatment, then whatever electrolyte they are used in must be acidulated. It is this discovery that forms the subject of the present application for Letters Patent. . In the appended claims I have used the term ‘an original electrolyte’ to mean the first electrolyte or its equivalent, an acidulated electrolyte.”

It will be seen from this excerpt that the only discovery which the patentee claims is in the use of heat-resistant films in a specified electrolyte. The heat-resistant films to which he refers, as explained earlier in his specification, are the films which aluminum acquires under electrochemical treatment. Aluminum has the remarkable property, when immersed in a suitable electrolyte and subjected to an electric current, of acquiring a film which acts as a dielectric, so that the aluminum member of the condenser serves both as anode and dielectric. This property of aluminum has long been known in the art. In a paper read before the American Electrochemical Society at Philadelphia in 1902, put in evidence by the plaintiffs, it is said that this phenomenon was discovered in 1855. Mershon’s first patent in suit points out that it is well-known that “the action of electrolytic condensers, rectifiers, and similar devices, depends upon the film which may be formed upon the surface of the aluminum, tantalum, magnesium, and other metals, when immersed in certain electrolytes and subjected to the electric current.”

The novelty which Mershon claims for his film is that it is heat-resistant when formed as he directs and used in the electrolyte which he specifies. The term seems to have been new with Mershon, but the thing itself has been disclosed in the prior art. Hayden, in his patent No. 996,583, of June 27, 1911, showed that the film was heat-resistant in an alkaline electrolyte slightly acidulated by the addition of glycerin. What he says is not that the film is heat-resistant, but that the electrolyte permits the operation of the cell at high volt[363]*363ages with but tnoderate temperature rise, which means the same thing. His electrolyte is boric acid, mixed with an excess of ammonia to make it alkaline, and then acidulated with glycerin. Zimmerman, in his patent No. 1,074,231 of September 30, 1913, showed that the “cell,” by which it is plain from the context he meant the film, has high heat capacity when the electrolyte is composed of borax and boric acid.

Heat resistance and the process of obtaining it in the formation of the film had also been disclosed in an article by Giinther Schulze on “The Behavior of Aluminum Anodes,” published in 1906 by the Annalen der Physik, Series IV, vol. 21, page 929, in which the author sets forth the results of an elaborate investigation of the effect of temperature upon aluminum films.

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14 F. Supp. 361, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mershon-v-sprague-specialties-co-mad-1936.