Moore v. Frigidaire Corp.

71 F.2d 840, 22 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 14, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 1934
DocketNo. 9721
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 840 (Moore v. Frigidaire Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Frigidaire Corp., 71 F.2d 840, 22 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 14, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227 (8th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a decree in favor of the plaintiffs (appellees) in a suit brought for the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 3,658,323 to Lloyd Blaekmore and letters patent No. 1,819,979 to Otto M. Summers, both of which relate to temperature control for electric refrigerators. The defenses are noninfringement and invalidity of the patents in suit. The patents belong to the Frigidaire Corporation, and the Penn Electric Switch Company is its licensee. The defendant is a dealer who sold electric refrigerators manufactured by the Grigsby-Grunow Company, of Chicago, which were equipped with the accused device.

The first question to be determined is that of infringement. The patent to Blaekmore was issued on February 7, 1928, on an application filed June 15,1922, and claims 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10, and 11 are involved in this suit. The patent to Summers was issued on August 18,1931, on an application filed May 30', 3 928, and claims 1,13,14,15,19, and 21 are in suit.

Electric refrigerators of the household type are equipped with an automatic regulator responsive to the temperature of the refrigerating chamber and so arranged and adjusted that it cuts in an electric switch, causing the refrigerating machinery to operate when a preüeiermined high temperature has been reached, and to continue to operate until the temperature has fallen to a predetermined point, when the regulator cuts out the switch, causing the machinery to stop. Thus the operating mechanism works intermittently and maintains a relatively constant temperature in the refrigerator within a predetermined range. This range is that of normal operation, and the adjustment of the thermostatic control mechanism which determines the temperature range of normal operation is called the factory adjustment or factory set-’1 ting. Too low or too high a temperature in a' refrigerator means unsatisfactory refrigeration, and the manufacturer is therefore interested in so adjusting the normal temperature control mechanism as to produce a range whieh will mean satisfactory operation to the user. The means whereby the refrigerating mechanism is started and stopped consists ordinarily of a drum-shaped sylphon or expansible metal bellows filled with a volatile liquid whieh expands with heat and contracts with cold. The extent of the expansion of the hollows depends upon the exterior pressure which is placed upon the bellows. This is well illustrated by patent No. 1,478,421 granted December 25, 1923, to Beehtold and Mellowes, which is owned by the plaintiff Frigidaire Corporation and embodied in refrigerators made by it. This patent shows a device whereby the exterior pressure upon the bellows is obtained by the use of a weighted lever-arm fulerumed or pivoted upon the bellows, the extent of the pressure thereon being determined by the point on the weight-arm- at. which the weight is fixed. The weight can be adjusted at any point upon the arm, and the-pressure upon the bellows can thus be changed by moving the weight on the arm either toward or away from the bellows. Moving the weight toward the bellows reduces the-[842]*842pressure, while moving it away increases it. As the bellows expands with the heat of the refrigerating chamber, it raises the weight-arm until it reaches a point where it cuts in the switch which starts the refrigerating machinery, and the refrigerating machinery then operates until it reduces the temperature to- a point where the contraction of the bellows lowers the weight-arm, which cuts' out the switch and causes the machinery to stop. The adjustment for normal operation is made at the factory, and the weight is there fastened to the weight-arm and is not to be disturbed except under the supervision of an expert.

It was discovered that, while it was desirable to leave the factory adjustment undisturbed, it was also desirable to provide some means whereby a housewife who desired to secure temporarily a lower temperature than normal might modify the factory adjustment in such a way that the refrigerating mechanism would operate and would continue to operate, until restored to normal, at a lower range of temperature than that provided by the factory. Blaekmore directed his attention to this problem. While he does not limit himself to the Bechtold and Mellowes device, he uses it as illustrating his method of cold eontrol for a refrigerator. What he sought was a simple means of permitting a temporary inodificatio-n of the normal temperature range without disturbing the factory adjustment, and which would permit a return to normal operation as soon as the temporary demand for the lower temperature range had ceased. There were, of course, several obvious ways by which a lower temperature than normal could be secured, since it was well understood in the art that a reduction of the pressure upon the bellows would cause the refrigerating mechanism to operate within a lower temperature range. Moving the weight toward the bellows would reduce the pressure, but it would, also disrupt the factory adjustment, and, unless the weight was returned to the exact position which it formerly occupied, the usefulness of the refrigerator would be impaired. To lighten the weight by removing a portion of it or to provide means for lifting a part of the weight would serve the same purpose. Biackmore’s scheme was to add auxiliary means whereby, from the exterior of the refrigerator, one could modify or affect the normal operation of the automatic control. Blaekmore placed in a convenient position on the exterior face of the refrigerator a handle or knob attached to a shaft which passed through the outer wall. To the interior end of the shaft was attached an arm, and to the end of the arm a coil spring,' the lower end bfi which was fastened to the outer end of the weight-arm. When the knob or handle was in the off position, the spring was not at tension and exerted no effect whatever upon the weight-arm and hence no effect upon the normal operation of the automatic control. However, as the handle or knob was turned away from the off position, the spring was tensed and exerted a lifting pull upon the weight-arm, thereby reducing its pressure upon the bellows and permitting the refrigerating machinery to operate at a lower temperature range. When the handle or knob was restored to the off position, the auxiliary means became inoperative and the normal range of temperature was restored. Everything used by Blaekmore to produce his desired result was old. The result was due to a combination of old elements. This combination is described in claim 1 as follows: “Refrigerating apparatus comprising, in combination, a cabinet, a cooling unit within said cabinet, means for circulating a refrigerant medium through said unit, control means for automatically controlling said apparatus, said control means having adjustable means for regulating same for normally maintaining a predetermined temperature condition of said cooling unit, auxiliary means within the cabinet for temporarily modifying the operation of the first means to obtain temporarily a different temperature in the cooling unit, and means extending through a wall of said cabinet and associated with said auxiliary means for controlling the latter.”

Summers in effect reproduced Blaekmore, but added one additional element; a defrosting arrangement.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 840, 22 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 14, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-frigidaire-corp-ca8-1934.