National Electric Products Corp. v. Circle Flexible Conduit Co.

62 F.2d 996, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 12, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3905
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1933
DocketNo. 162
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 F.2d 996 (National Electric Products Corp. v. Circle Flexible Conduit 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
National Electric Products Corp. v. Circle Flexible Conduit Co., 62 F.2d 996, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 12, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3905 (2d Cir. 1933).

Opinions

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

Two patents are charged to bo infringed in this suit. The court below held that the appellant presented no evidence of invention as to either. On this appeal appellant claims invention as to claims 2, 7, 8, 9, and 10 of patent No. 1,687,013. It abandons the other claims as well as the second patent litigated below, No. 1,804,549.

Patent No. 1,687,013 -is an invention for improvements in the construction of electric conductors having metallic sheaths known as armored cables or conductors. These cables theretofore consisted of two or more insulated conductors inclosed in an interlocked covering of insulated material as braided or woven fabric about which the spirally wound metallic sheath was placed. There were objections to this construction. They were (a) in making electrieal connections, a knife or other sharp instrument is used to strip the braided cover of the insulation off the wires, and this has always been at the risk of cutting through the rubber insulation and injuring the wires; (b) when flexible armored cables are installed, they must be cut to different lengths, and, in cutting the metal sheathing with a hack saw or other tool, the workman is apt to cut into and through the insulation and almost invariably a rough edge or burr will be left upon the cut end of the metal sheathing which may later cut through the insulation and produce a short circuit; (c) in braid-covered wares, which are usually treated with a coating of wax, there is apt to be a slide or creep within the metallic sheathing causing friction, especially a,t sharp bends, which is free to wear or cut through the insulation resulting in electrical difficulties.

The patent we are considering was applied for December 7, 1927, and issued October 9, 1928. Claim 2 describes an armored electric conductor or cable comprising a combination of elements which include insulated wires, a protecting covering of insulating material surrounding the insulated wires, a metallic sheath inclosing the protecting covering of the insulated wires, and an insulating bushing interposed between the insulated wires and the metallic sheath to protect the insulation of the wires from the edge formed a,t the end of the metallic sheath. Claims 7, 8, 9, and 10 describe armored conductors or cables comprising the same combination of elements as claim 2, with the additional feature of providing clearance space for the insertion of the bushing by employing a form of protecting covering which is adapted for ready removal from within the end of the metallic armor; that is, a protecting covering' of a spirally wound compressible material which can bo readily unwound and pulled out by hand from within the end of the armor without the use of any cutting tool.

The inventor solved the problems referred to by providing, instead of the old braided outer covering, a spirally wound overlapping layer of compressible material about the assembled conductors, the material providing additional protection to the insulated conductors during the operation of cutting the armor and also being adapted to be readily unwound and stripped off the conductors by hand, thus avoiding the use of a knife or other sharp instrument. The spirally wound compressible material which co-operates in the introduction of the insulated bushing, as is necessary, provides space, between the metallic armor and the insulated conductors for the insertion of the bushing; that is, the space is provided by unwinding and turning out a few turns of the compressible material inside at the severed end of the armor. By adopting the spirally wound overlapping layer of compressible materials about the assembled conductors into which, the convolutions of the metallic armor would sink, thus interlocking the armor and the conductors, danger from the sliding or creeping movement of the conductors within the armor was prevented.

This new armor bushing cable made under the patent developed protection which the industry was looking for and proved of great utility and benefit. Manufacturers of armored cable thus substantially reduced fire hazard. The utility of the invention was quickly recognized by its universal adoption by electrical contractors and inspectors as this record discloses. It met with the general approval of electrical inspectors throughout the country, and the old type was largely abandoned. Cable manufacturers obtained licenses and paid royalties for the use of the invention. Such use and acknowledged merit materially assisted in sustaining the invention. We think there was invention.

The court below held claim 2 of the patent invalid for lack of invention, in view of the British patent to Moseley, No. 2969 (1873), to Wilson, No. 102,137 (1916), to Wuerman, No. 182,489 (1923), to Wright, No. 206,275 (1923), and the French patent to Daram, No. 544,018 (1922). The Moseley patent shows a piece of rigid pipe conduit through which the wires had to be drawn with an insulating bushing in the end of the pipe to protect the wires. It does not show an armored cable. [998]*998There were no protective coverings or similar material separately applied to the insulated wire. There were three layers of wrappers of pure India rubber, which formed the basic insulation of the insulated conductors. It is a very old patent (1873). The application to the insulated wires of the layer of cotton or hemp, saturated with a sticky solution as boiled oil or gum, the whole then being covered with a ribbon or tape of tinned copper, resulted in a product entirely different from the appellant’s armored bushed cable. The layer of cotton or hemp was longitudinally applied, secured to the insulated wires by an adhesive compound, could not be readily stripped from the wire by hand without cutting and could not be removed from within the end of the copper ribbon or tape without disturbing it. Moseley’s invention was long before high-voltage currents. It does not suggest the patent in suit. The patent to Wilson shows and describes a cable consisting of several insulated wires with an outer covering of braided wire and a metallic ferrule having an inner sleeve portion fitting inside of the braided wire covering and an outer sleeve portion bent back over the end of the braided wire. The object of this invention was to provide a device to confine the frayed unfinished ends of the braided wire jacket in order to facilitate the operation of the connecting wires of this kind to a junction box. It does not describe either the interposition of a spirally wound protected covering of compressible material between the insulated wires and the braided wire jacket or the provision of an interior insulated bushing to protect and increase the insulation. Its ferrule is metallic. The Wuerman patent shows a rigid pipe conduit equipped with a leading-in tube or bushing to facilitate the drawing of wires into the conduit. There is no claim that it is an armored cable. The Wright patent is a bushing or ferrule to fit the ends of the conduit, both inside and out, to protect the insulation of the wire from being cut or injured by burrs or rough edges on the ends of the conduit while being drawn through. It does not suggest an armored cable, but merely a bushing and a rigid conduit with insulated wires lying loosely therein. There was no protective covering between the insulated • wires and the rigid metallic conduit.

The Daram patent relates to “flexible sheathing for electric conduits,” not' armored cable. Daram describes flexible or protective sheathing for electrical conductors which would cure defects which had been found to exist in the old lead sheathing which was flexible but mechanically weak.

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62 F.2d 996, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 12, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-electric-products-corp-v-circle-flexible-conduit-co-ca2-1933.