National Phonograph Co. v. Lambert Co.

125 F. 922, 60 C.C.A. 632, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4235
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 6, 1903
DocketNos. 974, 975
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 F. 922 (National Phonograph Co. v. Lambert Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Phonograph Co. v. Lambert Co., 125 F. 922, 60 C.C.A. 632, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4235 (7th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

GROSSCUP, Circuit Judge.

The two suits above entitled were separately brought in the Circuit Court, and from the decrees therein entered separate appeals are prosecuted to this court. They are so closely related, however, both in fact, and in the law applicable to the [923]*923facts, that they were heard together, and will be disposed of in a single opinion.

The first suit was brought on letters patent No. 414,761, issued November 12, 1889, to Thomas A. Edison for improvement in phonogram blanks;’ and the second upon letters patent No. 382,418, issued May 8th, 1888, to Thomas A. Edison also for improvement in phonogram blanks; the first resulting in a decree sustaining the validity of the patent, but finding the appellees not guilty of infringement; and the second in a decree sustaining the validity of the patent, and finding the appellants guilty of infringement—the appellees in the first suit being the appellants in the second. To reverse these decrees, the several appeals are prosecuted.

The material part of letters patent No. 382,418 is as follows:

The object I have in view is to produce a cylindrical phonogram blank or phonogram which can be readily placed upon the phonogram-cylinder of a phonograph, and will center itself, and will also be adapted to retain its place upon the phonogram-cylinder by friction alone. This I accomplish by providing the cylindrical phonogram blank or phonogram with a tapering bore adapted to fit over a similarly-tapered phonogram-cylinder. The phonogramblank or phonogram is provided with a cylindrical recording surface. Blanks or phonograms of the full length of the tapering phonogram-cylinder of the phonograph can be used as well as those of shorter length, the tapering bore centering the blank or phonogram, and adapting it to be pushed onto the phonogram-cylinder until it binds thereon with sufficient friction to hold it in place.
I propose to make these phonogram-blanks the entire length of the phonogram-cylinder, and also to divide such full-length phonogram-blanks into parts, so that sectional phonogram-blanks will be produced, which will be, for illustration, one-fourth, one-half, and three-fourths the length of the full-size phonogram blanks. All of these sectional phonogram blanks, as well as the full-sized phonogram-blank, will have the tapering bore, so that they can be pushed upon the tapering phonogram-cylinder until they bind, and the instrument can then be adjusted to them for recording and reproducing.
I do not claim herein a phonogram-blank having a recording surface of wax, or a wax-like material, nor such a surface mounted upon backing of tougher material, such matters being covered by my application for patent, (Case No. 734, Serial No. 252,964,) filed October 21, 1887.
What I claim is—
1. A phonogram-blank or phonogram having a bore tapered throughout its length, substantially as set forth.
2. A phonogram blank or phonogram having a cylindrical recording-surface and a tapering bore, substantially as set forth.
3. A phonogram-blank or phonogram having a cylindrical recording-surface of wax or wax-like material and provided with a tapering bore, substantially as set forth.

The material part of letters patent No. 414,761 is as follows:

My invention relates to cylindrical blanks for receiving sound-records in the phonograph, made of wax or wax-like or similar materials, and designed to be placed on the cylinder'of the phonograph for receiving and reproducing the sound-record. Heretofore these cylinders have been made with a smooth inner surface fitting closely upon the cylinder of the phonograph. I have found that several advantages arise from providing the interior of the cylindrical phonogram-blank with ribs, flanges, or projections, and it is in this that my invention mainly consists. This construction makes it easier to remove the molded blank from the mold in which it is formed, enables the injurious effects of contraction or warping of the cylinder to be readily removed, and prevents any bad effect from the accumulation of dust on the cylinder of the phonograph. I prefer to form a spiral rib on the interior surface of the blank.
[924]*924I find it easier to remove such a blank from the core than one having a smooth inner surface, since by slightly turning or screwing the same it can be readily withdrawn.
In the process of molding the blank while the material cools it sometimes becomes contracted or warped on its inner surface, so that it.does not fit the phonogram-cylinder truly, and in this case it has to be reamed out to remove the irregularities. This has to be allowed for in making the blanks, and when the blank is' made with a smooth interior the whole inner surface often has to be cut in order to make it true, and this is a matter of some difficulty and incurs a risk of injury to the blank. Where the blank is formed with an internal rib or ribs and such warping occurs, it is only necessary in order to remove it to cut away the edges of the ribs, and thus a blank having a true inner surface can be formed with less labor and expense and waste of material than where the smooth surface is used. I make the ribs always deep enough to allow for the reaming out of the cylinder. Another advantage is that when the blank is placed on the phonogram-cylinder any particles of dust or other foreign substance which may be on the cylinder enter and remain in the spaces between the ribs, instead of coming between the blank and the cylinder, where they might prevent the blank from assuming a true position and resting evenly thereon.
What I claim is—
1. A tubular phonogram-blank provided with internal ribs or projections, substantially as set forth.
2. A tabular phonogram-blank having an internal spiral rib, substantially as set forth.

The following patents were put into the record, either as anticipations, or other data material to the case:

No. 70,113, Oct. 22, 1867, A. S. Phillips.

No. 170,178, Nov. 23, 1875, I/. F. Locke.

No. 200,521] Feb. 19, 1878, T. A. Edison.

No. 277,097, May 8, 1883, J. R. Abbe.

No. 309,288, Dec. 16, 1884, G. Birkmann.

No. 341,214, May 4, 1886, C. A. Bell et al.

No. 341,288, May 4, 1886, S. Tainter.

No. 375,579, Dec. 27, 1887, C. S. Tainter.

No. 380,535, April 3, 1888, C. S. Tainter.

No. 382,419, May 8, 1888, T. A. Edison.

No. 393,463, Nov. 27, 1888, T. A. Edison.

No. 393,967, Dec. 4, 1888, T. A. Edison.

No. 397,856, Feb. 12, 1889, G. H. Herrington.

No. 399,264, Mar. 12, 1889, G. H. Herrington.

No. 399,265, Mar. 12, 1889, G. H. Herrington.

No. 406,571, July 9, 1889, T. A. Edison.

No. 421,450, Feb. 18, 1890, C. S. Tainter.

No. 464,476, Dec. 1, 1891, G. H. Herrington.

No. 488,191, Dec. 20, 1892, T. A. Edison.

We do' not feel called upon to pass upon the validity of either of these patents. The phonogram of defendants below, as we construe the patents, infringes the claims of neither of them.

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Related

National Phonograph Co. v. Lambert Co.
142 F. 164 (Seventh Circuit, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
125 F. 922, 60 C.C.A. 632, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-phonograph-co-v-lambert-co-ca7-1903.