O.M.I. Corporation Of America v. Kelsh Instrument Company

279 F.2d 579
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 1960
Docket7979
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 279 F.2d 579 (O.M.I. Corporation Of America v. Kelsh Instrument Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O.M.I. Corporation Of America v. Kelsh Instrument Company, 279 F.2d 579 (4th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

279 F.2d 579

125 U.S.P.Q. 560

O.M.I. CORPORATION OF AMERICA, a corporation of New York,
and Ottico Meccanica Italiana E Rivelamenti
Aerofotogrammetrici S. p. A., a
corporation of Italy, Appellants,
v.
KELSH INSTRUMENT COMPANY, Inc., a corporation of Maryland, Appellee.

No. 7979.

United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit.

Argued Jan. 6, 1960.
Decided May 30, 1960.

Robert F. Davis, Washington, D.C. (John H. Lewis, Jr., Washington, D.C., on brief), for appellants.

Albert J. Kramer, Washington, D.C., for appellee.

Before SOBELOFF, Chief Judge, and SOPER and BOREMAN, Circuit Judges.

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is taken from a declaratory judgment in which it was adjudged that United States Patent No. 2,492,870 for a stereoscopic projection map making instrument issued to Harry T. Kelsh and owned by Kelsh Instrument Company, Inc., a Maryland corporation, is valid and had been infringed by O.M.I. Corporation of America, a New York corporation, and Ottico Meccanica Italiana E Rivelamenti Aerofotogrammetrici S. p. A., an Italian corporation.

Ottico has been engaged in Rome in the manufacture and distribution of photogrammetric plotting apparatus for many years under the control of Umberto Nistri, an expert in the field. Harry T. Kelsh, the patentee, has been similarly engaged in the same field in Baltimore, Maryland, and was the founder of the Kelsh Instrument Company to whom the patent was conveyed. After the issue of the patent Ottico and O.M.I. began to manufacture and import into the United States an apparatus for making contour maps from aerial photographs which involved the methods outlined in the patent and Kelsh thereupon initiated action before the United States Tariff Commission under 19 U.S.C.A. 1337 to bar the importation of the Ottico instruments into the United States on the ground that they infringed the claims of the patent. Thereupon O.M.I. and Ottico brought the present suit against Kelsh and his corporation, seeking an adjudication that the patent was invalid and not infringed by them. Kelsh filed an answer and a counterclaim, charging that the plaintiffs had infringed the patent and prayed a permanent injunction and an accounting for damages. During the course of the suit in the District Court the plaintiffs conceded that if the patent is valid it is infringed by the Ottico instruments, but contended that the patent is invalid. Judge R. Dorsey Watkins, after an exhaustive study, held in a carefully prepared opinion (D.C., 173 F.Supp. 445) that Claim 1 of the patent, the only claim in suit, is valid and gave judgment on the counterclaim and dismissed the plaintiffs' suit. It is from this judgment that the present appeal is taken.

Claim 1 of the patent is as follows:

'An instrument for making maps by stereophotogrammetric methods, comprising a pair of projection lanterns each having a lens and slidereceiving means and supported side by side for projecting superimposed images of a pair of consecutive sliders, a moveable plotting table having a screen on which the images are projected for viewing to give a stereoscopic model, a point light source for each lantern and a light condenser to converge the light rays through a small area of the side and to a point coincident with the nodal point of the lens and diverge the light rays to cover approximately the screen of the plotting table, each of said light source and light condenser being moveably mounted relative to the lens in such manner that substantially the entire area of the slide in each lantern may be traversed by the converging light rays, and means for moving each light source and its light condenser so attached to the plotting table that as the plotting table is moved about, the light source and condenser move in a manner to maintain the image on the screen and to maintain the point of convergence of the light rays coincident with the nodal point of the lens.'

The basic idea underlying the photogrammetric art is to take photographs of an object from two or more points of view so that by comparison a reconstruction of the object in three dimensions becomes possible. The most important commercial use of the art is in mapping. Aerial photographs are taken from an airplane flying at an altitude of serveral thousand feet. The photographs are mounted for projection on photosensitive glass plates called diapositives. Successive overlapping diapositives are projected and when two plates are simultaneously viewed after correct orientation relative to one another a three-dimensional model of the surface of the ground is reconstructed in the mind of the observer. By the use of a mark in connection with the model it is possible to measure relative altitudes or to make linear tracings indicating all the points within the photographed area having a common altitude.1

Numerous viewing or projecting instruments operating under the same optical principles have been constructed and used in the prior art from time to time and after improvement have been superseded by others. When Kelsh came into the field he found that the instrument in most common use in the United States was the Bausch and Lomb Photomultiplex. It was, however, not entirely satisfactory because it required the reduction in size of the 9 inch by 9 inch negative photographic plate used in the aerial camera to a 2 inch by 2 inch diapositive, thereby reducing the mapping scale detail and accuracy to such an extent that it was not usable in certain types of work and, consequently, the expense incidental to the making of a complete map was increased. Kelsh devised a machine similar to the Multiplex but capable of using larger diapositives and obtained patent No. 2,451,031 thereon on October 12, 1948. Although the new machine embodied some improvement over the Multiplex it was not commercially satisfactory because the lenses and the light sources required for the illumination of the 9 inch by 9 inch diapositives were large, heavy and expensive. Kelsh thereupon continued his investigations and produced the device disclosed in the patent in suit. Therein he reduced the size and weight of the projecting lanterns by using light sources which swung about small projecting lenses in the lanterns so as to illuminate only those portions of the diapositives which were being projected for plotting on the mapping table below. He accomplished this by swinging or pivoting the light sources around the projecting lenses, focusing the light by condensers and connecting the housing of the light sources and condensers by pivot links to the mapping table. This device was the basis for the patent in suit, of which Fig. 1 is depicted below.

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

All of the elements of this structure, as the inventor admits, may be found in the prior art and hence the validity of the patent depends upon whether these elements have been put together in such a manner, not obvious to a person skilled in the art, as to produce a new and better result and thus to justify the issuance of the patent under the established rule. Black & Decker Mfg. Co. v. Baltimore Truck Tire Service Corp., 4 Cir.,

Related

Triumph Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. Alamance Industries, Inc.
191 F. Supp. 652 (M.D. North Carolina, 1961)
Entron of Maryland, Inc. v. Jerrold Electronics Corp.
186 F. Supp. 483 (D. Maryland, 1960)

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