Pierce v. American Communications Co.

111 F. Supp. 181, 97 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 60, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2922
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 19, 1953
DocketCiv. No. 51-526
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 111 F. Supp. 181 (Pierce v. American Communications 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
Pierce v. American Communications Co., 111 F. Supp. 181, 97 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 60, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2922 (D. Mass. 1953).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

Plaintiff in this action alleges infringement by the defendant of his United States patents No. 2,133,642, No. 2;133,643, No. 2,133,644, No. 2,133,645, No. 2,133,646, No. 2,133,648, and No. 2,266,070.

Defendant American Communications Company is a Massachusetts corporation doing business in this district, which leases and uses in its business certain radio transmitting and receiving equipment which is alleged to infringe the patents in suit. Federal Telephone and Radio Corporation (hereinafter called Federal), named as a defendant, is a Delaware corporation doing business in New- Jersey. It is the manufacturer and lessor of the accused radio-equipment. It has not been served here and has declined to appear voluntarily in the action.

Plaintiff has moved for a preliminary injunction against the alleged infringement. Both parties have filed motions for partial summary judgment as to certain claims of Pierce patent No. 2,133,642, which is the basic patent of the group involved in this action.

Ordinarily the issues in a patent case are such that it is inappropriate to-pass upon the question of the validity of the patent without hearing testimony from the experts called by the parties. In this case, however, both sides have filed voluminous exhibits and affidavits of experts in support of their respective motions, and both parties are agreed that these present all the evidence which could be adduced. Oral evidence from these experts would involve only a time-consuming repetition-, of what is already before the court in documentary form. The case, therefore, is one-in which it is proper to proceed to a decision on the motions for summary judgment and the motion for a preliminary injunction without the taking of oral testimony. Meikle v. Timken-Detroit Axle Co., D.C., 44 F.Supp. 460, 461.

[183]*183Patent No. 2,133,642 for an electrical system relates particularly to the use of a piezoelectric crystal for producing and sustaining, at a constant frequency the oscillations of such a system. While there are applications in other fields, the primary importance of the patents in suit is in the art of radio broadcasting.

The carrier waves by means of which radio communication is carried on are generated from the transmitter by an alternating current of electricity flowing in and out of an antenna consisting of a wire or wires suspended in the air. When this current alternates or oscillates at a high frequency of thousands up to millions of cycles a second, radio waves of corresponding frequency and intensity are produced. A broadcast on waves of any given frequency can he picked up by a receiver in which a corresponding electrical circuit has been tuned or adjusted so as to be responsive to waves of that particular frequency. It is important that the frequency of the waves sent out from a transmitter should remain constant. Communication is possible between sender and receiver only so long as both remain tuned to the same frequency. Moreover, a transmitter which varies 'from its proper frequency will interfere with stations transmitting on other frequencies, while the more closely stations adhere to their proper frequencies the greater the number of stations which can be assigned broadcast frequencies without danger of interference.

In the earlier days of radio several different devices such as spark gaps, electric arcs, or mechanical generators were used to produce the alternations or oscillations in the electrical circuit of a transmitter. A significant development came in 1912 with de Forest’s discovery that the thermionic vacuum tube or triode could be used to generate oscillations of the high frequency useful for radio broadcasting. Such tubes were used in circuits containing one or more condensers and one or more inductance coils. By adjusting a variable condenser to change the capacitance of the circuit (or, less frequently, by adjusting a coil to change the inductance) these circuits could be tuned to oscillate at the desired frequency. However, due to such factors as the running down of batteries, or the change in inductance and capacitance caused as the elements of the circuit became heated when in use, there was still an undesirable amount of variation in frequency.

The problem of maintaining the oscillations of the circuit at constant frequency was solved by the use of piezoelectric crystals. These are crystals of certain substances, such as quartz, tourmaline, and Rochelle salt (sodium potassium tartarate). When the opposite terminals of a battery or other source of direct current are applied to two particular surfaces of such a crystal it undergoes a mechanical deformation, i. e., it contracts or expands in some dimension or becomes twisted. Conversely when a mechanical force is applied to squeeze or stretch or twist the crystal, electrical potentials of opposite sign are built up on the opposing surfaces of the crystal. When an alternating voltage from an oscillator or other source is applied to the crystal it is deformed first in one direction, thén in another as the current alternates and thereby the crystal is caused to vibrate.

The piezoelectric properties of these crystals were first noted by Jacques and Pierre Curie in 1880 but for many years no practical application was made of them. During World War I a French scientist, Professor Paul Langevin, found a use for these crystals in devices for submarine detection and for ship to ship communication by means of waves propagated through the water. The communication of his discoveries to British and American scientists engaged in war-time research stimulated further study of these crystals. Pierce, a physics professor at Harvard University, was one of these scientists, and another was Professor Walter G. Cady, of Wesleyan University. Cady is generally recognized as the pioneer in the use of piezoelectric crystals in oscillating circuits, and admittedly it was Cady’s work which drew Pierce’s attention to the possibilities of their use in that field. The results of Pierce’s work he embodied in a paper published in the “Proceedings of the Amer[184]*184ican Academy of Arts and Sciences” in October 1923, which attracted wide attention among scientists at the time. These researches also formed the basis for his patent application of February 25, 1924, from which as a result of a later division of the application, the patents in suit.were derived.

This summary of the background ■ of Pierce’s patent application leads to the consideration of the defenses on which defendant here relies: invalidity, non-infringement, double patenting, and laches.

Validity.

Defendant contends that the Pierce patents are invalid for lack of invention over the discoveries of previous researchers in the field and particularly of Nicholson and Cady. The Pierce patent No. 2,133,642 teaches the use of a piezoelectric crystal inserted into an oscillating electrical circuit to control the frequency of the oscillations. The crystal used by Pierce is not the whole natural crystal but a thin slice or plate cut from the whole crystal. It it incorporated into the circuit by being connected on opposite surfaces to two electrodes. As Pierce shows it, the crystal is encased in a small box, resting on the bottom which is made of conducting material with a binding post attached so that it serves as one electrode, while the other electrode is a threaded binding post screwed through an opening in the insulating cover of the casing until it comes into contact with the upper surface of the crystal.

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Bluebook (online)
111 F. Supp. 181, 97 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 60, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-american-communications-co-mad-1953.