Roosevelt v. Law Tel. Co.

33 F. 505, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2947

This text of 33 F. 505 (Roosevelt v. Law Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roosevelt v. Law Tel. Co., 33 F. 505, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2947 (circtsdny 1887).

Opinion

Coxe, J.

This is an action of infringement, founded upon letters patent No. 234,413, granted to the complainant’s testator, as assignee of Georges Lionel Leclanché, on the sixteenth of November, 1880, for an improvement in galvanic batteries. The invention relates to an improvement upon the well-known Leclanché battery. The porous cup, previously used, is discarded, and in its place are substituted compressed chemical conglomerates, which form, in connection with a central carbon-conducting plate, the electro-negative pole of the battery. These conglomerates are composed of a metallic salt, in combination with the peroxide pf manganese, carbon, and some adhesive material. This compound is placed in moulds, and, while being subjected to about 100 deg. centigrade, is pressed by hydraulic pressure into flat or slightly hollowed plates. These plates are, by means of India rubber bands at top and bottom, held firmly against a carbon conductor, and at the points of contact are themselves, preferably, faced with pure carbon. They are so constructed and combined that the exciting saline solution can circulate around them. The battery cell is provided with a cover adapted to hold and support the positive pole, which consists of a zinc rod, and also the carbon conductor, to which the conglomerate prisms are attached. It is asserted of a battery so constructed that it possesses very strong electro-motive force, and perfect electrical conduction. It can be easily cleansed, and new conglomerates quickly substituted for those which may become worn out. The patent contains seven claims. The first three refer specifically to conglomerates containing a metallic salt, in combination with other constituents. The sixth and seventh are not limited to conglomerates so constructed, and relate to the particular arrangement of the prisms in connection with the conducting plate. It is not asserted that the defendants infringe any of these claims. The fourth and fifth are the only claims in controversy, and are in the following words:

“(4) The improved electro-negative element shown, which consists of two conglomerate bodies, united with and surrounding a central conducting plate, substantially as described. (5) In an electric battery, the combination of a cover adapted to close the cell containing the exciting liquid, with a zinc pole and an electro-negative pole, which consists of a central carbon plate, and two electro-negative conglomerates attached thereto, both of said positive and negative poles being supported by the cover, substantially as shown and described. ”

The defenses are lack of novelty and non-infringement. A number of prior patents and exhibits have been put into the record, which it is unnecessary to consider in detail, for the reason that it is not pretended that any one of them discloses the combinations covered by the fourth and fifth claims. Indeed, the expert witness for the defendants testifies that if these claims are construed to cover a central conducting plate of carbon, when combined with two other plates composed wholly or partly of granulated carbon, united together by a binding material, so [507]*507that a constant contact is maintained between the center plato and the side plates, be finds no combination in the prior art which anticipates it. As no broader construction of the claims than this is demanded, as the conclusion is concurred in by the expert witness lor the complainant, and as nothing is disclosed by the record which casts a doubt upon its accuracy, it is thought that this branch of the case may with propriety be rested at this point. One exception, however, should bo noted. In giving the answer referred to, the witness excluded from consideration all reference to the Rodgers exhibit, and the proof relating thereto. It is probable, if the testimony of Rodgers could be accepted in its entirety, that the invention of the patent would.be fatally limited, if not, indeed, completely anticipated. But prior use by Rodgers is not established by testimony which commends itself to the court. Neither orally nor upon the brief does the learned counsel for the defendants argue that the Rodgers battery was made prior to the Ledanchó invention, or that the story of Rodgers is entitled to credit. The evidence is without satisfactory corroboratiou. The principal witness upon the subject is impeached generally, and contradicted specifically; and it is sufficient to say that the court would not be warranted, in defiance of the rule which requires anticipation to be established beyond a reasonable doubt, to accept as truth testimony from such an equivocal and tainted source. It is thought, therefore, that there can be no doubt that Ledanché was the first to conceive the combinations in question, and that they disclose sufficient of the inventive faculty to support a patent.

The question of infringement which remains to be considered is a difficult and perplexing one; depending largely for its solution upon the construction given to the claims in question. The Law battery sold by the defendants is made under letters patent No. 255,597, granted to Childs and Shaw, March 28, 1882. The negative electrode is formed of two plates of carbon, having the planes of their faces parallel. They are securely connected near their upper ends by means of a hard rubber rivet to a smaller central carbon plate, which passes through a flanged aperture in the glass cover of the battery jar. A binding post is attached to the upper exterior portion of the central plate. The points of difference and similarity between the complainant’s and the defendants’ apparatus, when considered mechanically, can best be seen by placing diagrams of the two in juxtaposition:

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. 505, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roosevelt-v-law-tel-co-circtsdny-1887.