Safety Car Heating & Lighting Co. v. Gould Coupler Co.

239 F. 861, 152 C.C.A. 645, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2290
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1917
DocketNo. 69
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 F. 861 (Safety Car Heating & Lighting Co. v. Gould Coupler 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
Safety Car Heating & Lighting Co. v. Gould Coupler Co., 239 F. 861, 152 C.C.A. 645, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2290 (2d Cir. 1917).

Opinions

HOUGH, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Electric-car-lighting systems, depending ultimately upon axle driven generators, did not originate with this patentee; nor regarded as new articles of manufacture did any component part of the system disclosed by him. This is so fulíy admitted by all parties that no further comment is necessary. Every claim in suit is for a combination, or co-ordinated arrangement, of well-known electrical tools or appliances, to the end that such arrangement may produce a result desirable, useful and novel; and of course what is patented is not the result, but the embodied means by which the same is reached.

Nevertheless the nature of the combination, and therefore of the invention, cannot be grasped unless the wished-for result, the patentee’s desideratum, is first understood. The contest between these litigants is, at bottom, as to the meaning of sentences and phrases used in the specification and claims, whereof the words require little if any exposition, not obtainable from technical handbooks of approved authority. The parties diverge radically- even when stating in most general terms the object of invention, and such difference serves as a starting point for investigation.

Plaintiff holds that the invention is “an improvement in the means for assuring the production of a current of constant value, notwithstanding the variations in speed of the generator, due to the changes in speed of the car, thereby assuring a steady and efficient output of current, with special reference to the use of such current in charging the storage battery, while at the same time protecting the storage battery from the injurious effects of overchargingTherefore the system disclosed and claimed is one in which the “current output of the generator (is) materially diminished when the battery has been fully charged, to prevent overcharging,” the “injurious effects of which are well known, and need not be reviewed” — in the argument from which these quotations are taken. The foregoing is plainly descriptive of a combination of parts, capable of adjustment within the limits loosely indicated by the phrases “materially diminished” and “injurious effects”; if this view is correct, any diminution of current avoiding a surcharge deemed injurious by the operator, is within Thompson’s invention'.

Defendant, on the other hand, considers the system under consideration as one which “to achieve the broad result of protection of the battery from overcharge, effects successive long periods of charge and discharge; these periods being initiated and controlled by apparatus acting to initiate one condition when the battery is charged, and the other condition when the battery is discharged. The period of charge is one wherein the generator is rendered operative by being in circuit; the period of discharge is one wherein the generator is rendered inoperative by being disconnected at the main switch, even though its speed is above its normal cutting-in speed.” This description presents as the patentee’s purpose, a current supply to the lamps proximately emanating from the battery, until the storage cells have reached a predetermined stage of weakness, the generator being until then out of action; the dynamo then resumes operation primarily for the purpose of again charging the storage battery.

[865]*865Thus plaintiff asserts that the disclosure of the patent is of a system wide enough to cover a mere reduction of charging current without disabling the generator, one in which the battery may be an adjunct kept in reserve until such time as slowing or stoppage of the car renders its use necessary; while defendant declares that Thompson invented and described a plan for primarily using the storage battery with the generator in reserve as a sort of pump, to (so to speak) fill up the tank when need arose. To resolve this difference resort must be had to the specification and drawings, with such definition or explanation of technical terms, and words of art as may be necessary; but such explanations once made, the first question is of the meaning of a written document, a meaning to be spelled out of its four corners, and usually to be established before recourse is had to the file wrapper for further light, while the ascertainment of meaning always precede any consideration of equivalents.

[1] The record herein largely consists of the opinions of expert witnesses as to the meaning of words and phrases needing no definition ; such testimony (if it can be given that name) is a volunteering of duties laid by law on jury or court, and should not be suffered. Opinion evidence, on the very point submitted for decision, is always incompetent. Turning to the patent itself to ascertain its meaning, it is first observable that no provision is made for regulating the voltage of the lamps. Of this omission plaintiff’s expert says “the patent does not concern itself (therewith), * * * it is concerned with dynamo regulation.” The statement quoted is obviously consonent with what the patentee says, viz.: that his invention relates “to the charging of storage or secondary batteries”; one object being to provide means “for the efficient charging of a storage battery,” in which “the charging generator is rendered inoperative upon its functions being accomplished.” The natural inference from these words is that the generator’s function is accomplished when the secondary battery is charged.

Another stated object of the inventor was to “provide automatically acting means adapted to permit the generator to resume action independent of the speed at which the train is running.” The means for arriving at these results are shown in the diagram prefixed hereto. The main switch (48) is shown open, but, conceiving it closed, the path of the main generator circuit is seen passing around a solenoid core (40) in and through the current coil (41). A sufficient increase of current draws up the core; such core movement affects (through lever 38) the carbon pile resistance (4) mounted in the field circuit of the generator, and so in a manner confessedly old restores the current to normal.

But if no more in the way of regulation were done than this, the announced object of the patentee would fail, for no means would exist of preventing battery overcharge. . This Thompson effects by what he calls a “relay” comprising the “voltmeter coil 86,” in conjunction with “contact member 87”; an apparatus which when the battery voltage is high enough, will move the “contact member” so as to energize coil 38, and that in turn attracts the armature 33, and so closes a circuit from the battery through coil 36, which acting on core 37, pro[866]*866duces movement of the same lever on which the current coil operates, and increases resistance in the carbon pile, thus diminishing the generator current flowing through the main circuit, until (the battery current overcoming that from the generator) the core (44) of the main switch drops, the switch opens and the generator is out of service.

When the battery has discharged to the predetermined limit the “contact member” (£7) produces an engagement at £9, coil 31 is energized, armature S3 moves to its core, and coil 36 is disconnected. This brings the parts of the carbon pile closer together, lowers resistance in the field circuit, enables the generator to pick up, whether the car is going at or in excess of critical speed, and the main switch closes, re-establishing the main circuit.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. 861, 152 C.C.A. 645, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safety-car-heating-lighting-co-v-gould-coupler-co-ca2-1917.