Servo Corp. v. General Electric Co.

220 F. Supp. 473, 138 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 195, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10002
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedJune 22, 1963
DocketCiv. A. No. 566(H)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 220 F. Supp. 473 (Servo Corp. v. General Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Servo Corp. v. General Electric Co., 220 F. Supp. 473, 138 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 195, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10002 (W.D. Va. 1963).

Opinion

DALTON, Chief Judge.

A tiny flake of a metallic substance the size of a mouse’s toenail, when activated by infrared waves, sets into motion a chain of events which form a background for this important litigation.

An age-old problem confronting railroads everywhere has been the ever recurring “hot journal box” which house the brass bearing that fits over the top of the railway car axle. The method used to lubricate the axle is to use waste, saturated with oil, placed in the journal' box of each wheel. By “packing the box” and by frequent inspection, the carriers-were able to keep relatively few the number of overheated journal boxes which were of disabling effect on the movement of trains. Notwithstanding all the efforts of the railways in this direction, many “hot boxes” occurred on trains en route, and this frequently resulted in the breakdowns and delays which were quite-expensive to the carriers. Consequently, on all sides and for generations, there has been a continuing search by the railways and others interested in finding a way by which the overheated journal boxes could be detected before appreciable harm was done, and thereby facilitate and expedite the movement of' railway traffic in this fast-moving age.

A method which, for all practical purposes, solves the problem has been developed, and it is on the question of whether the plaintiff, Servo, is entitled to credit for the result that this controversy arises.

This important action, the trial of which required some 33 days, plus some-4 days of helpful argument by able counsel, with 6541 pages of evidence and 733-exhibits, has been a strongly contested one, and happily, by agreement of the-parties, the Court had the benefit of an outstanding member of the bar of the-Western District of Virginia, the Hon. R. S. Kime, to assist the Court as Special' Master in the determination of the intricate, technical and difficult issues involved, who spent months in study and preparation of his report.

The service of the Special Master has been helpful in the study, sifting and correlation of the volumes of testimony and exhibits, thus lifting a load of detail work from the District Judge. However, the Court is conscious of its duty and judicial responsibility to decide the issues presented, and it was partly with that thought in mind that the Court sat with the Master throughout the proceedings in this case. To avoid influence on the thinking of the other, neither the Special Master nor the Court indicated to the [475]*475other his thinking on the issues as the evidence was developed.

The Issues

This action involves the question of the validity and infringement of three patents owned by Servo Corporation of America, namely:

(1) Patent No. 2,987,857, referred to .as the 857 “Shutter” Patent;

(2) Patent No. 2,880,309, referred to .as the 309 “Orientation” Patent; and

(3) Patent No. 2,963,575, referred to as the 575 “Alarm” Patent.

(1) The 857 “Shutter” Patent

Special Master Kime, in his report, held the “Shutter” patent invalid for the reason that the results achieved were obvious to and could be accomplished by one skilled in the art and that there was a lack of novelty or newness in this alleged invention.

No objections were made by plaintiff, Servo, to this holding of the Master, and the Court agrees fully with and confirms the findings of the Special Master as to the invalidity of said 857 “Shutter” patent.

(2) The 809 “Orientation” Patent

This is the basic patent involved.

The Special Master, in his report, upheld the validity of the 309 “Orientation” patent as to claims in suit numbered 5, ■6, 9, 10 and 11, and further found that defendant, General Electric Company, had infringed upon the rights of Servo in connection with said patent, and had copied it in the features essential for successful operation of a hot box detector.

General Electric defended as to the 309 “Orientation” patent on the grounds that the subject matter of the patent would have been obvious to a person having ordinary skill in the art; that it is invalid because of prior public use, sale and publication of its subject matter for more than one year prior to the disclosure of the subject matter to the patent office; that the patent does not disclose the best mode contemplated and known by the patentees for practicing the alleged invention, and that said patent was neither infringed nor copied.

In this findings as to the 309 “Orientation” patent, the Special Master says in his report:

“ * * * The claim of the inventors is that they were the first to construct an apparatus consisting of certain component parts housed in a sturdy metal box (physical models of both the Servo and G. E. detectors were filed as exhibits) to be mounted trackside, preferably on a metal, concrete or wooden base, in such a manner as not to be affected by the passage of trains, looking upward and inward at such angles (in relation to the rails) so that the apparatus will view only the trailing (lateral) sides of passing journal boxes. Servo claims that it was the first to so construct and mount trackside, below the level of wheel axles, such a device so that its internal components would scan only journal boxes and register their temperature to the exclusion of all other heat sources that would otherwise tend to actuate false signals and that this was accomplished by using or taking advantage of the underside of the cars as a uniform reference background. This manner of mounting and pointing the apparatus is referred to as the ‘toed-in’ method which the inventors say is the crux of their invention.
“The body of the detector is composed of a heavy outer metal shell with a partial interior shell which, with its air space, tends to keep down the interior temperature of the box. Housed within the box is a lens, bolometer and an amplifier all electrically connected so that the device when mounted trackside and in operation can receive infrared heat waves from passing journal boxes. The metal shutter, which is the subject of the ’857 patent, or ‘Shutter’ patent, and which the inventors claim acts not only as a protection to the delicate internal [476]*476parts of the detector but as a reference background when the detector is not scanning, opens when the first wheel of the train passes over a magnetic transducer or wheel trip, whereupon, the device is made ready to receive heat signals from journal boxes as long as the train is in motion and as each successive wheel passes over the wheel trip the shutter stays open until a brief interval after the train’s departure, whereupon, it automatically closes.
“Hundreds of pages of evidence are devoted to a detailed description of bolometers, lens, shutters, amplifiers and circuitry and the part each and all play in connection with hot box detectors. An almost equal number of pages deal with various types of wheel trips, mechanical, magnetic and electrical, the function of which is to open the protective shutter of the detector and while the train is in motion gate through to the recorder the heat signals from passing journal boxes. This gating is generally denominated as time gating, where the signal is of a fixed duration, or space gating, where the signal is gated through for a time space which is governed by the speed of the train.

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220 F. Supp. 473, 138 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 195, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/servo-corp-v-general-electric-co-vawd-1963.