Simon v. United States

73 Ct. Cl. 1, 1930 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 305, 1930 WL 2512
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 8, 1930
DocketNo. 34096
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Ct. Cl. 1 (Simon v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simon v. United States, 73 Ct. Cl. 1, 1930 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 305, 1930 WL 2512 (cc 1930).

Opinion

Booth, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion:

The plaintiff, Emil J. Simon, was on January 8, 1918, granted Letters Patent No. 1253103 for an invention in spark gaps for the production of powerful electrical oscillations. This suit is for an alleged infringement of the patent by the Government, brought under the act of June 25, 1910 (36 Stat. 851), as amended by the act of July 1, 1918 (40 Stat. 705).

To understand the natiire of the mechanical device for which novelty and utility are claimed reference must be made to the electrical circuits generally employed at the time of the advent of plaintiff’s patent, and the place it assumed in the art of transmitting radio telegraphy. It was and is well known that radio messages are transmitted into space from an antenna wire in which a high voltage current is made to oscillate. The current utilized for this purpose is not transmitted to the antenna wire directly, but is generated and set up in a separate circuit which is coupled with the antenna circuit. The art had devised a conventional apparatus for generating and radiating powerful electrical oscillations; it embraced the essential features of electrical circuits and provided for a gap or opening through which, when the generating circuit attained a sufficiently high,voltage, the electric current would pass; or, as said, jump in the form of a spark, and set up the necessary oscillations in the antenna circuit.

Plaintiff’s patent concerns alone a mechanical means related solely to a spark device. What we have endeavored to explain is illustrated by Fig. 1 of plaintiff’s patent, as follows:

The letter E indicates the generator or source of current. The generator circuit is coupled through the transformer P S. The terminals of the secondary of the transformer [8]*8are bridged by a circuit connection containing a condenser C, in the usual manner. The spark gap is identified by the letter G, and its individual units by the letters Gi, G2, Gs, G4, Gs. Included in series with the spark gap device are the inductive coupling members L, and L2, the latter being arranged in the circuit of an antenna earth system O, B.

The record furnishes the information that the first spark gap device introduced in the art was the work and conception of a German scientist, Hertz. In a powerful electrical circuit Hertz inserted “ a pair of metallic balls or knobs separated by an air gap of a small fraction of an inch, each ball being connected to opposing portions of the electrical circuit.” Hertz’s device, while serving to some extent and under some circumstances to send out oscillations of desired single frequency, encountered the fatal obstacles of the alteration of air currents between the balls and the generation of excessive heat, with the result that the gap itself became an efficient conductor of electricity, and when the voltage of the circuit varied from a high to a lower one waves of different frequency resulted. Hertz’s failure to conceive a hermetically sealed device, as well as other defects, rendered his conception of little value in many respects, and its use ineffectual in that the waves transmitted into space from the antenna lacked the necessary uniformity in frequency to enable those tuned to it to receive connected and uninterrupted communications. Other difficulties aside from the above ones attended the effort of Hertz. To them, however, we need not refer, for as we have said, the Hertz device, which was not patented, disclosed the possibilities of a spark gap without accomplishing the elimination of the disturbing functional elements incident to a successful spark gap oscillating circuit.

On February 20, 1911, Georg Graf Arco and Eagnar Hákan Eendahl, residents of Berlin, Germany, were granted Letters Patent No. 1216588 for “ Improved Means for Producing Electrical Oscillations,” and the means specified was an improved spark gap or, as said therein, “ such short gaps are called in the art £ quenched ’ spark gaps, for the reason that the spark is quenched very rapidly therein.” The inventors clearly appreciated the difficulties of a single-[9]*9spark gap, exposed to the air and subjected to excessive beat, for tbe specifications disclose in Figs. 1, 2, and 3 an individual or single spark gap. Fig. 3 shows all the essential elements of an individual quenched spark gap unit comprising two parallel plates or electrodes, the spacing washer, and the clamp screw. Fig. Y is described on page 2 of the specifications, line 100, as follows:

“ Fig. Y shows such a connection in which three spark gaps of the form shown in Fig. 3 are shown connected in series.”

In other words, the Arco patent discloses to the public the use of what may be properly termed three-unit spark gaps in series. The Arco patent is so clearly an anticipation that we reproduce the figures cited in the above discussion.

Claim 4 of the patent in suit reads as follows:

“ 4. A self-contained individually removable spark gap unit, comprising a plurality of electrodes assembled together with opposing faces offset from each other, a packing of insulating and air-excluding material between parts of said electrodes and inclosing the opposing sparking faces thereof, and insulated screw pressure securing devices passing through said electrodes to hold the same and said packing under pressure in assembled relation independently of any other unit.”

This claim is slightly more limited than claims 1, 2, and 3 of plaintiff’s patent. The device embraced within it, over previous claims, concerns, we think, its call for “screw pressure securing devices passing through said electrodes to hold the same and said packing under pressure in assembled relation independently of any other unit.” In other words, the claim specifies the location of the pressure or clamping screw which functions as specified.

[10]*10A patent granted to George Seibt, No. 1216615, on February 20, 1917, discloses the essential elements of claim 4 in the following illustration, taken therefrom:

Beyond doubt, Seibt shows a multiple spark gap of the quenched type with a centrally located screw. The patentee, Seibt, in disclosing the elements of Fig. 14 recites:

“ Fig. 14 shows a plurality of disks 34, superposed upon but separated from each other by insulating washers 35, the disks being held between two clamp heads 36, 37, with heavy insulation 38 interposed between the clamp heads and outer disks, said heads being held together by a central rod 39, passing centrally through the disks but insulated therefrom by the insulating sleeve 40.” (Italics inserted.)

Seemingly, little if any novelty may be attached to the means for exerting pressure and sustaining the electrodes in proper relationship in view of the prior art. Seibt attempted by express declaration to avoid any limitations of his device in this respect, and it is difficult to ascribe invention to a specification of this character, one which would suggest itself to anyone at all familiar with the art.

The plaintiff’s patent is illustrated by Figures 2 and 3, which we insert at this point.

[11]

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ct. Cl. 1, 1930 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 305, 1930 WL 2512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-united-states-cc-1930.