Snook-Roentgen Mfg. Co. v. Stetson Hospital

237 F. 204
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
DocketNo. 1359
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 237 F. 204 (Snook-Roentgen Mfg. Co. v. Stetson Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snook-Roentgen Mfg. Co. v. Stetson Hospital, 237 F. 204 (E.D. Pa. 1914).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This case involves the validity of letters patent No. 954,056 for an improved X-ray machine. The controversy is between two makes of machine. One is that of the plaintiff. The other is that of the Waite & Bartlett Manufacturing Company, which is the real defendant in the case, in that it has undertaken the defense. The defendant of record is a mere user, and in a real' sense a nominal defendant.

The defense is a denial of infringement, which is, however, involved in the defense of hnticipation—a denial that the plaintiff’s patentee was the first inventor. Both machines are made under the licensed use of the Kemp patent, No. 774,090. The plaintiff defends [205]*205its proprietary right from a position which is entrenched by admitted, as well as proven, facts which makes its position a strong one.

The facts are that the machine which embodies the claimed invention is one which is highly useful and of almost incalculable benefit to mankind; it has met the supreme test of commercial success, and the field upon which the defendant machine seeks to enter was previously in the sole occupancy of the plaintiff. The users of such machines, who are a highly trained class of men, well equipped to exercise discriminating judgment of the merits of such devices, had accorded the plaintiff the practical tribute of their patronage. The Snook apparatus has further won a recognized place in the world literature of the art.

The admission of these facts, although frankly and ungrudgingly made by the makers of defendant’s device, is forced by not only the commercial record of the plaintiff’s device, but by the further fact that the two machines are to all practical intents one and the same. Defendant must therefore accord a full meed of praise to the device of the plaintiff or condemn its own. This carries also the admission of the fact of infringement, unless tire claims of plaintiff’s patent are so restricted as to exclude all machines which embody the one feature in which the defendant’s device differs from that of the plaintiff. This difference will be referred to later.

We are relieved from any special consideration of the allowance of particular claims, because the admission is further frankly made that the plaintiff is entitled to all it claims or to nothing. This concession is the child of the contention of defendant that the file wrapper of the patent in suit shows that as the co-st of securing its patent the meaning of its claims was restricted to a type of machine which excludes that of the defendant. If the claims are so read, the defendant has not infringed, and the patent of plaintiff goes unchallenged by defendant. It may therefore have all its claims allowed. If, however, the reading of the claims is made so broad as to take in the defendant’s machine, then it is asserted the patent is invalid, because the plaintiff’s patentee was not the first inventor, but merely constructed a machine which had been invented and fully described by Von F. S.- Koch, of Dresden, whose firm of Koch & Sterzel were German competitors in the same field of activity with both the plaintiff and defendant. If such be the fact, the plaintiff takes nothing.

To grasp the thought upon which each of these positions of no infringement or no patent is based, we must consider both of them in the first instance together. The startling suddenness with which the accidental discovery of Roentgen aroused the astonished - admiration of the world, and the possibilities of usefulness which the discovered fact was at once universally recognized to have, has made what the X-ray machine can do familiar to all. It has enabled the eye to see and photographs to be taken of what was before hidden under a hopelessly impenetrable veil. When the fact that this miracle could be wrought was once known, a machine to do the' work was soon constructed. There was in none of these machines, Considered as mere machines, a single novel element. Every one was too eager to [206]*206produce the result to lose any time over devising the best means as long as the well-known means would suffice. Since then all efforts have been directed principally along the line of so adapting and improving these well-known means as to take a better picture and shorten the time of taking it, and to protect the machine itself and render its use less hazardous to the operator. The scientific minds, among those which were employed in the problem presented, at once busied themselves in ascertaining the principles in accordance with which the phenomena presented appeared.

There would seem to be reason to believe that there is not yet an entire concord of opinion. -Indeed, some of the difficulties presented in the decision of this case arise out of such differences. The courts, of course, have no mandate to settle scientific controversies, and the danger always exists that the discussion of the scientific or rftechanical principles may crowd out of consideration the legal principles involved. The former principles, however, may comprise the facts out of which the law of the case arises, and to this extent, at least, they must be grasped and mastered.

The machines with which we are concerned may be roughly classified as induction coil and transformer types of machines. It would seem to be a fact (although one of no legal value) that there is yet a difference of opinion of the comparative merits of these types. At all events, they are both still in use. The one first in use was the induction coil: The operation of this type of machine was commonly understood to depend upon certain electrical principles. Indeed, one of the obstacles to the introduction of the Snook machine, which was the first and soon became a widely known example of the transformer type, was the criticism that it was built on wrong principles. It won a place for itself by the practical demonstration of good work results rather than by the conversion of its users to an acceptance of the principles of its operation.

Upon the discussion of these scientific features we will not presume to enter, but will leave this to the trained minds of the experts, including counsel. For the application of the legal principles with which we are more directly concerned, a few of the scientific facts will suffice.

Every one knows that light—light as commonly known—will penetrate certain substances and will not others. To express these facts we have the words “transparent” and “opaque.” The discovery of Roentgen has, in most important measure, done away with this difference between substances. We know that what we call the X-ray will penetrate substances which ordinary light will not! This power of penetration is associated in the mind with tire idea of intensity. It would seem that we must have this intensity of rays. To get them a tube, is constructed from which the air has, so far as possible, been exhausted. -This, gives us a high vacuum chamber. An essential agent which these machines are designed to employ is electricity, and a current of electricity is made to pass through the tube. The tube, however, must be specially constructed. The thought of just what takes place within the tube is difficult for the untrained mind to grasp and more difficult to express in words. The accepted conception seems to [207]*207be that it is a bombardment from a machine gun at one end of the tube pouring out missiles of almost inconceivable minuteness, projected with a like almost inconceivable swiftness of progression and forcé against a target at the other end. One to be ‘expected result is a manifestation of heat.

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Related

Scovill Mfg. Co. v. Balistocky
48 F.2d 875 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1931)
Stetson Hospital v. Snook-Roentgen Mfg. Co.
245 F. 654 (Third Circuit, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
237 F. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snook-roentgen-mfg-co-v-stetson-hospital-paed-1914.