Submarine Signal Corp. v. General Radio Co.

14 F.2d 178, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1283
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 20, 1926
DocketNo. 2450
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 178 (Submarine Signal Corp. v. General Radio Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Submarine Signal Corp. v. General Radio Co., 14 F.2d 178, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1283 (D. Mass. 1926).

Opinion

LOWELL, District Judge.

This was a bill in equity for the infringement of letters patent No. 1,217,585, granted on February 27,1917, to R. A. Fessenden. A preliminary question in regard to the title was decided in favor of the plaintiff, to whom the patentee had assigned his invention. The defendants were sued as contributory infringers. They made an apparatus known as the “sonic depth finder,” which is principally used in the United States Navy for taking soundings in deep water in connection with the making of charts. One of the defendants’ devices was sold to the All-America Cable Company, and used by them; this transaction gave rise to the present suit.

The invention relates to measuring distances by determining the length of time which elapses between the emission of a sound and the echo. This is done by causing a sound to be made by an electric impulse; the echo is received by an instrument which produces an electric impulse; and the time between the two impulses is then measured. In brief, the invention set forth in the specification consisted in producing a sound by an “oscillator” operated by electricity, which emitted the sound without the intervention of mechanical means. The echo was also received on the oscillator, or, alternatively, on a different kind of receiving instrument, by means of which the sound vibrations set up electric pulsations.

The use of the invention complained of was in determining depths of water at sea. Sound travels in sea water at the rate of about 4,800 feet a second. As it travels to the bottom and back, the elapsed time is just twice that required by the sound to reach the bottom. In one one-hundredth of a second sound travels 48 feet in sea water. It will be seen that, if the echo returns in one one-hundredth of a second, the depth of water would be one-half of 48, or 24 feet. Accuracy is therefore necessary when • the apparatus is used to warn ships of their approach to land, though not of so much importance in deep water, when it is used to make a chart of the ocean floor.

In the plaintiff’s device, as set forth in his specification, the elapsed time is measured from the electric impulse which energizes the oscillator to the electric impulse made by the echo; in this sense the apparatus in automatic, although it requires human agency to adjust the means for recording the impulses. In the defendants’ apparatus the elapsed time is measured between two sounds emitted by an oscillator. The echo issued only as a guide to vary the time between signals. TMs is done by changing the speed of the oscillator. The operator has a telephone receiver at each ear. In the right ear he hears only the sounds emitted by the oscillator; in the [179]*179left ear only the sounds produced by the echo. He changes the speed of the oscillator, so that a second signal exactly corresponds to the receipt of the echo of the first. When the sounds are thus synchronized, the time between the two emitted signals is measured, and in this way depth is determined, as the second signal corresponds with the echo. It will be apparent from the above description that the speed of the plaintiff’s oscillator is kept constant, while that of the defendants’ is varied.

The following claims were sued on: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 21. They read as follows:

“1. The method of measuring distance by sound inflection which consists in varying the current in an electrie circuit at the sending end, setting up at the sending end sound vibrations identical in time with the current variations in said electric circuit, directing said sound vibrations against an objective, transforming the sound vibrations inflected by said objective when received into electric impulses identical in time with said received sound vibrations and measuring the time elapsing between the beginning of each set of electric impulses.

“2. The method of measuring distance by sound inflection which consists in varying the current in an electric circuit at the sending end, setting up at the sending end sound vibrations identical in character with the current variations in said electric circuit, directing said sound vibrations against an objective, transforming the sound vibrations inflected by said objective when received into electric impulses identical in character with said received sound vibrations and measuring the time elapsing between the beginning of each set of electric impulses.

“3. The method of measuring distance by sound inflection which consists in varying the current in an electric circuit at the sending end, setting up at the sending end sound vibrations identical in frequency with the current variations in said electric circuit, directing said sound vibrations against an objective, transforming the sound vibrations inflected by said objective when received into electric impulses identical in frequency with said received sound vibrations and measuring the time elapsing between the beginning of each set of electrie impulses. .

“4. The method of measuring distance by sound inflection which consists in varying the current in an electric circuit at the sending end, setting up at the sending end sound vibrations identical in time, character, and frequency with the current variations in said electrie circuit, directing said sound vibrations against an objective, transforming the sound vibrations inflected by said objective when received into electrie impulses identical in time, character, and frequency with said received sound vibrations and measuring the time elapsing between the beginning of each set of electric impulses.

“5. The method of measuring distance by sound inflection which consists in transforming electrical impulses into sound vibrations for a predetermined period, which sound vibrations are directed against the objective, transforming the sound vibrations which are inflected by said objective into electrical impulses and measuring the time between the commencement of said predetermined period and the first receipt of said inflected impulses.”

“21. That method of measuring distance which consists in varying the current in an electromagnetic mechanism, causing the forces so produced to act directly and positively upon a diaphragm thereby setting the diaphragm in motion and setting up sound vibrations, directing said sound vibrations against an objective thereby inflecting the vibrations, receiving said inflected vibrations and measuring the elapsed time between the setting up of the vibrations and their reception.”

The word “frequency” is used to denote the rapidity of the electric pulsations, which affects the pitch of the sound. “Character” was explained as being the equivalent of “timbre,” which affects the quality of the sound in a musical note or in human speech.

The defenses are: (1) Anticipation by one Eels; (2) that the invention shows no patentable novelty over the prior art, and especially over an apparatus devised by one Berggraf; (3) that the claims are merely for the function of a machine; and (4) that the defendants do not infringe.

The first defense requires little comment. Eels had used an apparatus which sent out a sound by means of an electrie bell, and stated in United States letters patent No. 837,551, granted December 4, 1907, that the echo might be received by a telephone receiver. He had no idea, however, of the plaintiff’s method of taking time between two electric impulses.

Many patents were cited as anticipations of the plaintiff’s invention, but the defense in this part of the ease was grounded chiefly on Berggraf’s description of an apparatus for measuring depths.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Bolongaro
62 F.2d 1059 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 178, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/submarine-signal-corp-v-general-radio-co-mad-1926.