Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Winchester Ave. Ry. Co.

71 F. 192, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3266
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 7, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 71 F. 192 (Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Winchester Ave. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Winchester Ave. Ry. Co., 71 F. 192, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3266 (circtdct 1895).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, District Judge.

Complainant, by this bill, asks for a perpetual injunction and an accounting, by reason of the infringement of patents Xo. 495,443 and Xo. 495,383, granted April 11, 1893, to tlie administrators of (diaries J. Van Depoele, assignor to complainant. Both of said patents cover useful improvements in traveling contacts for electric railroads which are in general use in the trolley railway systems in this country, and both have been infringed by defendants. They will be designated hereafter as the “first” and “second” patents, respectively; Xo. 495,443, the main patent, and the earlier in date of application, being called the “first .parent.” Tin* defense is conducted by the Westing-house Electric & Manufacturing Company, one of the parties defendant.

The defenses to said first patent are that the alleged invention was made by an employ'd of the Van Depoele Company; lack of parent able novelty, in view of the prior state of the art; and that the same invention liad been previously disclosed by and patented to Van Depoele. The record is padded unnecessarily with irrelevant matter. Complainant's record covers 3,142 pages; that: of defendant, 2,237 pages. The issues directly involved do not warrant, the taking of such an inordinate mass of testimony, nor the introduction of such a confusing number of exhibits. This rapidly growing-abuse in patent suits, if persisted in, must seriously interfere with the present practice of presenting, in an opinion, (lie results of a full consideration of all the important issues in such cases. If admonition will not answer, the next step must be the punishment of the offending party by the imposition of costs.

The alleged invention relates to improvements in the devices whereby contact is maintained between tin* trolley car and the overhead wire conductor. It embraces the long, swinging, pivoted, hinged, and upwardly spring-pressed arm, extending from a support on the top of the car, and equipped with an underrunning contact device.

The claims of the main patent, Xo. 195,443, infringed by defendant. are as follows:

“((>) In an electric railway, tlie combination with a suitable track and a supply conductor suspended above the track, of a car provided with a swinging arm carrying a contact device in its outer extremity and means for imparting upward pressure to the outer jiortion of the arm and contact, to hold the latter in continuous working relation with the underside of the supply conductor, substantially as described.
“(D In an electric railway, the combination of a car, a conductor suspended above the line of travel of the car, a swinging arm supported on top of the car, a contact device carried by one extremity of the arm, and held thereby" in contact with the underside of the electric conductor, and a tension device at or near the other end of the swinging arm for maintaining- said upward contact, substantially as described.
"(8) In an electric railway, the combination of a car, a conductor suspended above the line of travel of the car, an arm pivotally supported on top of tlie car, and provided at its outer end with a contact engaging the underside of [194]*194the suspended conductor, and a tension spring at or near the inner end of the arm for maintaining said upward pressure contact, substantially as described.”
“(12) In an electric railway, the combination with a car, of a post extending upward therefrom, and carrying a suitable bearing, an arm or lever carrying at its outer end a suitable contact roller and pivotally supported in said bearing, and provided at its inner end with a tension spring for pressing the outer end of the lever carrying the contact wheel upward against a suitable suspended conductor, substantially as described.”
“(16) In an electric railway the combination of a car, a conductor suspended above the line of travel of the car, an arm pivotally supported on the top of the car, and provided at its outer end with a grooved contact wheel engaging the under side of the suspended conductor, and a tension spring for maintaining an upward-pressure contact with the conductor, substantially as described.”

It will be unnecessary to consider them separately, as it is agreed that, while some are broader than others, they all cover spbstan-. tially'the same combination, so far as the issues herein are concerned. The vital questions at issue will be best understood by a statement of the facts which are admitted and proved, and of the claims made by each party as to the facts which are in dispute.

The combination of devices described in patent No. 495,443 is df great utility in the art of electric railroading, and has superseded every other known apparatus. The experts for defendant admit that they do not know that any one other than Van Depoele, prior to September, 1885, when he put said apparatus into practical operation, had proposed to equip the car of án electrically propelled road with a contact device mounted on the end of a long pole upwardly pressed by means of a spring, and to hinge the pole to the car, and make it turn on a pivot; nor that any one, prior to March 12, 1887, the date of the application for the first patent, had described, in an electric railway, the combinations specified in the infringed claims. The earlier electric railways, when equipped with wire conductors above the car, maintained contact therewith by means of “overrunning” trolleys connected by a cord or wire with the car, and towed along above the surface of the conductor. These devices were impracticable for general use, because of uncertainty of connection, lack of adaptability to various forms of switches, varying tension, liability to derailment, and for other reasons. The patented invention No. 495,443, as stated by complainant’s expert, “consists generally in an electric railway having an overhead conductor,. and a car’ for said railway provided with a contact device carried by the car so as to form a unitary structure therewith, and consisting of a trailing arm hinged and pivoted to the car so as to bridge the space between it and the conductor, and move- freely both laterally and vertically, and said arm carrying at its outer end a contact device capable of being pressed upward by a suitable tension device into engagement with the underside of the conductor.” The advantageous features of construction which give the system these capacities are (a) the location of the supply conductor above the track and line of travel of the car, and contact with its underside; (b) the arrangement of the contact device on a trailing arm; (c) the maintenance of a constant upward pressure by means of a [195]*195tension cíe vice operat ing upon a hinged arm. By the use of this system, numerous difficulties are overcome, and corresponding advantages obtained.

The defendant, in support of its denial of patentable novelty, in view of the prior state of the art, shows generally that electric railways, suspended conductors, and contact devices were old, and that the utility of such devices for conducting the current from such conductors to the instrument on the car was well known and variously applied. These systems, so far as the present consideration is concerned, were chiefly used either for electrically lighting a car, or for signaling to or from it But defendant claims that, as in each case the object to be accomplished was to get a current from a conductor to a motor in the car, the difference in the ultimate result is immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F. 192, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-houston-electric-co-v-winchester-ave-ry-co-circtdct-1895.