Triangle Conduit & Cable Co. v. National Electric Products Corp.

56 F. Supp. 979, 62 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 350, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2089
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 21, 1944
DocketCivil Action No. 196
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 56 F. Supp. 979 (Triangle Conduit & Cable Co. v. National Electric Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Triangle Conduit & Cable Co. v. National Electric Products Corp., 56 F. Supp. 979, 62 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 350, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2089 (D. Del. 1944).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

The plaintiff makes certain types of electrical wire and cable covered by a number of the defendant’s patents. It began this action for a declaratory judgment to establish the invalidity and noninfringement of the patents and the defendant counterclaimed for infringement. As the case now stands, six patents, which fall into three groups of two each, are involved. As to each, the only issue is validity, because, if valid, the plaintiff clearly 'infringes them all.

1. The Serving Patents.

The first two patents, Robinson and Moore, Nos. 2,222,555 and 2,222,556, have to do with insulated electrical building wire. This type of wire-is usually installed by being drawn into conduits previously located in the walls, floors and ceilings, ordinarily without being assembled into a cable. The general construction of the insulating and protective covering of such wire is practically standard and consists of (1) an insulating coating of rubber next to the wire, (2) a fibrous covering of some kind saturated with an asphaltic compound to give- it moisture resistance, (3) a layer of flame resistant stearin pitch, (4) a thin wax coating to make it easier to draw or “fish” the wire into the conduits.

These two patents are directed specifically to the fibrous covering. They claim, in combination with the other elements of the wire as above described, what amounts in substance to a serving consisting of a number of cotton threads wound helically around the rubber to form a .close wrapping and secured by a binder thread oppositely wound. In the second patent the binder thread is made of a particular type of material, the specification mentioning rayon-as an example. The major elements of the combination are all old. The alleged p-atentablé improvement claimed is the use of the binder thread, which the patent describes as a “locking filament.” Its purpose is to keep the separate strands of the serving from separating or opening up and cracking the outer coating when the wire is sharply bent or kinked. My obserr vation from courtroom experiments is that in the case of. bends in the wire permitted by practice and regulation and ordinarily encountered in construction work, there is no noticeable difference in this respect between wire with the binder thread and that without it. On the outside of very sharp kinks the serving without the binder thread spreads more than that with it, but the difference is not great.

A British patent (Roberts No. 242,911) of 1925 discloses the use of an oppositely wound binder, thread to hold in place helically wound strips (servings) of insulating paper, wrapped around an electric cable. The conductor in the Robinson patent is a cable instead of a single wire and there are two layers of the insulating paper, but these differences are concededly immaterial. The paper strands of the Roberts patent have a considerable pitch, that is, they lie more nearly parallel with the wire than the cotton servings of the Robinson and Moore patents. Upon this distinction alone, the defendant, in order to avoid complete anticipation, proposes the theory that Roberts’ use of the binder thread was for an entirely different purpose from that of the patent. He argues that, since the greater pitch of the serving of the Roberts’ patent would, in itself, prevent separation [981]*981in the finished product, the purpose for which the binder was supplied must have been to prevent the bulging out or ballooning which might occur during the process of manufacture. Although the Roberts patent gives no hint of all this, it could be accepted without avoiding anticipation. It does not change the fact that, in both the Roberts patent and the patents in suit, the purpose of using an oppositely wound binder thread is the same, namely, to prevent the strands of the serving from coming apart when subjected to a force which tends to separate them. Roberts discloses this use and indeed it is so elementary that it hardly needs a prior art patent to show it. I am unable to see how the fact that a subsequent patentee uses this simple and well-known means of combatting a particular condition (bending of the wire in use), which Roberts may or may not have foreseen, constitutes novelty.

Even assuming novelty, the improvement can hardly involve invention. The defendant attempted to predicate invention upon evidence of the solution of a problem in the art and of a degree of commercial success which appears impressive enough until the peculiar situation in the industry is understood.

Before the plaintiff’s patent was applied for, the fibrous covering was usually made of braided cotton thread. That type complied with standards set by the National Board of Fire Underwriters. It was more expensive than merely wrapping parallel cotton threads around the rubber. The defendant attempted to get the Underwriters to approve an unbraided wrapping, but they refused to do so until it had supplied the binder thread, after which the wire was passed.

Of course, in the electric and building trades the cheapest construction which will get by the Underwriters is bound to have commercial success. When a thing is “good enough” a contractor will ordinarily use it in preference to something more expensive. Various tests by the Underwriters showed the defendant’s covering to be inferior to the braided kind in almost every way. The Underwriters, however, considered it safe and satisfactory and passed it. Had they not done so it would have been practically useless. “Commercial success” in this case, therefore, means nothing more than the approval of the Underwriters — a body whose judgment is entitled to great respect — but it is not the kind of commercial success which can be accepted as evidence of invention. The only problem solved was the problem of getting the Underwriters to approve something cheaper than was previously in use.

I therefore find that patent No. 2,222,555 invalid, first because anticipated by Roberts’ British patent and second, if not fully anticipated, then because such slight and immaterial novelty as it presents does not involve an inventive advance.

The second Robinson and Moore patent No. 2,222,556 falls with the first. Even if the first were valid, the selection of such a well-known material as it describes could not, in my judgment, possibly constitute invention.

2. The Crumpled Paper Patents.

The next two patents, Frederick-son No. 1,828,772 and Fullman No. 1,863,-979, have to do with cables (a term applied to an assembly of wires held together in some way) .and in particular with nonmetallic sheathed cable of a type developed about 20 years ago, using paper armor. It consists of rubber covered wires, two, three or four in number, each of which is surrounded by paper wrappings, the whole being covered with an outer covering of fire-resistant compound. The paper covering for the wires protects the rubber insulation from hammer blows and other knocks and also spaces them apart so that a nail driven through the cable may miss the wires.

Ever since the development of this type of cable the practice has been to use paper strips spirally wrapped. As far back as 1891, patent No. 459,378 to McCracken shows the use of twisted ribbons of paper spirally wound upon an electrical conductor and surrounded by insulating and sealing waterproof compound. , He points out that “Where the wires are laid up in cables the individual wires may be first so treated * * * ” although that suggestion does not seem to have borne fruit until much later.

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In re Walters
169 F.2d 79 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
56 F. Supp. 979, 62 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 350, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triangle-conduit-cable-co-v-national-electric-products-corp-ded-1944.