Tweedale v. Sunbeam Corp.

145 F. Supp. 97, 111 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 176, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2559
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedOctober 16, 1956
DocketNo. 13945
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 F. Supp. 97 (Tweedale v. Sunbeam Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tweedale v. Sunbeam Corp., 145 F. Supp. 97, 111 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 176, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2559 (E.D. Mich. 1956).

Opinion

PICARD, District Judge.

Action by plaintiff for infringement of patent No. 2,110,748. This defendant denies, and claims further that letters patent should never have been issued since plaintiff’s device won’t work or if it does it is not an invention over the prior art. In addition defendant asserts improper venue and lack of jurisdiction.

Findings of Fact

Questions of jurisdiction and venue were raised long before trial and decided adversely to defendant at which time an unsuccessful attempt was made to reverse the ruling by mandamus. Sunbeam Corporation v. Picard, 6 Cir., 227 F.2d 596. We then held and now hold that the subsidiary is the alter ego of defendant and satisfies, insofar as these proceedings are concerned, the jurisdictional and venue requirements of Sections 1694 and 1400(b) of Title 28 U.S.C.

Since no other evidence affecting these questions was introduced at the trial, we now direct our, attention to the merits, to-[98]*98wit: does defendant’s toaster infringe upon plaintiff’s?

The controversy arises over devices used in plaintiff’s and defendant’s bread toasters which automatically cause the bread to “pop up” when the desired degree of “cooking” is attained. Plaintiff’s patent, issued March 8, 1938 and expiring March 9, 1955, claims to attain this result by a photo, electric cell, commonly called an “electric .eye”. Although no model has ever been constructed plaintiff says that his toaster operates as follows: The bread slice is first inserted and then pulled down by means of a lever to a position adjacent to the héating units. While so held the operator must then adjust a screw which indicates the tripping point of the then untoasted bread by a slight click. At this point the bread carriage is released and. the adjusting screw is turned in an opposite direction a quarter, half or full turn; whatever experience has taught will produce the desired color of the toast. While this is being done the electric eye receives the light rays that are reflected from the. bread and as the latter turns brown the amount of light reflected therefrom to the electric eye is reduced. This results in a corresponding reduction of the current that flows through the electric eye and when the toast reaches the desired degree of brown (determined by setting of the adjustment screw) the drop in current flowing through the electric eye causes a relay to be released and the bread to “pop up” properly toasted. If both blind and deaf it would be rather difficult, if not impossible, for the operator to get results.

The Sunbeam toaster works automatically; is set when it leaves the factory and all you have to do is push down the proper lever “light”, “medium” or “dark” with which you could easily become acquainted by verbal or manual instructions.

Sunbeam i.s covered by several patents but the device employed therein to terminate the toasting cycle is covered chiefly by Koci patent 2,667,828 which was issued February 2,1954. This is the only feature of the Sunbeam toaster with which, we are concerned in the present litigation, narrowing our consideration to whether defendant’s patent infringes plaintiff’s automatic terminating device. The real difference lies in the “electric eye” of the plaintiff vs. defendant’s “bimetallic element” and while plaintiff admits that defendant’s toaster does not utilize the electric eye in the strict sense of those words, he claims that the “light sensitive element” disclosed in his patent, and used to automatically terminate the toasting cycle, is broad enough to include the “bi-metallic element” or the thermostat utilized by defendant’s toaster to achieve the same results. Plaintiff claims that in addition to the foregoing, and of greater importance in determining the question of infringement, is the fact that defendant’s bi-metallic element, as does plaintiff’s electric eye, utilizes radiation reflected from the toasting surface as the controlling factor in detecting the point to stop the toasting operation. Both .statements are denied by defendant which, in turn, insists that plaintiff is limited by the claims of his patent to a “light sensitive element” solely responsive to the color of the bread being toasted which does not include defendant’s bi-metallic element; and furthermore that Sunbeam’s toaster’s thermostat responds to heat emitted from the bread and does not operate in response to col- or of the bread nor to reflected radiation as does plaintiff’s device.

We think these two issues may be stated as follows:

(a) Does defendant’s thermostat, or-bi-metallic element, operate in response to either the .surface color of the bread or radiation reflected from its surface; and

(b) Are the words “light sensitive element” broad enough to include the thermostat used in defendant’s toaster ?

As to (a), numerous experiments were performed with the Sunbeam toaster in the presence of the court, the results of which conclusively proved to us that defendant’s thermostat does not operate in response to the surface color of the bread.

[99]*99And proof establishing that defendant’s thermostat operates in response to emitted radiation within the invisible spectrum rather than to reflected radiation within the visible spectrum was just as convincing and conclusive. Here, in fact, men admitted to be experts testified that:

(1) Non-metallic solids such as bread have a magnitude of emissivity in the neighborhood of from 90 to 95 per cent if radiation in the infra-red spectrum (heat) with a temperature range between that of a normal room and 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit is focused upon their surface;

(2) The temperature of heating elements in bread toasters is between 1,-400 and 1,600 degrees Fahrenheit while the toasting operation is in progress and the radiant energy produced is almost entirely within the infra-red or invisible spectrum while that within the visible spectrum is quite negligible or insignificant ; and

(3) Insofar as the reflective quality of a substance is concerned, it is either a diffuse or a specular reflector. The latter has a high reflectivity while the former has a low reflectivity.

Bread falls in the category of Substances which have a low reflectivity.

In addition, the experts also testified that since emissivity increases as temperature rises and reflectivity diminishes as the surface grows darker, the Sunbeam toaster must operate in response to radiation in the invisible spectrum emitted from the bread slice and not from visible reflected radiation. So in view of all testimony we find:

(a) Of the total amount of radiated energy which hits the thermostat of defendant’s toaster 95 per cent is emitted from the bread slice and is within the infra-red or invisible spectrum while only 5 per cent is reflected radiation; and

(b) The thermostat in defendant’s toaster operates in response to heat emitted from the surface of the bread.

We come now to the second question (b) to-wit — are the words “light sensitive element” used in plaintiff’s patent claims, when properly construed, broad enough to encompass defendant’s thermostat? While determination of this issue depends somewhat upon what is meant by “light sensitive element” and for that reason may be characterized as a question of fact, the primary issue is one of construction and can best be dealt with in our conclusions of law.

Conclusions of Law

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Bluebook (online)
145 F. Supp. 97, 111 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 176, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tweedale-v-sunbeam-corp-mied-1956.