Union Gas-Engine Co. v. Doak

88 F. 86, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2782
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedMay 10, 1898
DocketNo. 11,947
StatusPublished

This text of 88 F. 86 (Union Gas-Engine Co. v. Doak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Gas-Engine Co. v. Doak, 88 F. 86, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2782 (circtndca 1898).

Opinion

MORROW, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit for the infringement of letters patent No. 430,505, issued on June 17, 1890, to Mora M. Barrett and John F. Daly. The Union Gas-Engine Company, one of the complainants, appears to be the successor in interest of all the rights, title, and interest of the Pacific Gas-Engine Company, to whom the patentees, Barrett and Daly, had assigned their patent. The patent was issued for a new and useful' improvement in gas engines. The improvement consists in a device or mechanism for [87]*87igniting the gas used in gas engines, by means of an electric spark. In their specification, the patentees thus describe the invention:

“The present improvements are applied to gas engines oí the upright kind, and they relate to novel valve mechanism for operating the exhaust valve, to a novel electric Ignitor on an open circuit for exploding the charges of gas in the cylinder, and, in connection therewith, a current interrupter adapted to break the circuit at every alternate revolution of the crank shaft.”

Then follows a description of the improvements with reference to the drawings accompanying the specification.

[88]*88That part wbicb relates to tbe claims alleged to have been infringed is as follows:

“S and X are the two electrodes or contact points of the Ignitor. The part S is a flexible yielding tongue of metal fixed at one end in an insulated plug, S':\ and setting through the side of the cylinder into the space above the piston; and the part X is a finger or projection on a short rock shaft, T*, that sets through and has movement in an insulated hearing, T^, in the side of the cylinder. Hocking movement is given to this shaft by an arm, U, on the outer end of an eccentric rod, V, and an eccentric, V*, fast on the crank shaft. The finger, T, sets in line with and in close relation to the free end of the yielding tongue. By the rocking movement of the shaft it is pressed against and drawn over the end of the tongue with a wiping movement, first in a downward direction, and then in an upward direction, with equal pressure in both movements. One wire from the battery being connected at X to the rock shaft, and the other one, at Y*, to the tongue, the circuit is closed, and then broken, by the contact of the rock-shaft finger with the tongue, and the subsequent separation when the finger clears the tongue. As thus constructed for operation, this ignitor is found to produce a better quality of spark than is usually made by contact points or electrodes that work with a simple contact without a rubbing or wiping movement of one upon the other. The yielding tongue also' retains its shape for a much longer time than the tongues or springs in other ignitors of the kind where the contact and pressure of one part against the other is from one side or in one direction only. In connection with these parts, provision is made for cutting off the current at every alternate upstroke of the piston when contact between the two electrodes is made; but no spark is required, the object of which is to prevent waste and economize the battery power. * * *”

Four claims are made, of wbicb tbe second and third are in controversy. Claim No. 2 is as follows:

“An electric ignitor for gas engines, consisting of a flexible tongue forming one electrode or terminal, and an oscillating finger forming the other terminal, and adapted by its movements to act with a wiping movement against the flexible terminal, first in one direction, or downward, and in the contrary direction.”

Claim No. 3 is as follows:

“The combination of the yielding tongue, S, shaft, T*, carrying a finger or projection, and mechanism giving said shaft rocking movement, by which the finger is drawn against and off the end of the yielding tongue first in one direction, and then in the contrary direction.”

The specification, claims, and testimony introduced in the case show that tbe improvement claimed consists in a mechanism which produces what is termed a wiping or reciprocating motion; that is, one electrode, which is fixed to the shaft, wipes or rubs against tbe flexible and yielding electrode, thereby producing an electric spark, which ignites the gas in the explosion chamber of a gas en gine, causes an explosion, and furnishes tbe motive power. According to one of the witnesses, “the wiping spark is when one electrode comes in contact with the other, and then is broken with a wiping or rubbing motion.” Tbe advantage of the wiping motion over other movements is that the electrode is always clean, and the current passes better, and creates a bigger spark. There are two wiping or rubbing movements, one rotating, and the other reciprocating; that is, moving back and forth.- Another advantage of the reciprocating movement over the rotating one is that it has a tendency to keep the spring to which the flexible and yielding electrode is attached straight, thereby prolonging the period of its serviceability, whereas the tendency of the rotating movement is-[89]*89that the flexible and yielding electrode is habitually bent in one direction, thereby softening it; and it becomes more and more bent until the contact electrodes fail to touch, from which it must result that no spark can be produced. In short, the value of the improvement consists in the device which produces the wiping movement, instead of the rotating movement, with the results above set forth.

The defendant, in his answer, sets up anticipation and want of invention. He relies upon the following prior patents to support the first defense, viz.: (1) Reissued United States letters patent No. 9,846, dated August 23, 1881, issued to J. P. Tirrell and George T. Pinkham, entitled “Apparatus for Lighting and Extinguishing Gas by Electricity”; (2) United States letters patent No. 272,004, issued to H. j. Warren, dated February 6, 1883, entitled “Electric Gas-Lighting Burners”; (3) United States letters patent No. 333,336, dated December 29, 1885, issued to Daniel S. Regan; (4) United States letters patent No. 368,445, dated August 16, 1887, issued to Cyrus W. Baldwin; (5) United States letters patent No. 387,167, dated July 31, 1888, issued to Julig & Ewald; (6) British letters patent No. 4,736, of 1884; (7) British letters patent No. 11,448, of 1888; (8) German patent No. 43,446. These patents all throw light upon the state of the art with respect to the ignition of gas by means of electric sparking, and the application of this principle to the ignition of gas in gas engines. The patent issued to J. P. Tirrell and George T. Pinkham, No. 9,846, on August 23, 1881, and denominated “Apparatus for Lighting and Extinguishing Gas by Electricity,” shows that the idea of igniting gas by electric sparking produced by a wiping or reciprocating motion between two electrodes was well known and understood, and, as applied to the lighting of gas used in houses, streets, etc., worked successfully. The patent issued to Henry J. Warren, No. 272,004, on February 6, 1883, for an improvement in electric gas-lighting burners, further exemplifies and illustrates this idea of electrical sparking produced by a reciprocating or wiping movement, as above stated. There was nothing new, therefore, in the application of the principle of electric sparking co the ignition of gas used as a motive power in gas engines. But It is a well-established doctrine of the law of patents that it is not the result attained by a patentable device or mechanism which is patentable, but that the subject of a patent is the device or mechanical means by which the desired result is secured. Carver v.

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88 F. 86, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-gas-engine-co-v-doak-circtndca-1898.