Victor Talking Mach. Co. v. American Graphophone Co.

125 F. 30, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5072
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 13, 1903
DocketNo. 1,093
StatusPublished

This text of 125 F. 30 (Victor Talking Mach. Co. v. American Graphophone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victor Talking Mach. Co. v. American Graphophone Co., 125 F. 30, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5072 (D. Conn. 1903).

Opinion

PLATT, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity seeking to restrain defendant from an alleged infringement of letters patent No. 679,896, issued August 6, 1901, to Eldridge R. Johnson, and subsequently assigned to the plaintiff, for an “improvement in sound-boxes for talking machines.” The claims sued upon are as follows:

“(1) In a sound-box, a spring-mounting for the stylus-bar, comprising a thin piece of tempered steel having its ends twisted in opposite directions, and secured to the sound-box casing, and its intermediate portion secured to the stylus-bar.
“(2) In a sound-box, a spring-mounting for the stylus-bar, comprising a strip of .tempered steel having screw holes provided in each end, and the said ends twisted or sprung in opposite directions, so as to render the intermediate portion extremely sensitive, the said intermediate portion being rigidly secured to the stylus-bar and the end portions to the sound-box casing, thereby rendering the stylus-bar sensitive, for the purpose described.
“(3) The combination with the sound-box casing, a diaphragm mounted therein, a stylus-bar mounted in an opening formed in the lower wall of the casing, a tempered steel spring secured to the said stylus-bar, having its ends twisted in opposite directions, and secured to the sound-box casing on each side of the stylus-bar.
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“(5) In a sound-box for talking machines, a spring-mounting for the stylus-bar, comprising small tempered steel fingers extending from each side of the stylus-bar transversely thereto, each of said fingers being twisted or sprung in opposite directions and having their free ends rigidly secured to the sound-box casing.
“(6)' In a sound-box for talking machines, an annular casing having a radially-disposed aperture provided in its wall, a stylus-holder adapted to pass through said aperture, small tempered steel fingers extending from the said stylus-bar on each side thereof, each of said fingers being bent or sprung in opposite directions, and having their free ends secured to the sound-box casing, for the purpose described.
“(7) The combination with the sound-box casing, a diaphragm mounted therein, a stylus-bar mounted in an opening formed in the lower wall of the casing, a wire connection rigid in the direction of its length secured to the diaphragm and to the stylus-bar, a tempered steel spring secured to the said stylus-bar having its ends twisted in opposite directions, and secured to the sound-box casing on each side of the stylus-bar.
“(8) The combination with the sound-box casing, a diaphragm mounted therein, a stylus-har mounted in the casing, a wire connection rigid in the direction of its length secured at one end to the stylus-bar, a head formed on the other end of said wire adapted to an opening in the diaphragm, means for securing said head to the diaphragm, and a tempered steel spring secured to the stylus-bar having twisted ends, the said twisted ends being secured to the sound-box casing on each side of the said stylus-bar.
“(9) The combination with the sound-box casing, a diaphragm mounted therein, a stylus-bar mounted in the casing, a wire connection rigid in the direction of its length secured at one end to the stylus-bar, a head formed on the other end of said wire adapted to an opening in the diaphragm, means for securing said head to the diaphragm, a film or seal of wax applied over the said connection, and a tempered steel spring secured to the stylus-bar having twisted ends, the said twisted ends being secured to the sound-box casing on each side of the said stylus-bar.
“(10) The combination with the sound-box casing, a diaphragm mounted therein, a stylus-bar mounted in the casing, a wire connection rigid in the direction of its length secured at one end to the stylus-bar, a head formed on the other end of said wire adapted to an opening in the diaphragm, a flange formed on the outer end of said head, a washer secured on said head [32]*32adapted to bear against the opposite face of tbe diaphragm, a film or seal of wax applied over tbe said connection for preventing the same from rattling, and a tempered-steel spring secured to the stylus-bar having twisted ends, the said twisted ends being secured to the sound-box casing on each side of the said stylus-bar.
“(11) The combination with the sound-box casing, a diaphragm mounted therein so as to be free to move throughout its entire area, a stylus-bar loosely mounted within the casing, a wire connection rigid in the direction of its length secured to the stylus-bar, a head formed on the opposite end of said wire, means for positively connecting this head to the diaphragm, a seal of wax applied over said connection, and a thin twisted spring secured at its middle portion to the stylus-bar and having its twisted ends secured to the sound-box casing on each side of said stylus-bar, for the purpose described.”
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“(16) A sound-box for talking machines comprising a easing made in two sections adapted to fit one within the other, the said two sections being driven or shrunk together, a diaphragm confined at its periphery between the two sections, yielding gaskets provided on each side of the said diaphragm; the said parts being adjusted so as to prevent the said diaphragm from rattling, yet leaving it free to vibrate throughout its entire area; a stylus-bar mounted within the casing; a tempered-steel spring having -twisted ends, which are secured to the casing on each side of the diaphragm, and having its intermediate part secured to- the stylus-bar; a wire connection permanently secured to the stylus-bar at one end and to the diaphragm at its other, and a wax seal applied over the connection to the diaphragm, substantially as described.”

The defense is noninfringement.

It is well at the outset to make a few general observations. A serious contention is on foot between these parties and in the court for this district as to their respective rights in and to a certain type of talking machine which makes use of the disk record and a so-called “zig-zag movement.” It cannot be expected that at the present juncture I will invade the darkened recesses for light upon that controversy. Consequently, it is not persuasive to charge the defendant with producing a “Chinese copy” of the plaintiff’s construction. It is a somewhat peculiar method of attaining a coveted position to attack the defendant with a contention which, if successful, could only result in lopping off an unimportant branch, while the ax is withheld from performing its function in a process which might result in severing the very trunk of the tree itself.

In the case at bar the contention of the parties, as I gather it from the oral and written arguments, is chiefly confined to the question as to whether in fact the defendant uses a spring-mounting for a stylus-bar, which embodies in its construction “a thin piece of tempered steel having its ends twisted in opposite directions.” The quotation is taken from claim I. All manner of changes are rung upon the language in the later claims, but through them all the main idea which these words express can be traced. To find out what the inventor meant, we must go to his specifications.

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Bluebook (online)
125 F. 30, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-talking-mach-co-v-american-graphophone-co-ctd-1903.