Wabash Corp. v. Ross Electric Corp.

89 F. Supp. 720, 85 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 68, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4040
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 27, 1950
DocketCiv. No. 2430
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 F. Supp. 720 (Wabash Corp. v. Ross Electric Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Corp. v. Ross Electric Corp., 89 F. Supp. 720, 85 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 68, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4040 (E.D.N.Y. 1950).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

This is an action for the infringement of two patents issued to Cornelis Korver; one, No. 2,115,423 on April 26, 1938 for a method and device for transporting wires; and the second, No. 2,162,847, issued June 20th, 1939, for a photoflash lamp, on an application originally filed as part of the application for the former patent and later divided therefrom.

The former patent will be referred to as the process patent and the latter as the product patent.

The defendants deny infringement and allege invalidity of the patents. In the process patent, claims 1 to 6 inclusive, and claim 10 are relied on; and all three claims of the product patent are involved.

Despite the division of the two Korver applications resulting from the action of the Patent Office, the two patents are verjr closely related. In the effort to produce a photo-flash lamp which would avoid the difficulties encountered in the prior art, Korver devised a method for mechanically filling the bulb. Prior to Korver the art had known only manually filled flash bulbs such as that made by the General Electric Company about 1930. The bulb of that period was made pursuant to the invention of Ostermeier, described in United States patent No. 1,776,637. The Oster-meier lamp consisted of a glass bulb filled with oxygen into which had been forced thin aluminum sheet foil, so that when the current was passed into the bulb, the foil would burn with an intense light; and since the combustion occurred within the bulb, the disadvantages encountered by photographers theretofore in the use of the flash powers in an open space were overcome.

The Korver method patent describes an invention for introducing a thin wire filling into photo-flash lamps. The specification recites the difficulty of transporting through a tube a wire of small mechanical strengh, by means of a pressing or pushing action, without the use of a drawing or pulling action. So in accordance with his invention Korver provided a gaseous medium, and claimed that the wire could be distributed with great uniformity and in a curled state within the limited space. The specification also recites that in addition to transporting the wire, the gas used has a straightening action* upon the wire, so that the curling power will cause no difficulties during the travel such as might be expected when the wire touches the inner surface of the tube through which it is being transported.

Claim 2 may be taken as a fair statement of the invention. It reads: “A method of uniformly filling a hollow body closed except for a single aperture, with an internally-strained wire of small mechanical strength, comprising the steps of carrying [722]*722the wire through the aperture and into the hollow by a stream of gas'leaving through another portion of the aperture, and distributing the wire in' a curled condition and as uniformly as possible within the hollow by the recurrent flow of the gas therein.”

The defendants rely oh á number of patents of the prior art to establish that it was old before Korver to use a stream of air to transport different kinds of material into various containers, including lamp bulbs; that it was old to strain wire to make it curl, and to fill it loosely in containers so as tp effect elasticity.

The Schur patent, .No. 1,915,451, issued June 27, 1933, is for a method and means for directing and accumulating strand material. Schur deals with strand material such as “is being fabricated continuously at a high • rate of speed and where such strand material is so light that when allowed to proceed unsupported .through, the atmosphere from the fabricating means to an accumulator, air currents tend to misdirect it from the desired course”. He seeks to direct the continuous strand material through an atmospheric gap to an accumulator in a confined stream of gaseous medium which flows to that accumulator. By his invention he claimed that it becomes possible to control the direction of the strands as each strand is surrounded by a confined stream of gaseous medium. Figure 2 of this patent shows the strand material being blown through a tube by compressed air and deposited in a container. Figure 3 shows an inlet nozzle with separate openings for compressed air and for the..strand material. .The outlet nozzle is indicated in figure 4. Figure 5 is a modification in which instead of using an air jet for creating a suction at the intake end of the strand-directing tube, he taires the strand through a tube into a stationary container which is constantly being evacuated by another tube leading .therefrom to the vacuum pump. This passage may be emphasized: “The container 14 being'closed, other than communicating with the evacuating means by the tube 15 and with the atmosphere by the tube 13, produces a suction at the intake end 12, wherefrom a stream of air is caused to flow through the tube to serve as a positive carrying vehicle for the strand.” Schur explains that by the expression “strand material” he means a pulp ribbon in rolled-out condition, but adds: “it is obvious that my method is applicable to strips or ribbons which in being directed to an accumulator present difficulties similar to those encountered with strand material.”

Under cross-examination defendants’ expert Noel admitted that there was nothing in the Schur patent which mentions or refers to an internal strain in any strand material used; that there is no effort to surround the filament with gas spaces, but that on the contrary the turns of the coil are spaced as close to one another as possible, and that there are no curls or undulations in the material deposited in the spin-ing pots; and finally that the air that flows out of his pot' has no function in locating the material on the walls of the pot, or carrying it in the direction in which it comes out of the pot.

At least Schur and Korver were concerned with transporting material into a container. Nevertheless Korver went further than Schur, for his method provided for the curling of a fragile wire, which may be both temporarily strained by- and transported in a stream of,moving air; nor does Schur disclose that by reversing the direction of the air flow the material could be uniformly distributed throughout the space and locked in position. As between Schur and Korver, Korver could not have learned from Schur much beyond the principle that a stream of air could be employed to introduce certain materials into a container (but not a bulb)'.

Patent to J. A. Wolle,.No. 1,689,093, issued October 23, 1928, is for a method and apparatus for making curled wire. This inventor sought to provide a method and apparatus for making metal sponge or similar products composed of flat wires or filaments which are curled or convoluted. The specification discloses that flat wires of ribbons, while passing between flattening rolls and tension rolls, are drawn over the edge of a curling blade. The edge of this blade is sharp, and the drawing of [723]*723the flat wires or ribbons over this edge, while the wires or ribbons are under tension, produces a curling tendency in the flat wires or ribbons (Wolle patent, p. 2, column 2, 11. 116-125). The specification then continues: “The curling tendency thus produced would cause the flat wires or ribbons to immediately curl up if the wires or ribbons were free of tension.” This patent also provides for feeding the curled wires into sloping chutes to carry the wires to separate measuring receptacles.

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Bluebook (online)
89 F. Supp. 720, 85 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 68, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-corp-v-ross-electric-corp-nyed-1950.