Western Electric Co. v. Capital Telephone & Telegraph Co.

86 F. 769, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2991
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedMarch 29, 1898
DocketNo. 12,129
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 F. 769 (Western Electric Co. v. Capital Telephone & Telegraph Co.) 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
Western Electric Co. v. Capital Telephone & Telegraph Co., 86 F. 769, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2991 (circtndca 1898).

Opinion

DE HAVEN, District Judge.

Upon the calling of this case for final hearing, the complainant moved to exclude from the record the deposition of Charles H. Aldrich, and certain documents printed in the defendants’ record, and specifically referred to in the motion. The grounds'of the motion, as stated, are:

“That said deposition was improperly and irregularly taken and filed, and is wholly irrelevant and-immaterial, and that said documents were not proven, or properly offered, and are incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial.”

The deposition was not taken within the time prescribed or permitted by rule 69 (equity rules), and the complainant made this objection at the time of the taking of the deposition. The motion to exclude this deposition must therefore be granted, as the rule referred to is imperative, that testimony taken after the time prescribed shall not be read at the time of the hearing. Wooster v. Clark, 9 Fed. 854. Upon the other branch of the motion, nothing further need be said, than that some of the documents referred to are incompetent as evidence, not having been properly proven, and others are not relevant to the issues made by the pleadings, and one of them, the purported agreement between the American Bell Telephone Company and the Western Electric Company, does not appear to have been formally offered in evidence, nor accompanied by proof of its authenticity. The motion will be granted, and the defendants will be allowed an exception to this ruling.

Having disposed of this preliminary question, I proceed to the consideration of the case on the merits.

This is a suit in equity for an alleged infringement of patent No. 252,576, granted on January 17, 1882, to the Western Electric Manufacturing Company, as the assignee of Leroy B. Firman, who is alleged in the bill of complaint to have been the original and first inventor of the invention described in said letters patent, and entitled “Multiple Switchboard for Telephone Exchanges.” The complainant asks for an injunction and an accounting. The defendants, in their answer, deny that Firman was the original or first inventor of tha multiple switchboard, and, among other matters, allege that:

“On November 29, A. D. 1879, there was filed in the patent office of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland a provisional specification.- and on the 28th [771]*771day of May, 1880. a complete specification, under patent No. 4,903, of tlio year 1879, granted to Charles E. Scribner, and sealed on May 14,1880, fully disclosing and describing a system of multiple switchboards, in which the same telephone lines are connected to the first of the multiple switchboards, and thence to respectively corresponding blocks in (lie second, and so on through the series, so that any two of the lines can be connected together on either of the multiple switchboards as specified in the first and principal claim of the complainant’s patent; thus anticipating and carrying into effect the useful functions which constitute the alleged grounds and meritorious feature upon which the complainant’s patent was granted.”

In respect to the alleged infringement the defendants aver:

“That they have never at any time made or sold any multiple switchboards of any kind, character, or description whatsoever; but the defendant corporation, the Capital Telephone & Telegraph Company, has used in its business of conducting a telephone exchange a multiple switchboard manufactured under, and distinctly claimed and patented and fully protected by, various and sundry letters patent of the united States granted to Thomas J. Perrin on the 7th day of April, .1885, and at other dates, and not in accordance with the description or claims of the complainant’s patent, and that such multiple switchboard used by the defendant corporation follows the principles disclosed and described in the expired United Slates letters patent oí Charles E. Scribner, and in said expired English patent oí Charles E. Scribner, more nearly and closely than those defined and claimed in the complainant’s patent.”

The questions arising in the case have been carefully and elaborately presented in the evidence submitted, and also in the arguments of counsel.

1. The claim of the defendants that the alleged invention of Firman described in the patent issued ¡0 complainant was anticipated by tbe British patent, No. 4,903, issued to Charles E. Scribner, may be disposed of in a few words. While the latter patent antedates that of the patent in suit, still the evidence shows that Firman had reduced his alleged invention of the multiple switchboard to practice early in the year 1879, not later than March of that year, several months prior to the date of the Scribner patent, and also before the first step taken to secure that patent. This patent therefore cannot be held to anticipate the alleged invention of Firman.

2. It is, however, insisted by the defendants that, in view of the prior state of the art, there is a want of novelty in the alleged invention described in the patent in suit; that it exhibits nothing more than mechanical skill, and is a mere duplication of old devices; and that claim 2 of (he patent is void because it is an aggregation of old devices, and not a legitimate combination. In order to clearly understand the force of these objections to its validity, it will be necessary to state with more particularity the nature of the alleged invention described in complainant’s patent. The claims of the patent are:

“(1) The combination of two or more switchboards at the central office of a telephone exchange system, to each of which the same telephone lines are connected, whereby any two of these lines may be connected together upon either of the multiple switchboards. (2) The combination of two or more multiple boards, to which the lines of the terminal stations are connected, and means, as described, whereby the switchman may readily ascertain what lines are in use.”

The device covered by complainant’s patent is shown by the drawing filed with the specifications of the patent, and of which the following figure is a copy:

[772]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 F. 769, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-electric-co-v-capital-telephone-telegraph-co-circtndca-1898.