Western Electric Co. v. Wallerstein

60 F.2d 723, 15 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2589
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1932
DocketNo. 433
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 723 (Western Electric Co. v. Wallerstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 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. Wallerstein, 60 F.2d 723, 15 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2589 (2d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

These appeals by.both plaintiffs and defendant involve an infringement of five patents. The American Telephone & Telegraph Company owns the patents; the Western Electric Company, Inc., a subsidiary of the owning company, manufactures under the patents; the Electrical Research Products, Inc., a wholly owned talking motion picture subsidiary of the Western Electric Company, and the Western Electric Company, are exclusive licensees and proper parties plaintiffs. Western Electric Co. v. Pacent Reproducer Corp’n, 42 F.(2d) 116 (C. C. A. 2). The defendant is "an exhibitor of sound pictures, and owns a theater in Buffalo, N. Y.

The patents relate to sound transmission and communication, particularly as now found in the development and reproduction of sound pictures. In improving its telephone service on transcontinental lines, the American Telephone & Telegraph Company used amplifiers, or repeaters, as they are sometimes termed, and met its best success by greatly improving the De Forest three-electrode vacuum tube. De Forest had added the third element or grid to the Fleming valve in 1906, and had used that device to some extent as a detector of radio waves; he had made little progress with it as an amplifier prior to 1912. The problem of amplification was to reproduce without distortion the input of the amplifier in its output, greatly increased in energy. Speech has been found to be extremely complicated; each of the ordinary sounds being composed of many frequencies which must he accurately reproduced. The range of audible frequencies is from 16 to 16,000 vibrations per second. For sound pictures and publie address systems, substantially from 30 to 5,000 cycles must be reproduced without distortion in order to give the high quality which is known to-day. Greater power is needed to drive the loud speakers of these systems than is required for radio or telephone. The lack of faithful reproduction would be so accentuated under certain eonditions as to destroy the utility of the systems. The success of sound pictures was due solely to high quality reproduction; that is, without distortions.

Each of the patents in suit relates to circuits in which the three-electrode vacuum tube is used. It is claimed that all of the inventions may be used to advantage in a single amplifier in which the final output contains the integrated result and combined advantages of all the inventions.

Lowenstein Patent.

The Lowenstein patent, No. 1,231,764, for a telephone relay, was filed April 24,1912, and issued July 3, 1917. Claims 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7 are relied' upon, and claims 1 and 7 have been selected as typical. The court below found this patent invalid.

This invention consisted essentially in the discovery that, if the grid of a vacuum tube amplifier is made to operate by potential and not by current, the distortion produced in the input circuit by current (and reproduced in amplified form in the output circuit) could be prevented, and that this restriction to potential operation could be attained by the application to the grid of a suitable initial negative potential on which the signals to he amplified are superposed.

Lowenstein disclosed a telephone system connected to a vacuum tube amplifier by a transformer 12-13. One terminal of the transformer 13 is connected to the grid 18, of the vacuum tube and the other terminal to a battery 21. This is the input circuit. The telephone receiver 24 is connected to the vacuum tube by the transformer 22-23. The transformer is connected to the plate 17 and to the battery 21. This is the output circuit. The filament 16 of the vacuum tube is heated by the battery 19, and the temperature of the filament is adjusted by a resistance 20. The battery 19 is called the “A battery.” The battery which supplies current for the plate eir-[725]*725cuit is called the “B battery.” The inventiou claimed for Lowenstein is that he inserted a third battery in the grid circuit and connected its negative terminal to the grid in order to make the grid at all times more negative than any part of the filament. This prevents the grid from becoming positive and causing current to flow in the grid circuit. This negative potential, applied to the grid by the C battery bad to be greater than the most positive signal voltage that would be impressed on the grid. The negative potential applied 'to the grid by the C battery had also to be maintained more negative than the potential of any part of the filament. If the grid were more positive than any part of the filament, it would still compete with the plate by attracting some of the electrons which should pass to the plate, and would thus fail to prevent the flow of current and harmful consumption of energy in the external or grid circuit.

The reason for its use is stated in an article by the defendant’s expert Bowles in Popular Radio, published before this controversy arose, in which he said: “Much distortion is introduced when the grid of a valve is not properly biased (negatively) due to the current taken by the grid. A reversed C battery will cause a set to be almost inoperative.”

Thus the primary object of Lowenstein was to eliminate distortion. His specifications show that the distortion which he sought to eliminate was that which arises in the circuits as distinguished from that arising in the tube itself. He bad ascertained by experiment that relays which function according to current values cannot remedy this distortion. Therefore he sought a way to make Kis relay function without permitting the (low of any current; i. e., according to terminal voltages as distinguished from current values. The court below stated: “The controversy as to the scope and meaning of this patent arises out of the construction to be given to the following paragraph of the specification: ‘The potentials created in secondary 13 are made to control the current flowing through the ionic field and originating in battery 21 by connecting the one terminal of coil 13 to the modulating member 18 and the other terminal of said coil to a point on the battery 21, which is located ultranegatively relative to the negative point of the battery connected to the filament.’ The plaintiffs’ position is that these; words must be interpreted as meaning that the grid was connected to a point on the battery 21, more negative than any part of the filament. The defendant’s position is that a grid biasing potential, more negative than the most negative potential point of the filament, is not disclosed.”

This controversy arises because the diagram of Lowenstein does not show which way the filament of the A battery is connected, and therefore it cannot be determined which is the negative end of the filament. If the battery 21 is connected to the negative side of battery 19, then the grid would necessarily be negative to all parts of the filament. If the battery 21 is connected to the positive side of battery 19, then the grid would be negative with respect to all parts of the filament only if the C battery had a higher voltage than the A battery. The diagram does not help in determining these things. In tlie specification as originally filed, Lowenstein stated that the terminal of the transformer 13 was connected to a point on the battery 21, preferably located ultranegatively relative to the negative point of the battery connected to the filament. The meaning which Lowenstein intended to give to the term “filtran egative” appears in the prosecution of the case in a response under date of August 6, 1914, by Lowenstein to an action by tbe Patent Office, citing Von lieben as an anticipation.

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60 F.2d 723, 15 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-electric-co-v-wallerstein-ca2-1932.