Western Electric Co. v. Wallerstein

51 F.2d 529, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1533
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJuly 18, 1931
DocketNo. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 529 (Western Electric Co. v. Wallerstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York 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, 51 F.2d 529, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1533 (W.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

This is a patent infringement suit in which infringement of patents to Lowenstein, Mathes, Colpitts, Arnold, and Blattner is. urged.

The defendant operates the Broadway Theatre located in Buffalo. The infringing apparatus is a sound-on-dise talking motion picture reproducing mechanism, which was installed in the defendant’s theatre some time prior to May 7, 1929. The infringement-complained of is the use of two type 10 and two type 11 audio amplifiers manufactured by Paeent Electric Company, Inc.

The five patents were issued to the American Telephone & Telegraph Company, one of the plaintiffs. Another of. the plaintiffs is the Western Electric Company, wMch is the manufacturing subsidiary of the Telephone Company. It is controlled by the Telephone Company through its ownersMp of more than 98 per cent, of the capital stock of the Electric Company. The third plaintiff, Electrical Research Products, Inc., is a subsidiary of the Western Electric Company, which owns all of its stock and which is engaged in the commercial distribution of sound picture apparatus and some other commercial products manufactured by the Western Electric Company.

Western Electric and Products are the exclusive licensees of the Telephone Company under the patents in suit.

The defense herein was undertaken by Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., for the reason that Warner Brothers control the chain of Stanley theatres which have installed Paeent talking picture reproducing systems similar to that of the defendant herein.

The patents involved are of extreme importance, some of them, perhaps, going to the very heart of the sound moving picture industry, although at the time of the conception of these inventions their association with the reproduction of pictures was not even remotely imagined.

Rather, the early researches of the Telephone Company were directed to the improvement of transcontinental telephonic communication. Such a line was completed in July, 1914, and was open to the public in January, 1915. Repeaters were required for satisfactory long-distance telephone service. Such development was undertaken by the Telephone Company as early as 1903, but it was not until the De Forest three-electrode vacuum tube, and the associated' circuit in wMch it was to be used, had been developed, that marked progress was made.

Extraordinary progress in the art of sound reproduction followed De Forest’s disclosure of the three-electrode vacuum tube. The problems involved were intricate. Sound is composed of a wide range of frequencies. A range of frequencies audible to the human [531]*531ear extends from about 16 to 16,000 vibrations per second. The piano range is estimated to be from 30 to 5,130 cycles per second.

It is not necessary, as appears from the record herein, to reproduce so wide a range for effective telephone communication; but it is necessary to embody such wide range for successful reproduction of sound pictures and kindred purposes. In other words, much greater power is required to drive the loud speakers employed for public broadcasting and sound picture reproduction than is necessary for radio or telephonic reception, for the reason that the output of these loud speakers must fill large auditoriums and large outdoor areas. Distortion in the reproduction of the sound must, therefore, be zealously guarded against.

It is in these large power applications of audio amplifiers that the inventions, which are the subject-matter of the patents, are concerned, though, of course, they may be used in other fields.

All of the inventions relate to circuits in which the three-electrode tube is employed. These inventions are capable of conjoint use, and are, therefore, properly embodied in this one cause of action.

The scientific principles and the highly technical and abstruse problems involved, at all times presented to the court an intellectual challenge. It is with a feeling of marked appreciation that the court acknowledges the assistance and co-operation given throughout the long trial by counsel and experts alike.

Patent No. 1,231,764, issued to Fritz Lowenstein July 3, 1917, on an application filed April 24, 1912, and renewed April 26, 1917, is for an improvement in telephone relays. With the exception of the third claim, all of the claims are alleged to be infringed. They are resisted on the ground of invalidity, and also because of an alleged estoppel arising out of a license from the Electrical Research Products, Inc., to the Yitaphone Corporation.

The plaintiffs urge claims 1 and 7 as typical, and, therefore, attention may be focused upon them. They read as follows:

“1. Telephone apparatus comprising the combination, with a talking circuit, of a suitably energized relay circuit including an anode and a cathode separated by a conductive gap, a modulating device interposed in said gap and electrically connected with said talking circuit, means for impressing upon said modulating device a potential more negative than that of said cathode, and a translating device arranged to be energized from said relay circuit.”
“7. The combination, with an audion having its anode and cathode included in a suitably energized circuit, of means for impressing upon the audion grid a potential more negative than that of the audion cathode.”

This patent was adjudicated in the Southern district of New York, and these claims, the only claims therein involved, were held valid. Radio Corporation of America et al. v. J. H. Bunnell & Co., Inc., (D. C.) 25 F.(2d) 847.

It is contended by the defendant that the result reached by Judge Winslow, who decided that ease, was due to errors of fact.

The object of the invention was a relay whereby potential differences of incoming speech currents were sought to be maintained in the telephone receiver, with the reproduced sound composed of waves of the same frequencies as those of the incoming sounds, and having the same relative amplitudes as in the original sound waves.

In the- long distance telephone art as then known to Lowenstein, he found that under certain conditions the speaker’s voice was plainly heard in the receiver, while at other times it was unintelligible. This defect he ascribed to the fact that speech currents of higher frequencies become attenuated to a greater relative extent than those of low frequency. Such results were due to electrical properties of a long line. He further observed that the distortion was but little affected by terminal conditions, and concluded that relays or receiving apparatus functioning according to current values could not remedy the distortion nor compensate for the effects; but he said terminal voltages are affected by terminal conditions, and hence argued that it was possible to select such terminal conditions as would enable the relative amplitudes of the original voltages to be well maintained at the incoming end of the line. He reasoned' that a relay apparatus which functions according to terminal voltages was well adapted for the production of receiver operating currents of the desired absolute strengths, and in the relative strengths required for successful operation of the receiver.

Referring to the drawing, we need consider only the circuits concerned with the three-electrode tube 14. The controversy as to the scope and the meaning of this patent [532]

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51 F.2d 529, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-electric-co-v-wallerstein-nywd-1931.