Western Union Tel. Co. v. Baltimore & O. Tel. Co.

25 F. 30

This text of 25 F. 30 (Western Union Tel. Co. v. Baltimore & O. Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Baltimore & O. Tel. Co., 25 F. 30 (circtsdny 1885).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

The complainant moves for a preliminary injunction to restrain defendant from infringing the second claim of reissued letters patent No. 10,035, division G, granted to Joseph B. Stearns, assignor to complainant, for “duplex telegraph apparatus.” The motion is resisted upon the ground that there was no patentable novelty in the allegéd invention, and that the reissue is void because it includes that part of the invention which had been abandoned to the public by the delay on the part of the patentee in applying for a reissue. The original patent was granted to Stearns, May 14, 1872; it was reissued April 1, 1873, (No. 5,344,) and was again reissued in divisions A, B, and G, February 7, 1882.

No doubt whatever is entertained that Stearns was the first and [31]*31original inventor of a very valuable improvement in duplex telegraphy, which obviated a serious practical difficulty in duplex transmission over long lines, caused by the interference of the return charge arising from static induction with the operation of the receiving instrument at the transmitting end. He did this by a new combination of old instrumentalities. He added to the existing duplex telegraph a condenser, so placed that it would receive a charge from the battery equivalent to the charge which the line at the same time received, and would discharge that charge around one coil of the relay at the samo time the line discharged its charge around tho other coil, so that the armature between the two coils would not be moved by the discharge from the line. As is stated in the affidavit of one of tho defendants’ experts, “no one before Stearns had endeavored to obviate the effects of the return current due to the static induction upon the receiving instrument in duplex telegraphy with the exception of Varley; and the device used by Varley was not a condenser, nor was it in any sense the known equivalent of a condenser. ”

The invention thus made by Stearns was fully and clearly described in the specification of the original patent. The claim of that patent upon one construction may be deemed to have been narrower than the real invention. This, however, would affect only the question of infringement. A new and valuable invention was described and claimed.

It is not necessary, in considering the first objection to the validity of the patent, to inquire into the prior state of the art. The defendants’ expert says: “The claim does not appear to cover any more than the patentee had a right to claim in view of the state of the art at that date.” This concessjon renders such an inquiry unnecessary, hut the concession is abundantly fortified by the facts as they appear upon this motion.

The real question in the case would seem to be whether the reissue, so far as it affects tho claim infringed, is void. The claim involved is as follows:

“The combination, in a duplex telegraph, substantially as hereinbefore set forth, of a battery, a main line, and artificial or compensating line, a rheostat in said artificial line, and a condenser having its terminals, respectively, connected with said artificial lines and the earth.”

The claim of the original patent reads as follows:

“In tele rraph apparatus for double transmission, the combination, with the relay at .each station, of a condenser, for tho purpose of neutralizing the effect of the return current duo to the static induction of the line, as set forth.”

If the case turned solely upon the question whether the claim of the reissue is broader than that of the original, a sufficient doubt would be suggested to require a motion for an injunction to be denied, because a fair doubt is sufficient to defeat such a motion.

Tiie claim of the original may fairly be construed as limited to a combination in which a condenser is employed in connection with the [32]*32relay at each station upon a duplex telegraph line. Of course a duplex telegraph implies a line with a receiving and transmitting station at each end of it. The drawings of the patent show only one end of such a line, and the specification of the original describes the apparatus in detail, including a condenser, a battery, and a branch circuit or compensating line with a rheostat in it at that end of the line shown in the drawing. It may fairly be assumed that-the claim was expressed in-the terms used in order to exclude any implication that the invention consisted-in employing the condenser at one end of the line or at one station only. The real invention of Stearns did not require his condenser to be employed in combination with the rest of the apparatus at both ends of the line. If a condenser were used with the apparatus at one station only, the static effect of induction would be neutralized at that end of the line only. The combination would be operative and advantageous to this extent; but it would be less so than if it were used in the apparatus at each station. If condensers were placed at both stations in the required combination, signals at both could be more rapidly and perfectly received.

It admits of fair argument whether it would not have been a fair construction of the claim of the original to interpret it as meaning the combination of a .condenser with the two relays of the duplex system. It would have been the duty of a court to construe the claim in such a way as to protect the real invention unless the language of the specification and the claim would preclude such a construction. The case does not turn solely on this point, however, because within 11 months from the granting of the original patent it was surrendered, and a reissue granted, which contained this claim:

“Claim 2. In an apparatus for double transmission, the combination of a condenser with a branch or compensating circuit, whereby the effect of static induction upon the receiving relay or instrument is counteracted, substantially as and for the purpose herein specified. ”

The specification was amended by inserting as follows:

“As the apparatus at each terminal station is similar, the diagram represents the apparatus at one station only.”

In this claim every unnecessary element of the combination is eliminated. It covers the invention in the broadest form in which it can be stated. Limited, as its terms must be, by the descriptive matter of the specification, and read in view of the prior state of the art, the claim was not too broad. It- does not require a condenser at each station as a constituent. In other respects, as is argued for the defendant, the claim is narrower in terms than that in the original, because it restricts the combination to one in which the condenser is employed with “a branch or compensating circuit.” If this claim included as one of its constituents, by fair interpretation, “a condenser having its terminals, respectively, connected with said artifi[33]*33cial lines and the earth,” it was obviously broader than the claim which is now in controversy.

The claim in controversy is not enlarged by reason of any undue enlargement of the descriptive part of the specification of the reissue. Mr. Renwick, an expert for the defendant, in his affidavit, says that he agrees with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-tel-co-v-baltimore-o-tel-co-circtsdny-1885.