Westinghouse Air-Brake Co. v. New York Air-Brake Co.

65 F. 99, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3119
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedDecember 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 65 F. 99 (Westinghouse Air-Brake Co. v. New York Air-Brake 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
Westinghouse Air-Brake Co. v. New York Air-Brake Co., 65 F. 99, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3119 (circtsdny 1894).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

This is an application for a preliminary injunction under three patents, viz.: No. 860,070, March 29, 3887, to George Westinghouse, Jr.; No. 376,837, January 24, 1888, to the same; and No. 393,784, December 4, 1888, to Harvey S. Park. It is unnecessary to enter into any elaborate statement of the history of the art, and of the impress left upon it by these inventions. That entire subject has been discussed with great care and set forth at great length in the former opinions of this court and of the court of appeals delivered in the earlier actions between these same parties. 59 Fed. 581; 63 Fed. 962. In those opinions it is held that the two patents 360,070 and 376,837 disclosed, the one the emergency valve, the other the supplemental piston or special motor, which, so far as the art has now progressed, appear to be both essential to the structure of a successful quick-action air brake.Both of these inventions achieved great necessities and overcame great hindrances; each is an indispensable part of the “bridge which carried railroad-car builders from failure to success”; both were products of the inventive genius of the same man; nothing anticipating either is shown; and the defense of the defendant in the former action and in this may truthfully be described in terms of another art, — by bringing the two patents into juxtaposition they seek to. short-circuit the claims, and thus dissipate the invention. This attempt failed in the former suit, wherein No. 376,837, the patent sued upon, was held-to be one of wide breadth; one as to which “a court would not be justified in adopting a narrow or astute construction which should minimize the character of the invention, leave its real scope open to trespassers, and thus be fatal to the grant.” Wherefore the court of appeals held it to be entitled to a liberal construction, with a wide range of equivalents. Although No. 360,070 was not declared upon in the [101]*101earlier suit, it urns discussed at great length, and its meritorionsness was clearly recognized. The statements of the problem to be solved as it stood prior to January, 1888, and of the contribution of 360,070 to that* solution, as they are set forth in the opinions above cited, leave no doubt that both the circuit court and the court of appeals regarded it as a patent of wide breadth; the only difficulty being to find sufficient standing room within the field it occupied to permit of according to 376,837 also the necessary breadth of construction to cover the infringing devices then before the court, and thus save to a meritorious inventor the fruits of his novel and most useful invention.

Defendant relies upon the rejection by the patent office of the original first claim of 360,070, and the substitution of the present first claim as an .abandonment of tbe fundamental broad invention therein disclosed. , When, however, the reference on which the patent office rejected the original first claim (Boyden’s patent, No. 280,285) is consulted, it is apparent that the essential change in the claim is the phrase used to differentiate 360,070, an invention to be used “in the application of the brake,” from Boyden’s invention, whose object was to provide for replenishing, “while the brake is on,” the air reservoir or brake cylinder, when the pressure is reduced by leakage, etc. There is no tiling in the file wrapper or contents to show that the patent office required or that the inventor agreed to abandon what was the great feature of his invention, — -the emergency valve, — or to give up whatever range of equivalents Ms patent might, as modified, fairly cover. Both these patents 360,070 and 376,837 are broad ones, and their claims should be construed to cover the meritorious invention they disclose, unless the language of such claims precludes such a construction. The only question really open on this motion is that of infringement.

Patent No. 360,070.

The first claim of this patent is as follows:

“(1) In a brake mechanism, the combination of a main air pipe, an auxiliary reservoir, a brake cylinder, a triple valve, and an auxiliary valve device, actuated by the piston of the triple valve and independent of the main valve thereof, for admitting air in the application of the brake directly from the main air pipe to the brake cylinder, substantially as sot forth.”

Defendant’s device has the main air pipe, an auxiliary reservoir, a brake cylinder, a triple valve, and an auxiliary valve device, independent of the main valve, for admitting air in the application of the brake directly from tbe main air pipe to the brake cylinder. The means for actuating the auxiliary valve device is stated in the claim to be “the jiiston of the triple valve”; and the way in which it acts, as shown in the patent, is by direct impingement upon the stem of the auxiliary valve device. In defendant’s structure the piston of the triple valve acts upon the auxiliary valve device, not directly, but by opening a port, which reduces pressure on one side of another piston in a supplementary chamber, the movement of such supplementary piston opening the emergency valve. None the less is the auxiliary valve device “actuated” by the piston of the triple [102]*102valve, though, two pistons do the work of one,-and the action of the 'triple-valve piston is indirect instead of direct. Such an addition to the mechanical details of the combination is within the doctrine of equivalents, when the original invention is a broad one, *as this undoubtedly is, and the language of the claim fairly covers it, which is the case here; the word “actuated” being applicable equally to indirect and to direct actuation. Nor will it avail defendants, -as against the claim of a broad patent, that the addition to the mechanism is itself an advance in the art, — an advance, it may be noted, which is not theirs, but one they have appropriated from a subsequent patent of the same inventor. The person who discovered the advantage of a supplemental motor for the- emergency valve, and devised its mechanism, was, as the court of appeals has held, entitled to a broad patent for that highly meritorious invention, which was essential to complete success in the art; but that circumstance did not entitle him to appropriate the meritorious and equally essential emergency valve of the earlier patent, so long, at least, as he actuated his supplemental motor in the way in which such earlier patent claimed, viz. by the piston of the triple valve.

The second claim of No. 360,070 is as follows:

“(2) In a brake mechanism, the combination of a main air pipe, an auxiliary reservoir, a brake cylinder, and a triple valve having a piston whose preliminary traverse admits air from the auxiliary reservoir to the brake cylinder, and which by a further traverse admits air directly from the main air pipe to the brake cylinder, substantially as set forth.”

The discussion of the first claim applies equally to this one. In the first claim, actuation by the piston of the triple valve was made an element. In this claim the inventor more closely limits the mode of such actuation. It is to be by a “further traverse” of that piston. The means shown in the patent is by direct impingement upon the stem of the emergency piston. The defendant avails of the “further traverse” to set in motion supplementary devices which act upon the emergency valve. Both these claims are infringed, as is also the fourth. The fifth, which has not been elaborated upon the argument, contains the additional element of a check valve, and the question of its infringement may be left for final hearing.

Patent No. 376,837.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Westinghouse Air-Brake Co. v. Christensen Engineering Co.
103 F. 491 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1900)
Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Union Ry. Co.
84 F. 888 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1898)
Westinghouse v. Boyden Power-Brake Co.
66 F. 997 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 F. 99, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westinghouse-air-brake-co-v-new-york-air-brake-co-circtsdny-1894.