Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Columbia Meter Co.

200 F. 584, 119 C.C.A. 64, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1885
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1912
DocketNo. 51
StatusPublished

This text of 200 F. 584 (Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Columbia Meter Co.) 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
Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Columbia Meter Co., 200 F. 584, 119 C.C.A. 64, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1885 (2d Cir. 1912).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge.

This case is sui generis in the difficulties which it represents to the proper understanding of the invention of the patent and the anticipatory devices. Propositions which in an ordinary patent cause would be understood the moment they were stated are here confused by a jargon of terms of art and diagrams which convey no meaning to the uninitiated. This is due largely to the fact that we are dealing with an imponderous, intangible, mysterious fluid which no one has seen and which is known chiefly by the results which it produces. It is also due to obscure drawings and description. Sectional views of an electric meter drawn in black upon white paper convey little information to the lay mind. The description offers no adequate assistance. For instance, the invention is described by referring to “Figs. 1 to 4 of the drawings” shown on three separate sheets, reference being constantly made to parts designated by numerals which appear on some figures and not on others. No information is given as to which figure the reader is to examine, thus adding another element of perplexity. If we had been shown the meter of the Davis and Conrad and Hummel patents, either in operation or at rest, or, if this were impracticable, if models, or at least large diagrams with 'the parts marked and differently colored, had been presented, it would have enabled us more readily to distinguish the salient features of the inventions. We are expected to understand the working of complicated machinery which we have never seen from the conflicting opinions of experts who differ upon many of the essential features of the methods used and the results accomplished. We mention these facts to emphasize the incongruity of a system which requires the submission of such questions to a tribunal composed wholly of lawyers. If the court were empowered, in exceptional cases, to call to its assistance impartial experts learned in the particular art under discussion, it might furnish a solution of the difficulty. Such a plan has, we understand, worked satisfactorily in other countries.

The patent in suit was granted to Davis and Conrad for improvements in electric meters and motors and relates to the measurement of alternating currents of energy. It describes “means for transforming electrical energy into mechanical energy and to electrical measuring instruments which embody such means and utilize the same for actuating suitable indicating, registering, or recording devices.” One of the objects “is to provide a simple and efficient means whereby a shifting magnetic field may be produced and employed for actuating an armature or secondary member having circuits closed upon themselves and located in such magnetic field at a speed which is proportional to the energy in the circuit with which it is connected.”

Another object “is to provide a wattmeter for alternating current circuits which shall accurately indicate the true energy supplied to the translating devices of the circuit to which the meter is connected within widely separated .limits.” The patentees assert that they have devised a simple, compact and cheap motor wvhich is capable of exerting a relatively large starting torque and of running smoothly when put to commercial uses. It may also be used advantageously as a meter-motor.

[586]*586The core of the primary member is built up of iron plates and is provided at one side with an inwardly projecting pole-piece and at the opposite side with two inwardly projecting pole-pieces. The ends of the two last-mentioned pole-pieces are separated from each other and from the end of the inwardly projecting pole-piece, by air gaps. The plates constituting the magnetizable portion of the core are clamped together rigidly by means of relatively thick face plates, the bolts passing through the plates and the body of the core. Two coils, which in effect may be considered as a single coil, having a large number of' turns of relatively small wire, surround the core and are preferably' located adjacent to the pole-pieces. These coils are connected across an alternating current circuit, the energy of which it is desired to measure. The inwardly projecting pole-piece is designed to be magnetized by currents proportional to the current delivered to the working current. “Since the coils are wound to produce a magnetic flux in the same general direction at any given instant, it obviously follows that the two poles adjacent to the gap 6 are of opposite sign.” The specification also- states that the pole-piece $ is shown surrounded by a coil “therefore serving to malee the pole-piece % an intermediate pole.” '

The patentees describe at great length the operation of the meter resulting in the alternate shifting of the magnetic field. The specification says:

“This alternate shifting of the effective resultant flux from one side to the other of the air-gap 5 by reason of the alternate reinforcement and opposition of the fluxes at these two sides will obviously be at a maximum when there is a phase difference of ninety degrees between the shunt and.series current, and this resultant shifting field will decrease in strength and duration as the phase angle between- the two currents decreases until the two ■currents are in stop, when the effective resultant field will be mainly or wholly located at one side of the air-gap 5. Under this condition the resultant flux will be alternately reversed in direction, but will not shift to the other side of the air-gap, and hence there will be no rotation of the disk.”

The claims in issue are as follows:

■ “9. In a wattmeter for alternating-current circuits, a laminated core having two air-gaps substantially at right angles to each other, in combination with a closed circuit hrmature located partially in one of said air-gaps, shunt-coils constructed and arranged to produce a strong magnetic flux across the other 'air-gap and a relatively weak flux through the armature, and a series coil arranged to produce a magnetic flux through the armature and through one or both of the shunt-coils whereby a shifting field is produced and the desired relation between the shunt-current and the impressed electro-motive force is maintained.
“10.' An alternating-current motor having a rotatable closed-circuit secondary member and a primary member comprising a shunt-winding at one side of the secondary member, a series winding- at the other side, and a core for said windings, said core and windings being so constructed and arranged that only a portion of the. shunt-flux passes through the secondary member and the entire series flux passes through said member and threads all or a part of the shunt-winding.”

• Judge Hand found that the British patent to Hummel No. 543, accepted August 15, 1896, is “a complete anticipation of the defendant’s meter,” The Davis and Conrad patent is dated August 9th, 1898, two years after the Hummel patent. We understand Judge Hand to hold [587]*587not that the Davis and Conrad claims are necessarily anticipated by Hummel, but that the defendant cannot be held as an infringer for using a wattmeter for alternating currents found in the prior art. If the claims are construed to cover the defendant’s structure, they must also cover Hummel’s structure. If, on the other hand, they -are construed so as to avoid Hummel', they are not broad enough to include the defendant.

The construction and operation of the Hummel meter and that of the patent in suit seem very similar to the layman uninitiated in the mysteries of the art.

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Bluebook (online)
200 F. 584, 119 C.C.A. 64, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westinghouse-electric-mfg-co-v-columbia-meter-co-ca2-1912.