Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Simms Magneto Co.

286 F. 558, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1111
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 286 F. 558 (Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Simms Magneto Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey 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. Simms Magneto Co., 286 F. 558, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1111 (D.N.J. 1922).

Opinion

EYNCH, District Judge.

The plaintiff alleges that the defendant has infringed its letters patent No. 1,081,731 granted to Alfred P. Foster for a device for starting internal combustion engines, whether employed on automobiles, boats, aeroplanes, or elsewhere. The device is what is commonly known as a “self-starter.”

The defendant does not manufacture self-starters. It does, however, supply the Maxwell Motor Car Company with electric motors and switches, which are utilized by that company in the making up or assembling of starters for its Maxwell motor cars. It does not seem to be seriously questioned that the complete Maxwell starter embodies the device of the patent in suit. The issues are whether the plaintiff has a valid patent, and, if so, whether the supplying of motors and switches to the Maxwell Company constituted the defendant a contributory infringer.

[1] When automobiles first came into use, it was necessary for a person in order to start the engine to crank it by hand. This was the general practice until about the year 1910, when electric starting devices or self-starters came into quite general use. They all comprise an electric motor and accessories. The purpose of an electric starter is to put in operation the engine which propels the automobile or boat or aeroplane, and when it has done this it is called upon to serve no further purpose. So a means of disconnecting the starting motor from the engine, after the engine has started, was, of course, desirable. Before the advent of electric motor starters, the use of spring starters and compressed air starters was attempted; but they never came into general use. Foster’s plan was to put the operation of this starting device, as well as its disconnecting, under a pedal or lever, which was straight-acting, and which would spring back when released. His idea, in a general way, was to haw one part of his device which, when operated, would by a downward movement first enmesh the connecting gears between his electric motor and then turn current into his motor. The current would energize the electric motor, which would cause the engine to pick up or start and then by a reverse movement or release, as soon as the engine bad picked up, the current would be taken out of the motor, or turned off, and the motor would become automatically disconnected. The device is of simple construction and is easily operated.

The claims in suit are as follows:

“2. A starting device for internal combustion engines including in combination a flywheel and a motor normally operatively disconnected; an electric circuit normally open and adapted, when closed, to energize the motor; [560]*560means under the control of the operator for operatively connecting the flywheel and motor and thereupon closing the circuit; and automatic means for opening the circuit and thereupon operatively disconnecting the flywheel and motor.”
“5. A starting device for internal combustion engines, including in combination an engine and a motor normally operatively disconnected; an electric circuit normally open, and adapted, when closed, to energize the motor; means under the control of the operator for operatively connecting the motor with the engine, and thereupon closing the circuit and automatic means for opening the circuit, and thereupon operatively disconnecting the motor and engine.
“6. In a starting device for internal combustion engines, a motor; mechanism connected therewith and operated thereby, and including a movable member adapted to be operatively connected with an engine; an electric circuit normally open, and adapted, when closed, to energize the motor; means under the control of the operator for operatively connecting the movable member of the mechanism with an engine, and thereupon closing the circuit and automatic means for opening the circuit,'and thereupon operatively disconnecting the movable member of the mechanism from an engine.
“7. A starting device for internal combustion engines, including in combination an engine and a motor normally operatively disconnected; means under the control of the operator for operatively connecting the motor with the engine, and thereupon energizing the motor and automatic means for deenergizing the motor, and thereupon operatively disconnecting the motor and engine.”

With respect to the prior art the defendant has called the attention of the court to a very large number of patents. Some of them relate to electric starters for engines, while others have to do with air, spring and pneumatic devices. It strikes me that spring starters and air starters are distinctly different than electric starters. There is a different series of parts, and perhaps a different kind of elements. It- appears that they made no impression on the art whatever. Therefore I do not think they can be read on the terms of claims which distinctly call for electric circuits, the possible exception being as to claim 7, which will-be considered and disposed of hereinafter. So, setting aside those devices of the prior art which had spring motors and compressed air motors, I shall take up those which included electric motors.

One of these is the patent to Marx, No. 854,060. What Marx invented was a motor for starting a sewing machine. - This motor was fastened to the ceiling or some part of the wall, and was connected by belting with the sewing machine or other device it was intended to run. There is neither flywheel nor combustion engine. .There are no gears between a motor and a flywheel. Not only that, the order of procedure of the Marx device is exactly opposite to that specified in the patent in suit. In other words, Marx first closed a switch, energized his motor, and then coupled it up with the clutch. I cannot agree to the proposition that the belt and pulley arrangement of the Marx device should be regarded as an anticipation.

Next, the patent of Lahmeyer, a German patent. Lahmeyer’s device is very complicated. He was apparently attempting to solve the problem of easily starting a very large stationary engine. Whether his device has been used in the starting of automobile engines, boat engines, or aeroplane engines I am unable to ascertain. An examination discloses that it has two pulleys, three gears, a lever, a segment, a [561]*561lever arm, and a hand wheel. While it is true that its large flywheel and the motor are normally operatively disconnected, the difficulty, it seems to me, is that what he was dealing'with was an entirely different proposition.

As to the Galloway British patent, No. 6,284, no electric motor or circuit is contemplated, nor is anything said about the succession of operations by the admission of the gears in the energizing of the motor. Nothing is said about a single lever or pedal for performing both operations, or means for automatically restoring the parts to their original position.

I have examined the other patents of the prior art submitted by the defendant. Many of them contain elements mentioned in the claims of the patent in suit. There are flywheels, motors, gears, electric currents, levers, etc. -All of these things, of course, are well recognized elements. There áre presented some patents which relate to starting automobile engines, but as to them the elements do not correspond with the elements of the claims under review.

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Bluebook (online)
286 F. 558, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westinghouse-electric-mfg-co-v-simms-magneto-co-njd-1922.