6 F. 603 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1881
This is a bill in equity to restrain the defendant from the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 140,336, issued to Frank L. Pope on July 1, 1873, and now owned by the plaintiffs, for improvements in circuits for electric railroad signals. Before the date of this invention electro-magnetism had been utilized for the automatic actuation of signals, denoting both danger and safety upon the line of a railroad. By Johnson’s patent of 1858 a single battery was mounted on each train, and was applied to turn the signals in succession. Each signal was operated alternately by two electro magnets; one to turn it to “danger,” and the other to turn it to “safety.” This plan required a battery for each train. Under Clark’s patent of 1861 the signals were operated by the action of a railroad train; but bis apparatus made use of a sxiecial battery, and an independent electric
The object of the system which Pope patented was to operate automatically a series of signals, in definite and predetermined succession, by the passage of a train, making use of a single battery. The patentee says in his specification: “My invention consists in a peculiar arrangement of electric circuits, in combination with a battery, and with two or more circuit closers, operated by moving trains or otherwise, whereby a series of two or more visual or audible signals, situated at intervals along the line of a railroad, may be operated by currents of electricity derived from a single battery, thereby obviating the inconvenience and expense o.f employing, as heretofore, one or more separate batteries, situated at or near each signal, for the purpose of actuating the same.” The record shows that the invention was a new combination of old devices whereby a novel and useful result was produced, and was patentable. It is assumed that the same invention was placed on the Eastern Bailroad of Massachusetts by the defendant, a corporation which has been engaged in the manufacture and erection, upon different roads, of signaling apparatus constructed in accordance with various patents of Thomas S. Hall, and that the change which was made, whereby the earth was used as a part of the.circuit, was not a material change or modification of the invention. Letters patent to Hall & Snow, No. 165,570, dated July 13, 1875, describe the defendant’s method of electric circuits.
Upon this assumption the main question in the case is that of priority of invention, for it will be manifest that Pope and Hall were each independent inventors of the onc-battery system, and that each mentally conceived of the same plan, in substance, in the summer and fall of 1872. Hall is the father of the plan of electric railroad signaling apparatus, which is in use in this country, and in 1872 was actively engaged in studies and experiments, and in the practical
The patent having been granted to Pope, and now being attacked on the ground that the patentee was not the first inventor, it is not enough for the defendant to show that Hall had conceived the same idea, and had made drawings or models, and experiments with his models, but the defend
Hall, during the summer of 1872, was thinking over the same idea which Pope had, and about December 21, 1872, came to the mental result that a one-battery system was feasible. He forthwith wrote to his son, who was in Boston, to join him in Meriden. ''The son complied with the request, and, with the assistance of other employes, made a working model in accordance with his father’s instructions in the upper room of the defendant’s shop. Hall, as the manager of the defendant corporation, was constructing at this time, for the Eastern Railroad Company, his system of signals upon the manifold-battery plan. Early in January, 1873, he described the new plan to the manager of the company, who agreed that it might be placed upon his road in lieu of the old plan, at the defendant’s expense, if not subsequently approved. About January 20,1873, Hall telegraphed to George H. Snow, his assistant, to stop work on the railroad and come to Meriden, where he was employed upon the signals
Subsequently, in December, 1873, after the new track circuit closers were finished, Snow went to the Eastern Railroad to put the new system in operation. Here a practical difficulty was experienced, wddeh is thus explained by Alvah W. Hall, the son of T. S. Hall: “The first difficulty we found was that the magnets, being wound with coarse wire, and thus adapted for the short circuits and comparatively weak batteries with which they had previously been used, required too much battery power to work them on a long circuit. Therefore, when a battery was applied strong enough to work the most distant signal, which signal would have the longest circuit of any of them, it made the current too intense when the signal nearest the battery, which would be on the shortest circuit, was operated to work satisfactorily. The spark, on breaking contact with the circuit closer of this short circuit, following in a burning flame between the points of the circuit closer after the said points were removed from each other their proper distance, destroyed the points and burned them up.” A change was made on February 14, 1874, which obviated the difficulty, and which mainly consisted in bringing the ground into use to form part of the circuits. This is the change which the plaintiffs insist was simply mechanical in its character, and which the. defendant claims made its combination a new invention. Subsequently, the system, of Mr. Hall was introduced upon other railroads, and a large amount of money was paid to his company therefor.
I am clearly of opinion that the application of the one-bat
The plaintiffs rely upon the qualification of the rule that he is the first inventor who has first actually perfected the invention; the qualification being that if the one first to conceive of the invention was at the time using reasonable diligence in adapting and perfecting the same, he is recognized as the first inventor, although the second to conceive may have been the first to reduce to practice. It is also true that the determination of the fact of diligence is not to be reached by comparison of the diligence of the two inventors. If Pope was reasonably diligent in perfecting his idea, it does not matter that Hall was exceedingly diligent and made more rapid advances.
The plaintiffs’ position is that Pope had mentally worked out his invention by the first week of November, 1872; that Hall had reached the same result in the latter part of December, 1872; that Pope applied for his patent on May 15, 1873, and that there was no laches in thjs respect. All this is true; and if, meanwhile, he had been engaged in efforts to perfect his invention, his right to the patent could not be assailed on the ground that another was the first inventor.
It was an important step in this invention to originate the
On or about February 10, 1873, Pope had a conversation with Mr. A. G-. Davis, superintendent of telegraphs on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, in regard to the introduction of a signal' system on that road, and told Davis that he had devised a plan by which the requisite number of signals on-eight or ten miles of road could be worked from one battery, and that he was willing to undertake to do this at any time. In March a single signal was put up on the road, but it is evident that this signal was not put up as a sample of the one-battery system. Sometime between February 10th and April 1st, Pope had one or more conversations with Edwin D. McCracken in regard to the system; but, giving to these interviews the weight which they have in Pope’s mind, the conversations were simply an assertion of what he could do by this proposed plan. The only thing thereafter done was to make out the application. Mr. Pope says: “As the various parts of the combination, circuit closers, signals, signal machinery, etc., had already been thoroughly tested in practice, and almost continually, for over a year, it did not seem to me necessary to test the new combination in actual service before making an application for a patent, as it was a very easy matter for any competent electrician to calculate from existing data the amount of battery power, the size of conductors, and the proportionate electrical resistance of the different parts, so as to insure the satisfactory operation of the system in practice. After completing and filing an application for a patent on an improved track connection which had been invented by Mr. Hendrickson, and which was sent to Washington and filed on the twenty-fifth day of April, 1873, I prepared the application for the patent, which was issued July 1, 1873, as No. 140,536, and is Exhibit A. This
During the period between November 6th and May 15th, Pope was busy, but he was not busy about this invention. He was occupied with other inventions, but he was doing nothing with this one. The just and equitable principle of the law, which gives a patent to the inventor who first conceives of the invention, provided he is diligently engaged in perfecting it and adapting it to use, and overcoming the practical difficulties which are always to be surmounted before theory becomes fact, although he was slower in the race than the one who was second to conceive, does not apply to Pope. Who faintly conceived the idea is not known. Pope first attained a mental result. After that, he was actively occupied in the same branch of study, but he did not develop this system in wood and metal. Hall did develop it, made it useful and practicable, and achieved success. In my opinion it would be a great wrong to decide that the defendant is liable as an infringer.
Let the bill be dismissed.