No. 13 | 2d Cir. | Nov 11, 1912

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The invention, as stated generally in the patent, “consists in imbedding conductors in an enamel of insulating material that is made to adhere to tlie device that is to be heated by or otherwise used in connection with an electrical current, and which serves to insulate the conductors while connecting them to the device.” Since the disposition we shall make of the cause follows from the conclusions we have reached as to the “enamel of insulating material,” it will be sufficient to excerpt from the patent only such passages as refer to this enamel. The pat-entee, in his specifications, first mentions the enamel as “an efficient and desirable means for the insulation of the conductors used in connection with devices that are to be heated by means of an electric current.” Referring to the drawings, he states that:

■‘f)n the upper surface of tlie metal base is an enamel of any desired sub-sraiice adapted lo serve as an electric insulator. Within the enamel are imbedded the coils of an electric conductor in such manner that all portions of tlie conductor are completely imbedded, and, are separated from one another, and only the incoming and outgoing connections of the conductor are exposed.”

*582He then says:

“In tlie application of the enamel and electric conductor, it is preferable to first spread on the surface of the object a thin coat of enamel in soft condition, which is then caused to harden. Afterward the coils of the conductor are laid upon this, and next a second coat of enamel in soft condition is spread thereon and subjected to a sufficient degree of heat to cause the two coats of enamel to unite and firmly adhere together and to the base. In this manner the several coils of the conductor may be completely surrounded and imbedded in a compact and integral insulator, that is made to adhere to the surface of the object which carries the conductor.”

This paragraph was in the original filed application. While proceedings were pending in the Patent Office a statement was inserted that:

“The method herein referred to of applying the insulator and conductor to the base or body is part of the subject-matter of a concurring apiilieation, serial number 411,832, and is reserved to be claimed therein.”

The Office having rejected the application upon reference to earlier patents, in which glass was used as an insulator, the patentee inserted the following paragraph:

“In using the term ‘enamel’ I refer to any of the adhesive substances commonly employed to produce on the surface of metallic and other objects an adherent coating or film, usually called an ‘enamel,’ and which is made permanent by heating it after its application; but I prefer to use such substances as are commonly applied to iron ware in the manufacture of cooking utensils, generally known as granite ware.”

The Office still rejected the application, again citing its former references. Thereupon the solicitor for applicant filed an argument, in which he set forth the applicant’s position in reference to glass as shown in the following, excerpt:

“Glass, it is true, is an insulator, and is a vitreous substance, as is enamel; but it is not the equivalent of an enamel for the purpose of this invention, for many reasons, chief of which is that it is incapable of surviving the expansion and contraction of the metal to -which it is made to adhere. Enamel, on the other hand. has substantially the same coefficient of expansion as metal, as is shown by its universal use on ordinary cooking utensils, and hence is adapted to the purpose of the Morford invention; and it is only a substance having this capability that can be fairly held to be covered by the use of the term ‘enamel or its equivalent’ in his claims.”

The applicant then offered to malee the definition of his enamel (quoted above) more specific by adding to the quoted paragraph the following:

“However, I do not regard as equivalents glass or such other vitreous .substances as have not the capability of requisite adhesion to the body they coat, and the property of expanding and contracting with it sufficiently to avoid breaking of the insulation.”

Upon this amendment being made in the specifications, the patent was promptly issued. The claims in controversy are:

“1. In an electro-heating apparatus, the combination, with the heated surface plate and the resistance, of a coating of enamel or its equivalent, securing the resistance to, but insulating it from, said plate, substantially as set forth.
“2. In an electro-heating apparatus, the combination, with the plate to be heated and the resistance, of a coating of adhesive enamel or its equivalent *583for securing the resistance to, but insulating it from, said place, substantially as set forth.
“3. In an electrical apparatus, the combination, with a supporting body and an electric conductor, of a coating of enamel or its equivalent, securing the conductor to, while insulating it from, the body, substantially as set forth.”

Defendants’ articles are of two types; one a so-called resistance tube, the other a’ rheostat. In the tube the supporting body or base is a porcelain tube, which is itself a nonconductor. That circumstance, we are inclined to think, would put the tubes outside the scope of the claims; but since, in the rheostats, the base is of metal and a conductor, we prefer to dispose of the whole case on the question of enamel.

The testimony seems to indicate that, at the time Morford’s application was pending in the Patent Office, no one had shown any means whereby glass could be applied to a purpose, such as that of the patent, where it would have to adhere to a metal surface when exposed to the action of heat. Probably the applicant’s solicitor was correct in stating that glass, as the art then knew it, if used to make Mor-ford’s electric heater, would be “incapable of surviving the expansion and contraction of the metal to which it is made to adhere.” But the testimony shows that the substance used in defendants’ articles is glass, as defined scientifically or in common speech. Whether it does "survive the expansion and contraction of the metal to which it is made to adhere,” because it is applied in some way other than the one employed in the earlier art, is not material, for the patent does not cover the method of applying. The sole question is whether the glass used by defendants is included within the disclaimer. If it be, infringement cannot be found.

The complainant insists that the disclaimer does not include defendants' glass, because such glass is not “incapable of surviving the expansion and contraction of the metal to which it is made to adhere.” We are not inclined to accept this interpretation. As thus construed the disclosure and claims of the patentee would be thus paraphrased:

‘T have discovered and bere disclose a combination of elements whicb, when acted upon by an electric current, will act in a designated way and produce certain stated results. One element of the combination is a chemical compound — an ‘enamel.’ I do not give any formula for its production, because in the art of making cooking utensils there are well-known formulas for producing enamels, which, when used as an element in my combination, will act to produce the required result. I claim in my particular combination other enamels which are equivalent to these. But I do not regard as equivalent glass (which broadly is a variety of enamel) or other vitreous substances which are incapable of operating in my combination, sb that when they are used the result is not accomplished.”

As thus construed, the “disclaimer” disclaims nothing. If a person uses a variety of enamel, which will not accomplish results when in combination with, the other elements, there will be no operative structure to be proceeded against as an infringement, and no question of equivalent or disclaimer can possibly arise.

The disclaimer was inserted by the applicant of his own motion, at a time when the examiner was citing prior patents in which glass was used. His arguments to differentiate the references, and his pro*584posed amendments devised to take his patent outside of the examiner’s construction of them, had failed to convince. This particular amendment was intended by him to accomplish something; to insert in the specifications a clause, which wodld thereafter prevént his contending for a construction of his patent, which, but for this particular clause, he might fairly contend for. The Patent Office undoubtedly understood that it accomplished something, because upon its insertion all objections were withdrawn and the patent issued.

There is nothing difficult or abstruse about this disclaimer. Patents were cited against the applicant, in which glass was used to coat parts of various apparatus exposed to electric action and to changes of temperature. As the. applicant understood the situation, although “glass,” broadly speaking, was a variety of enamel, it would not work in his combination, because it did not possess certain qualities which the chemical compound of his combination had to possess. Therefore he disclaimed “glass” as an equivalent of the enamel of the patent.

Now it appears that subsequently some one else has found that glass — even glass, like the glass of the cited cases — may be so treated, that it can be used in patentee’s combination, and will work as well as the earlier enamels known at the time of the patent. .If the pat-entee had not disclaimed anything, it might be contended that such glass was an equivalent of the enamels, of the patent. But a disclaimer of “glass” should not be practically canceled, when it appears that some one had discovered how to use it effectually in patentee’s combination, even though the patentee disclaimed it only because it would not work effectually then, and he supposed it would never do so.

The decree is affirmed, with costs.

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