65 F. 615 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1895
This is a suit for infringement of patent No. 238,315, granted to Elihu Thomson and Edwin J. Houston March 1, 1881, for “current regulator for dynamo-electric machines.” The object of the invention is to control the operation of a dynamo-electric machine in such manner that the constant and unvarying
The claims of the patentees are for a combination, and are expressed in the following terms:
“(1) In a current regulator for a dynamo electric machine, the combination of a device responding to changos in the main or generated current, a shifting commutator for said machine, and mechanism controlled by said responsive device to shift the commutator to those positions where the current taken up by said commutator shall he constant. (2) In a current regulator for a dynamo-electric machine, an electro-magnetic device, acted upon by variations in the main or generated current, an adjustable or shifting commutator for the machine, and mechanism controlled by said electro-magnetic device to adjust the commutator to those positions where the main or generated current taken up by said commutator shall be constant.”
Through an inadvertence of the drawings, at variance in that respect with the written description in the patent, the complainant’s device, as drawn, is inoperative. But, this corrected, and the device in some other respects slightly modified, the so-called invention is both practical and highly valuable.
The principal defense is that, in view of the prior state of the art, and especially of the invention patented by Thomson & Houston, January 20, 1880, Ho. 223,659, this so-called invention has been anticipated, and the patent, therefore, is invalid. Mach learning on this question by counsel for both sides, and by the experts called, has been put at the disposal of the court, and many questions relating to the laws of electricity, which are in their very nature, in the present state of the art, insoivable by one not an expert, are raised. I have availed myself, as closely as I could, of the excursions of counsel into these abstruse fields, but have come back from them, I confess, more bewildered than enlightened. So far as I have been able to ascertain, all knowledge of electricity is, so far, purely empirical, and mere speculations, therefore, however acute and plausible, as to the ways and methods of this force, fire likely to he erroneous, and therefore valueless. In the view of the case to which my judgment has come, it is unnecessary to enter these regions of speculation, or to attempt to decide between the respective contentions so earnestly put forth and learnedly maintained.
Patent 223,659 discloses a device almost identical with that of the patent in dispute. As stated already, the commutator is made up of a number of subdivisions called “segments,” which are electrically insulated from each other. In the revolutions of the commutator each of these segments comes into contact first with one brush, then with the other; and, as the contact is broken by the passing of the segment away from the brush, there is a tendency to form a spark between the tips of the brush and the edge of the leaving segment. When such sparking is violent, or repeated, it eats away the metal surfaces between which it occurs, and is, in every respect, disadvantageous. Whatever may be the cause of the sparking, it
Now, if the uses were analogous, and the principles and devices employed were somewhat different, the sole question remains whether an electrical mechanic, having the knowledge of the art that the public possessed when the so-called invention in suit was conceived,
I differ from Judge COLT in tbis case with reluctance, for I defer to his superior experience and wisdom In the patent held; but I cannot follow him in this case without violating my own sense of judicial responsibility. The bill will be dismissed.