Westinghouse Air-Brake Co. v. New York Air-Brake Co.

87 F. 882 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1898

WALLACE, Circuit Judge.

The patents upon which this suit is founded are for improvements in air brakes, infringement being alleged of claims 3 and 5 of letters patent No. 382,032, granted May 1, 1888, to Theron S. E. Dixon, and of claims 5 and 6 of letters patent No. 538,001, granted April 23, 1895, to George Westinghouse, Jr.

The patent of Dixon, so far as it is found in the two claims in controversy, describes a modification of the automatic air brake of the prior patents to George Westinghouse, Jr., Nos. 360,070 and 376,837, which consists “in cutting off and dispensing with the passage from the train pipe and brake cylinder, and locally venting the train pipe directly to the atmosphere through a passage or port.” Westinghouse vented his train pipe into the brake cylinder.

Whatever theoretical advantages may reside in the modification, the improvements have not been of sufficient practical value to displace the Westinghouse brake, and those which are the subject of the two claims are of no commercial value.

What was done by Dixon was to interrupt the passage in the West*883iiigliouse brake, and is thus described by him in his specification: “I cut oü and dispense with all communication between the train pipe and the brake cylinder, and in lieu thereof'provide an open air port, H, through which, when the local discharge is taking jdace, the air will vent from the train pipe directly.” H is a passage' opened by a quick-action vent valve, just: as the passage in the Weslinghouse brake is opened by his quick-aclion vent valve, viz. by the impact of the triple-valve piston at the extreme end of its traverse. As illustrated in the drawings, there is a poppet valve in the passage, H, which is pushed out of the way by the train-pipe air ad mitted by the quick-action vent valve.

Dixon was not the first to effect a local discharge in automatic air brakes by venting them to the atmosphere, but he was the first to conceive the utility of doing so in the way in which he did it, and of modifying the organization of the Westinghouse brake to that extent. Local venting of train pipes was old in the air-brake art. It was perfectly well known that a quick serial application of the brakes throughout a train of cars could be effected in an automatic air-brake system by venting the train pipe at each car to the atmosphere. Westinghouse himself, in one of Ms earlier patents, — Xo. 217,838, — had pointed this out, and had devised a crude arrangement of devices to accomplish it. He concluded that it was desirable to vent the train pipe into the brake cylinder, and thus utilize the air, which would be wasted if vented to the atmosphere, to assist in charging the brake cylinder and actuating the brakes; and for this purpose devised the apparatus of No. 360,070, subsequently improved by the mechanism of bio. 876,837. Dixon conceived that in such an apparatus the vent from the train pipe would not be as rapid or complete as it would be into the atmosphere, and accordingly modified the mechanism of the apparatus of Westinghouse. His change may have accelerated the serial brake action in emergency applications, but it did so at the expense of the advantage introduced by Westinghouse of actuating the brakes in part by direct train pressure.

In the Dixon air brake it is of the utmost importance that when the train-pipe vent has once been opened it shall promptly close after releasing a small quantity of the train-pipe air to the atmosphere;, not only to prevent an unnecessary waste of air, but especially to enable the brakes to be released. As is stated by one of the expert witnesses for the complainant, any organization which is not provided with means for doing this “would be a practically inoperative' device in an automatic air-brake system,” and would be “a complete; failure.” The inventions specified in claims 3 and 5 do not include these means.

It is difficult to escape the conclusion that any competent mechanic skilled in the air-brake art could easily, and without the exercise of any inventive faculty, change the Westinghouse brake' of patents Isos. 360,070 and 376,837 by opening a vent to the atmosphere in the air passage from the train pipe to the brake cylinder, either by the method of Dixon or by other methods equally available. In Westinghouse’s certificate of addition of February 11, 1888, to Ms French patent of March 29,1887, he shows how this can *884be done by an “unimportant change” in the slide valve of No. 360,070.

If the claims are not void for want of patentable novelty, the defendants are entitled to prevail upon the issue of infringement. In any view of the facts, Dixon was' not a pioneer, but was merely an improver upon the prior mechanism of Westinghouse, not alone for accomplishing the same general result, but also for effecting the specific result of locally venting the train pipe to the open air in an automatic air brake. If the claims cover inventions, they are technical, rather than valuable, ones, and ought not to receive a liberality of interpretation which will extend them beyond their literal import.

The claims themselves recognize the limitations imposed upon the scope of the patent by the prior art. The specification contemplates the use of a piston so constructed as to have two strokes, and which moves through a preliminary traverse upon a service application of the brakes, and a supplementary or final traverse for an emergency application, and completes the service application upon the primary traverse, and before entering upon its emergency traverse. This piston is an element of both claims. In the mechanism of the defendants the piston has but one stroke, making a single traverse for both service and emergency application of the brakes.

The third claim recites as one of its elements “a valve, which opens said passage when the main valve-operating piston opens the emergency port,” viz. when communication between the auxiliary reservoir and the brake cylinder is open. In the mechanism of the defendants the valve (71) that opens the vent passage is opened at or near the first part of the stroke of the triple-valve piston, and before any communication between the auxiliary reservoir and the brake cylinder is established. The train pipe is thereby vented to the atmosphere upon service applications as well as upon emergency applications, and at the commencement of the operation of setting the brakes.

The fifth claim has as a constituent a vent valve which is “operated by the final movement of the piston, B, when applying the brakes.” As has been said, the valve in the mechanism of the defendants is not operated by the final movement of the piston. The piston lettered B in the drawings differs so materially from the piston in the mechanism of the defendants that the latter has been made the object of attack in the second patent in suit, in which the claims were obviously prepared for that express purpose.

The second patent in suit — No. 538,001 — is not.infringed by the mechanism of the defendants unless the claims are given a construction not warranted by the specification. The application for that patent was pending in the patent office when the defendant the New York Air-Brake Company sent to the complainant certain blue prints of the air brake which it was about to manufacture and was manufacturing when this suit was brought. Thereafter the pending application was amended by inserting six new claims., The patent is, so far as these claims are concerned, a transparent attempt to appropriate a combination of which Mr. Massey was the inventor.

The valve mechanism described in the specification is such as is *885adapted to be used in conjunction with the well-known form of triple valve in an air brake as an auxiliary means of venting the train pipe into the brake cylinder. It is arranged within a casing of the brake cylinder, and is actuated by the triple valve. The claims cannot be expanded to cover inventions not suggested by the specification.

The bill is dismissed, with costs.

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