121 F. 831 | 2d Cir. | 1903
Appeal by defendant in the court below from its decree on bill alleging infringement of complainant’s patents Nos. 511,559 and 511,560, granted to Nikola Tesla on December 26, 1893. The court below sustained both patents, and found infringement of both claims of patent No. 511,559 and of the first claim of patent No. 511,560. Inasmuch as we have reached a conclusion adverse to the complainant upon the question of priority of invention, the other issues will not be discussed.
The claims of patent No. 511,559 are as follows:
“(1) The method of operating motors having independent energizing circuits, as herein set forth, which consists in passing alternating currents through both of the said circuits, and retarding the phases of the current in one circuit to a greater or less extent than in the other.
“(2) The method of operating motors having independent energizing circuits, as herein set forth, which consists in directing an alternating current from a single source through both circuits of the motor, and varying or modifying the relative resistance or self-induction of the motor circuits, and thereby producing in the currents differences of phase, as set forth.”
“(1) Tüe combination with a source of alternating currents and a circuit from the same of a motor having independent energizing circuits connected with the said circuit, and means' for rendering the magnetic effects due to said energizing circuits of different phase, and an armature within the influence of said energizing circuits.”
The claims of the former patent cover a certain method and of the latter certain means of operating electrical motors by means of alternating currents from a single original source. This system is known as the “split phase” system. Nikola Tesla, the patentee herein, was the inventor of what is known as the “polyphase system” of transmission of power, and had covered by his earlier patents, Nos. 381,-968, 382,279, and 382,280, said system when operated by means of currents of- varying phase from independent lines or circuits. The applications for these earlier patents were filed during the fall and winter of 1887 and the winter and spring of 1888, the final fees were mailed on April 8, 1888, and said patents issued May 1, 1888. Up to April 8th, Tesla had. not intimated to his solicitor that his broad invention of the rotary field motor could be practiced by any means which did not involve the use of two independent circuits from the generator to the motor. The applications for the patents in suit were filed December 8, 1888. By the method and means therein described Tesla dispensed with one of the line circuits, and was able to run the motor by means of alternating currents from a single original source. This was accomplished, as appears from the foregoing claims, by means which so retarded the phases of the current in all circuits, or so varied the relative resistance of the motor circuits, as to maintain the necessary difference of phase in the currents. Such utilization of a single original source by thus splitting a single current into two currents was an improvement of great practical value. But on April 22, 1888, there had been published at Milan, in an Italian journal, a report of a lecture by Prof. Galileo Ferraris, in which the system covered by the patents in suit was fully described. This printed publication is such a disclosure of the subject-matter of the patents in suit that, if prior thereto, it would constitute an anticipation.
To support the burden thus cast upon it of proving to the satisfaction of the court that the supposed inventions in suit were made prior to April 22, 1888, complainant has introduced a photograph and the evidence of two witnesses, Messrs. Brown and Page. One of said witnesses has testified that said photograph represented a motor which was in Tesla’s shop in the fall of 1887, and in which the difference in phase was secured by the introduction in one of the circuits of a coil having self-induction. There is nothing in the photograph, however, to indicate the means by which said motor was operated, nor whether it was adapted to receive a single or double current from the generator. Its construction is at least as suggestive of use in connection with the earlier pofyphase as with the later split phase patents. We are therefore confined to a consideration of the testimony of said two witnesses.
Mr. Brown furnished capital to Tesla to make his experiments at the date here in question, and afterwards sold his interest in the Tesla inventions to this complainant. On May 25, 1900, he testified that in
We are brought, then, to a consideration of the testimony of said Page, the witness chiefly relied- on to carry thé date of invention back of April 22, 1888. The material parts of his testimony are as follows, namely, that, having been employed as aforesaid, Tesla “explained that he had other ideas about the operation of these motors, and thereupon disclosed to me his scheme for operating the motors by connecting them with single circuits”; that “when he first described the scheme of patent 555,190 (application filed May 15, 1888), Mr. Tesla
This evidence is clear, direct and persuasive as to a disclosure by Tesla of various schemes for operating motors on the split phase principle. But it falls far short of the requirement in such a case. “The burden which rested upon the defendant in the first instance has been transferred to the complainant, and it must furnish the court with convincing proof that the anticipation has been anticipated.” Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company v. Saranac Lake Electric Light Company (C. C.) 108 Fed. 221, 222. Clark Thread Company v. Willimantic Linen Company, 140 U. S. 481, 11 Sup. Ct. 846, 35 L. Ed. 521. It is to be noted that this testimony relates to events which occurred 12 years before; that the only means which the witness had for refreshing his recollection is the lost diary. The witness could not be expected to have any independent recollection as to what was covered by the charge, entered four days before the date of the anticipating publication, for “services in this particular matter,” nor whether the date and character of said charge was correctly entered. The evidence fails to show the specific character of said disclosure, whether it covered the constructions herein held to be infringed, or some of the other constructions embraced in the patents in suit, or in said other patents not in suit on which the witness was then en
The decree is reversed, with costs, and with instructions to the court below to dismiss the bill, with costs.