63 F. 588 | 3rd Cir. | 1894
This, suit was for the alleged infringement by tlie defendant of letters patent of the United States to Thomas A. Edison, Ko. 254,042, dated September 19,188.2, granted upon an application tiled August 9, 1880, for an “electric distribution and translation system.” After stating that the “invention relates to a method of equalizing the tension or pressure of the current through an entire system of electric lighting, or other translation of electric force, preventing what is ordinarily known as a ‘drop’ in those portions of the system the more remote from the central station,” the specification proceeds thus:
“As is well known from patents already granted mo, and prior applications pending, I use in my system an electric light formed of a continuous incandescing conductor, large numbers of which are grouped into one system, supplied and regulated from a central station; main conductors loading from and to_the_ central station; each lamp or translating device being in a derived circuit to the main conductors; the entire system being what is known as a. ‘multiple-arc’ system. From a central station the main conductors may proceed, and it is intended that they should, to a, great distance, and supply a large number of translating devices. In such cases there is inevitably a difference in tension between various parts of the circuit, due to the resistance of the main conductors. This may ho partially remedied by making The conductors very large near or at the station, gradually decreasing their size or conducting capacity, but such plan only lessens slightly the ratio of fall. To obvia te the difficulty I provide feeding • conductora which extend from the generator or generators to tlie main conductors of the lamp or consumption circuit or circuits; such feeding conductors not having any translating devices connected therewith, and being connected with the main conductors of the consumption circuit or circuits at the center, ends, or other*590 points on such main conductors. From a central station several sets of such feeding conductors may run; each set.feeding into its own lamp or consumption circuit, or all the sets feeding into a connected system of lamp or consumption circuits. It will be seen that the drop upon the feeding conductors has no effect upon the relative candle power of the lamps of the system, the relative candle power of the lamps being affected only by the drop upon the main conductors of the consumption circuit or circuits between the end of a set of feeding conductors and points most distant from any feeding conductors. In order to maintain practically the same candle power throughout the system, the main conductors of the consumption circuit or circuits should be so proportioned that the drop in tension upon them shall not exceed a definite small limit,—for example, five per cent. This drop will make a difference of less than a candle power in all the sixteen candle power lamps of the system, which difference is not perceptible to the eye. Upon the feeding conductors, however, any loss can be made. This loss will be varied according to loealitites, and the relative cost of copper for conducting purposes and horse power for generation. This loss upon the feeding conductors in large and extended systems will generally be greater than upon the main conductors of the consumption circuit or circuits. It may be, for example, about fifteen per cent.; but circumstances might make it desirable to diminish the -loss upon the feeding conductors down even as low as that upon the main conductors of the consumption circuit or circuits, or to increase the loss upon the feeders to more than fifteen per cent. * * * When it is desired to use a few lamps near the central station they may be placed upon a direct circuit therefrom, with resistance at the commencement or home end of the circuit sufficient to then reduce the tension of the current in such circuit so that it shall only be equal to that in the more distant circuits, and one or more of such circuits may be combined with the circuits before described. When large buildings or blocks of buildings, using many lamps, are to be supplied, it may be desirable to lay therefor separate feeders, insulated from each other. Where several central stations are used in a city, each having feeding conductors leading to lamp-circuit conductors of the description before noted, it may be advisable to connect the feeding circuits of all the stations, equalizing the tension or pressure throughout the entire system of the place where the central stations are located.”
The illustrative drawings show different applications of the general form of circuit described in the specification. The patent has six claims, but the defendant was charged only with' the infringement of the first, second, and third claims, which are as follows:
“(1) A consumption circuit, in the main conductors of which the drop in tension is not sufficient to vary practically the candle power of the lamps connected therewith, in combination with feeding conductors connecting the consumption circuit with the source of electrical energy, and having no translating devices connected therewith, the drop in tension upon such feeding conductors not affecting the relative candle i>ower of the lamps of the consumption circuit, substantially as set forth. (2) A consumption circuit, in the main conductors of which there is a definite, small drop in tension, not sufficient to vary practically the candle power of the lamps connected therewith, in combination with feeding conductors connecting the consumption circuit with the source of electrical energy, and having no translating devices connected therewith, the loss upon such feeding conductors being greater than upon the main conductors of the consumption circuit, substantially as set forth. (3) The combination of a consumption circuit, in the main conductors of which the drop in tension is not sufficient to vary practically the candle power of the lamps connected therewith, with a feeding circuit having no translating devices, and extending from the source of electrical energy to the center of the consumption circuit, substantially as set forth.”
For the proper determination of this case it is essential that the subject-matter of these claims should be clearly understood.
“But this statement of the claims would be highly inaccurate, if permitted to stand alone. Other limitations must be regarded. Not only aro the circuits, feeding and consumption, unique in their special characteristics, but, as well, a.re jointly applicable to the lighting by incandescent lamps, in multiple a.rc, of large areas, of which portions or parcels are very distant or remote from a central station, from which, however, emanates complete control. It is true that these latter limitations are not expressed in terms in the claims under consideration, or in either of them. But, in drafting the claims, Mr. Edison, by the words used, clearly referred to the descriptive phraseology of the specifications of his invention preceding them.”
Accordingly, the court construed these several claims as involving the lighting of a “large territory,” by the use of “large numbers” of incandescent lamps, and as implying central station regulation whereby variable drop in tension in remote parts of the system may he controlled. But, in our judgment these limitations are inadmissible. The fact is, pending the application for this patent
“The claim is a statutory requirement prescribed for tire very purpose of making the patentee define precisely what his invention is; and it is unjust to the xmblic, as well as an evasion of the law, to construe it in a manner different from the plain import of its terms.”
The claims here, we think, were purposely framed broadly, so as to cover the simplest form of the alleged invention.
The claims with which we are concerned, as we have seen, are each' for a combination of two elements,—a. consumption circuit and feeding conductors having respectively the peculiar properties specified. The primary question for solution, then, is “whether it involved invention, in a patentable sense, to combine a circuit for feeding only with a consumption circuit, the main conductors of which are so proportioned as to maintain such uniformity of pressure upon them that there is practically no variance in the candle power of the lamps connected therewith.
Now, a claim for a combination carries with it an implication that the separate elements are old. Says Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking for the court, in the case of The Corn-Planter Patent, 23 Wall. 181, 224:
“Where a patentee, after describing a machine, claims as his invention a certain combination of elements, or a certain device or part of the machine, this is an implied declaration,—as conclusive, so far as that patent is concerned, as if it were expressed, that the specific combination or thing claimed is the only part which the patentee regards as new.”
In the present instance the positive proofs accord with the implication. .Most certainly the patent in suit discloses no new means either for transmitting a current of electricity, or for equalizing pressure upon the consumption circuit. It is to be noted that the patent leaves it altogether to the judgment of the electrical engineer or constructor to determine the relative lengths of the two parts of the combined circuit, and the proper thickness of the conductors. As to these points no definite instructions are given. Undoubtedly it was well known prior to the alleged invention that
The specification states that, “in order to maintain practically the same candle power throughout the system, the main conductors of the consumption circuit or circuits should be so proportioned that the drop in tension upon them shall not exceed a definite small limit, for example, five per cent.,” but gives no information whatever how this is done. This silence is highly significant. The specification assumes that to secure uniformity of electrical pressure, and thus uniformity of effect, is a matter of common knowledge among those skilled in the electrical art, as indeed it was. The drop or fall in tension or pressure in an electrical current in its passage through a conductor was an observed and well-understood phenomenon long prior to the year 1880. ' It was known that its cause was the resistance offered by the conductor to the flow of the current, and the laws governing the flow of electricity and the drop in tension had been ascertained and published, and were perfectly familiar to all skilled electricians. They understood the effect upon the drop in
In the art of electroplating, as practiced long before 1880, we find an arrangement of circuits substantially the same as that of the patent in suit. Here a large number of articles to be plated simultaneously are suspended in the bath by separate wires attached to a metallic rod placed across the top of the tank; that is to say, the articles are arranged in multiple arc with respect to the electric current. The rod is supplied with the current by conducting wires which connect the rod with the dynamo, and the current divides among the suspended articles. It will be perceived that here one part of the circuit is used exclusively for transmitting the current, and the other part for distributing it. Equality of electric pressure among the articles to be treated is essential to good work, and in fact the distributing rods were made of such size that any material fall in pressure was avoided.
Turning now to the Khotinsky French patent of 1875, which relates to the art of electric lighting, we discover that it shows and describes a circuit of feeding and consumption parts in combination, identical in form with that of the patent in suit. The lamps of Khotinsky’s system are incandescent lamps, and they are arranged in multiple arc. He shows a magneto-electric machine located “in the center of this system, or -at any other point.” From the magneto-electric machine run two “conducting wires,” with which no translating devices are connected. These conducting or feeding wires connect with the “main conductors” of the circuit, with which all the lamps are connected. In his diagrams 1 and 3 the feeding conductors connect with the center of the consumption circuit, and in diagram 2 at the end. Undeniably, Khotinsky’s combined arrangement of feeding conductors and distributing conductors is precisely the arrangement of the patent in suit. Nothing, indeed, is said by Khotinsky about proportioning the main conductors of the consumption circuit so as to prevent injurious drop in tension. It was, however, wholly unnecessary 'for him to say anything upon that subject. All that was needful to overcome tíre difficulty due to drop in tension was to make the main conductors of the consumption circuit of proper thickness. The laws governing the flow and distribution of electricity in conductors were perfectly well known to electricians at the date of Khotinsky’s patent, and any electrical engineer of ordinary skill then called on to construct a circuit of Khotinsky’s system, it is to be assumed, would have acted in accordance with common electrical knowledge, principles, and practice; in.other words, he would have made the main conductors of the consumption circuit sufficiently large to be of practical utility. How can it be affirmed that it would require invention simply to proportion Khotinsky’s circuit in the manner contemplated by the patent in suit,—to make his transmitting wires and distributing
Now it is quite true that prior to the year 1880 electric lighting for ordinary domestic purpose's was not an accomplished fact. But this was not for lack of anything shown by the patent in suit. The great desideratum was a practical incandescent lamp. Such a lamp, with a illamental carbon conductor of high resistance, and burning with a very small amount of current, was devised in or about the year 1879, and it solved the problem of the practical subdivision of the electric current for incandescent lighting. The principle of this lamp was pronounced by Mr. Justice Bradley, in Consolidated Electric Light Co. v. McKeesport Light Co., 40 Fed. 21, 29, to have been “the grand discovery in the art of electric lighting, without which it could not have become a practical art for the purposes of general use in houses and cities.” Such were the views which prevailed in the second circuit in the case of Edison Electric Light Co. v. United States Electric Lighting Co., 47 Fed. 454; Id., 3 C. C. A. 83, 52 Fed. 300,—where it was decided that Mr. Edison was the first and original inventor of this lamp.
Under the proofs, we cannot assent to the suggestion that the alleged invention here in question supplied a long-felt want, or met a difficulty generally recognized in the art as a serious hindrance to the distribution of the electric current. In fact, prior to the application for this patent no incandescent electric lighting plant had been built. There had been no occasion to erect such plants, for no practically successful incandescent lamp had yet been furnished to the public. Hence electrical engineers had not been called upon to deal practically with the problem of drop in tension in the construction of such plants. In truth, the feeder and main system of distribution came naturally, in the ordinary progress of the art of incandescent electric lighting, as and when needed.
In his Cantor Lectures of February, .1885 (put in evidence by the plaintiff below), Prof'. George Forbes, speaking of this feeder and main system, well said, “It is a result; which would certainly have been arrived at by any one who thoroughly and intelligently worked out the problem.” True, he added that, so far as he could discover, Mr. Edison “was the first, by a long time, to hit upon this cure for the evil.” But this latter statement is without significance when we reflect that a practical incandescent lamp, without which domestic electric illumination was impossible, was invented so short a time before the application for this patent, and that when the occasion for its use actually arose the feeder and main syst em was' forthcoming.
It is a great mistake, as the proofs demonstrate, to attribute to the patent in suit the merit of having solved the problem of economically supplying the requisite current for extensive use to circuits covering large areas, portions of which are at great distances from the source of electrical energy. Whatever of economy in copper may result from the plan of the patent is confined altogether to the transmitting conductors, and the cost of copper restricts the use of this system to comparatively narrow limits.
rr’'e multiple-arc or derived-circuit system of distribution being confessedly old, and the high-resistance incandescent lamp having been devised, to provide “feeding conductors which extend from the generator or generators to the main conductors of the lamp or consumption current,” was, it seems to us, an obvious engineering expedient. Then, as already shown, the proper proportioning of the two parts of the combined circuit involved only the exercise of the common knowledge and skill of the electrician. The facts, we think, clearly bring this case within the principles announced by the supreme court in the case of Hollister v. Manufacturing Co., 113 U. S. 59, 5 Sup. Ct. 717, and in kindred cases. The plan of electric distribution covered by the claims in question is not “the creative work of that inventive faculty which it was the purpose of the constitution and patent laws to encourage and reward.” To sustain these claims would be to sanction a monopoly in that which belongs to the public.
In announcing this conclusion we cannot do better than quote some observations of the supreme court which apply with great force to this case, as we read the proofs. In Atlantic Works v. Brady, 107 U. S. 192, 199, 2 Sup. Ct. 225, the court said:
“The process of development in manufactures creates a constant demand for new appliances, which the skill of ordinary head workmen and engineers is generally adequate to devise, and which, indeed, are the natural and proper outgrowth of such development. Each step forward prepares the way for the next, and each is usually taken by spontaneous trials and attempts in a hundred different places. To grant to a single party a monopoly of every slight advance made, except where the exercise of invention, somewhat above ordinary mechanical or engineering skill, is distinctly shown, is unjust in principle and injurious in its consequences.”
The appellant maintains that under the ruling of the supreme court, in the case of Miller v. Manufacturing Co., 151 U. S. 186, 14 Sup. Ct. 310, the first, second, and third claims of the patent in suit are void, because of the grant of an earlier patent to Mr. Edison, No. 239,147, dated March 22, 1881, which dealt with the evil of drop in tension, and provided a remedy by feeding conductors, having no lamps therein, connected with the mains of the consumption circuits arranged in sets concentrically around the central generating station, and so proportioned as to secure equal electrical pressure throughout the entire system. It is contended that the invention described and claimed in the earlier patent is for one form of the alleged invention described in the later patent, and covered by the first three claims thereof,’ and that no one could use the invention of the earlier patent without infringing these later claims. The question thus
The decree of the court below is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with directions fco enter a decree dismissing the hill of complaint, with costs.