Patent, No. 140,536, granted July 1, 1873, to Frank L. Pope for
an improvement in electric signaling apparatus for railroads, was
for a combination of several previously known parts or elements, to
be used together in effecting the desired result of signaling,
among which parts so used, and essential to the combination, was an
insulated section or insulated sections of the track of the
railroad on which the device might be used.
In practical operation, the device protected by that patent
required independent devices to equalize the resistance in the
different circuits.
The device patented to Thomas S. Hall and George H. Snow, by
patent 165,170, granted July 13, 1875, for an improvement in
operating electric signals, dispensed with the use of insulated
sections of the track, and used instead thereof the earth for the
return current to complete the circuit, and arranged its conductors
with reference to the batteries and magnets so as to equalize the
resistance in the circuits when the signals were operated by a
single battery.
The device patented to Hall and Snow differs from that patented
to Pope in the elements which form the combination, in the
functions performed by them, in the arrangement of the parts, and
in the principle of the combination, and the rights protected in
the latter are not infringed by the use of the former.
This was a suit in equity to restrain an infringement of a
patent for an improvement in electric signaling for railroads. The
defense denied the priority of invention and denied the
infringement. The facts which make the case are fully stated in the
opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity for an injunction to restrain the
alleged infringement of letters patent No. 140,536 for an
improvement in circuits for electric railroad signals, issued
July
Page 114 U. S. 88
1, 1873, to Frank L. Pope, of whom the appellants, who were
complainants below, are assignees. On final hearing, the bill was
dismissed by a decree now brought here for review by this appeal.
The drawing which accompanies and illustrates the patent is as
follows:
image:a
The following is the substantial part of the specification,
together with the claims:
Page 114 U. S. 89
"My invention consists in a peculiar arrangement of electric
circuits, in combination with a battery and with two or more
circuit-closers operated by moving trains or otherwise, whereby a
series of two or more visual or audible signals, situated at
intervals along the line of a railroad, may be operated by currents
of electricity derived from a single battery, thereby obviating the
inconvenience and expense of employing, as heretofore, one or more
separate batteries situated at or near each signal for the purpose
of actuating the same."
"In the accompanying drawing,
A A represents a portion
of the track of a railroad. At intervals of say a mile, more or
less, sections of the said track,
a, a1, a2, are
electrically insulated from the remainder in a manner well
understood and therefore requiring no detailed description.
B is a galvanic battery of any suitable construction and
placed in any convenient location near the line of the railroad.
Two wires or other conductors
C and
Z are
attached to the positive and negative poles, respectively, of the
battery
B and extended to any required distance in a
direction parallel or nearly so to the line of the railroad. The
conductors
C and
Z may be placed on poles, and
should be suitably insulated from each other and from the earth.
The conductors
C and
Z are virtually
prolongations of the positive and negative poles of the battery
B. Each of the insulated sections of track
a, a1,
a2, etc. is placed at some point at or near which it is
desired to erect a signal, and any required number of these may be
employed to meet the requirements of any particular case.
M,
M1, and
M2 are the electromagnets which actuate or
display the respective signals. The said signals may be of any
suitable construction, and should be provided with some suitable
means of retaining them in position or action after the circuit
through the magnets
M, M1, or
M2 has been
interrupted.
m, m1, and
m2 are magnets so
arranged as to release, reverse, or stop the action of said signals
which have previously been brought into action by the magnets
M, M1, and M2."
"The operation of the apparatus is as follows:"
"Suppose a train moving along the track
A A from left
to right in a direction indicated by the arrow. Upon reaching the
point
a, the
Page 114 U. S. 90
wheels and axles of the train will form an electrical connection
between the opposite insulated rails, and a circuit will be formed
between the conductor
C and the conductor
Z
traversing wires 1 and 2, magnet
M, and wire 3, and the
signal attached to
M will consequently be displayed. Upon
the arrival of the train at
a1, the same operation will be
repeated and another connection formed between
C and
Z, traversing the wires 4 and 5, magnet
M1, and
wire 6, while at the same time a portion of the current will
traverse the branch wire, 7, magnet
m, and wire 8. Thus,
the signal attached to
M1 will be activated, and
simultaneously the action of the magnet
m will release or
reverse the action of the first-mentioned signal. Upon reaching the
point
a2, the closing of the circuit by the train will in
like manner cause the signal attached to
M2 to be
displayed, and the signal last displayed by
M1 to be
withdrawn. In this manner, any required number of such signals may
be operated by means of a single battery."
"The respective resistance of the several circuits should be so
adjusted that they will be as nearly as possible equal to each
other, as a much more perfect action of the apparatus will be
secured thereby."
"On a railroad having a double track, two separate series of
signals, one series for each track, may be connected with the
conductors
C and
Z of a single battery, if
required. If preferable, they may be also operated by means of
separate batteries and separate conductors. In cases where it is
required to operate a large number of signals extending along the
road for a distance of many miles, the two conductors
C
and
Z may be extended the entire distance, and a number of
batteries attached at convenient intervals, say, for instance, from
five to ten miles apart. The several batteries should all be placed
with their positive poles in connection with the wire
C
and their negative poles in connection with the wire
Z,
when they will virtually form one large battery, and the principle
of operation will remain the same as that hereinbefore
described."
"I do not desire to confine myself to the use of any particular
form of visual or audible signals nor to the particular devices
Page 114 U. S. 91
herein described for closing the electric circuit at points from
which a signal is to be operated. Instead of the circuit's being
closed automatically by the train itself, it may be closed by a
signalman by means of a key or switch, or otherwise."
"I claim as my invention:"
"1. The battery
B in combination with the positive and
negative conductors
C and
Z, two or more
electromagnets
M M1 M2 for actuating or causing to be
actuated visual or audible signals, and two or more circuit-closers
a a1 a2 placed at intervals along the line of a railroad,
substantially as and for the purpose specified."
"2. The battery
B in combination with the positive and
negative conductors,
C and
Z, two or more
electromagnets
m m1 m2 for releasing or reversing visual
or audible signals, and two or more circuit-closers
a1 a2
placed at intervals along the line of a railroad, substantially as
and for the purpose specified."
"3. The combination of the battery
B, conductors
C and
Z, circuit-closer
a, and
electromagnet
M for actuating a visual or audible signal,
with the circuit-closer
a1, wires 5, 7, and 8, and
electromagnet
m for reversing, releasing, or stopping said
signal, substantially as specified."
Among several defenses set up in the answer, the two chiefly
relied on were first that Thomas S. Hall, and not Pope, the
patentee, was the first inventor of the improvement claimed, and
second that the devices used by the defendants were not an
infringement of the patent. The decree below was based on the first
of these defenses alone, the circuit court finding that Hall was
entitled in law to priority of invention; but we have not found it
necessary to discuss the questions of fact and law embraced in this
issue, as we have concluded to dispose of the case upon the ground
that the defendants did not, by the devices used by them, infringe
for patent of the complainants.
Page 114 U. S. 92
These devices are illustrated by a drawing, of which the
following is a copy:
image:b
Page 114 U. S. 93
This diagram represents the plan of electric railroad signals,
placed and put in practical operation by the defendants on the line
of the Eastern Railroad near Boston prior to the bringing of this
suit. In comparing it with the drawing annexed to the patent, it is
to be remembered that the latter represents a series of double
signals in succession on the line of a railroad track, divided into
blocks, while Exhibit C represents but one pair of such signals in
one such block. To make it correspond with the other, as a
representation it should be imagined as being repeated in several
successive blocks, constituting portions of one circuit, closed at
fixed points by circuit-closers for that purpose.
Mr. Pope, the patentee, drew this diagram, and, as a witness on
behalf of the complainants, explains it in comparison with the plan
described in the patent, with a view to establish their identity.
He says:
"I have made a diagram which exhibits the apparatus which I
examined, or so much of it as is material to this case, which I
annex, and is marked Exhibit C."
"A battery of perhaps one hundred cells is placed in the station
building at Chelsea. One pole of this battery -- I think the
negative pole -- is connected to the earth."
"A conductor is attached to the other or positive pole of the
battery, consisting of an insulated wire extending along parallel
with the track upon poles. This wire, which I examined, extended to
wards Boston, the end remote from Chelsea being disconnected, or,
as it is termed, open. A second conductor, consisting of another
similar wire insulated and attached to the same poles, was arranged
parallel to the first one. The second wire was open at Chelsea and
connected with the earth at its remote end."
The first-mentioned wire I have shown in the diagram and marked
"positive conductor;" the second wire is marked "negative
conductor." At a short distance from the station, a semaphoric
signal is placed consisting of a red disk balanced upon a lever.
This was placed in the cupola of a small building at the side of
the track. An electromagnet was arranged with its armature attached
to said lever so that when brought into action, the red disk on the
other end of the lever would be
Page 114 U. S. 94
moved into a position to render it visible through an opening in
the cupola. A latch or detent was placed in a position to fasten
the lever after the action of the magnet had ceased, and thus
continue the exhibition of the signal. A circuit-closer was placed
upon the track at a point near the signal which consisted of a
lever so placed as to be depressed by the wheels of a passing
train, which movement caused the circuit to be closed by pressing
two springs together. When the circuit was thus closed by a passing
train, a connection was formed between the positive and negative
conductors, and the electric current, in passing from one to the
other, passed through and operated the magnet by which the signal
was displayed. At a point, perhaps a mile distant, another signal
was arranged in precisely the same manner in connection with a
Second circuit-closer, and the same positive and negative
conductors. An additional circuit-closer, placed upon the track in
the vicinity of this last-named signal, was arranged to form a
connection from the positive to the negative conductor by the way
of a third wire running upon the poles back to the signal first
mentioned, where it passed through and operated a second magnet,
which lifted the latch or detent, and allowed the disk to return to
a position concealing it from view. I examined two of these signals
and saw many others along the line of the road.
"I find in this arrangement thus described the combination
claimed in the first claim of said patent, consisting of a battery
in combination with positive and negative conductors, two or more
electromagnets for operating visual signals, and two or more
circuit-closers placed at intervals along the line of the railroad.
Also the combination claimed in the second claim of the patent,
consisting of a battery in combination with positive and negative
conductors, two or more electromagnets for reversing visual
signals, and two or more circuit-closers placed at intervals along
the line of the railway. I also find the combination claimed in the
third claim of a battery, positive and negative conductors, a
circuit-closer and electromagnet for actuating a signal, with a
second circuit-closer, wires, and a magnet for reversing said
signal."
Mr. Moses G. Farmer, an expert witness on behalf of the
Page 114 U. S. 95
complainants, makes the same comparison, with the result,
according to his opinion, of establishing that the defendants'
system is essentially the invention described in the patent.
On the other hand, Prof. Henry Morton, an expert witness on
behalf of the defendants, points out two particulars in which the
plan, as practiced by the defendants and shown in Exhibit C differs
from that of the Pope patent so materially that they cannot be
considered substantially the same.
The first of these is that in the patent, insulated sections of
the railroad track used, when covered by a locomotive or cars, as a
circuit closer, are made essential to the combinations claimed,
while they are dispensed with in the Hall system, other and
independent circuit closers being employed.
The second is thus described by Prof. Morton in his
testimony:
"I also find a difference between the plan described in the
patent and that shown in Exhibit C in another regard. In the plan
of the patent, the conductors
C and
Z are
connected respectively with the positive and negative poles of the
battery, or, as the patent itself states, 'are virtually
prolongations of the positive and negative poles of the
battery.'"
"In the plan shown in Exhibit C, however, the conductor
C, or positive conductor only, is connected with the
battery, the other conductor,
Z, or, as it is called,
negative conductor, having no connection with the battery. In
consequence of this difference of arrangement in the system of the
patent, the positive conductor
C carries the positive
current in one direction, away from the battery, and the other, or
negative conductor
Z brings the positive current in the
opposite direction, or back to the battery, and thereby involves
the production of circuits of different resistance for each
station. In the system represented in Exhibit C, on the other hand,
both the conductors,
C and
Z, serve to carry the
positive current in the same direction, away from the battery, and
should therefore properly be both called positive conductors. As a
result of this arrangement, the current always passes through the
same or equal circuits, no matter at which station the connection
is made, simple changing from one to the other of these equal
parallel wires at the station where the contact is effected. "
Page 114 U. S. 96
"It is for this reason that in this system no equalization of
resistance, in the sense involved in the description of the patent,
is required."
It is upon these two points that the question of infringement
depends.
In considering them, it is important to bear in mind that the
patent is for a combination merely, in which all the elements were
known and open to public use. No one of them is claimed to be the
invention of the patentee. He does not claim them himself as
separate inventions. It is simply a new combination of old and well
known devices for the accomplishment of a new and useful result
that is claimed to be the invention secured by the patent. And the
well settled principles of law, heretofore applied to the
construction of patents for combinations merely, must apply and
govern in the present case.
The object of the patented combination was the accomplishment of
a particular result -- that is, to work electric signals on what
was known as the "block" system, by means of circuits, operated by
a single battery instead of many. But this result or idea is not
monopolized by the patent. The thing patented is the particular
means devised by the inventor by which that result is attained,
leaving it open to any other inventor to accomplish the same result
by other means. To constitute identity of invention and therefore
infringement, not only must the result attained be the same, but in
case the means used for its attainment is a combination of known
elements, the elements combined in both cases must be the same and
combined in the same way, so that each element shall perform the
same function, provided however that the differences alleged are
not merely colorable according to the rule forbidding the use of
known equivalents.
The first question we have to consider upon the issue as to
infringement is whether insulated sections of the rails, as
circuit-closers, constitute an essential element in the
combinations described in the patent. And that question we are
constrained to answer in the affirmative.
These insulated sections of track are shown and marked on
Page 114 U. S. 97
the drawing which accompanies the specification, and in its
descriptive part they are referred to as parts of the arrangement.
It says:
"At intervals of say, a mile, more or less, sections of the said
track
a a1 a2 are electrically insulated from the
remainder in a manner well understood, and therefore requiring no
detailed description."
And again:
"Each of the insulated sections of track
a a1 a2, etc.,
is placed at some point at or near which it is desired to erect a
signal, and any required number of these may be employed to meet
the requirements or any particular case."
And in describing the operation of the apparatus, if further
says "Upon reaching the point
a, the wheels and axles of
the train will form an electrical connection between the opposite
insulated rails," etc.
"Upon reaching the point
a2, the closing of the circuit
by the train will in like manner cause the signal attached to
M2 to be displayed, and the signal last displayed by
M1 to be withdrawn."
It is true that the patentee also says in the specification:
"I do not desire to confine myself to the use of any particular
from of visual or audible signals, nor to the particular devices
herein described for closing the electric circuit at points from
which a signal is to be operated,"
but that he does not thereby indicate any intention of
dispensing with insulated sections of the track, as a necessary
part of the mode of forming and closing the circuit, appears from
what immediately follows: "Instead of the circuit's being closed
automatically by the train itself, it may be closed by a signalman
by means of a key or switch or otherwise." This language evidently
implies that the insulated sections of the track are constant
factors in the plan, the only alternatives proposed having
reference not to a substitute for them, but merely to another mode
of using them in closing the circuit. So in each of the three
claims, the circuit closers
a a1 a2, or one or more of
them, are expressly named as part of the combination claimed as the
invention of the patentee. The use of insulated sections of the
railroad track thus repeatedly appears in every part of the
specifications as an unchangeable and characteristic feature of the
invention, and there is nothing in the state of the art at that
date, as disclosed in the evidence, to show that the patentee would
have
Page 114 U. S. 98
been justified in applying, or that if he had applied, an
application would have been sanctioned by a grant of a patent for a
combination as large and undefined as that now claimed by
implication and construction, so as to cover every form of a
circuit-closer then known or thereafter invented. For that employed
by the defendants as part of the Hall system was not only not known
and in use at the date of the patent, but was a device invented by
Hall himself or one by Snow, for which the latter obtained a patent
dated October 21, 1873. It dispenses altogether with the use of
insulated sections of the track, and employs instead a separate
instrument placed near the track and worked by means of a lever
connected with the track, so that the wheels of locomotives and
cars passing on the track depress the outer end, the lever being
raised again and held up after the train has passed by means of a
spring, which holds it in place.
Upon this point, the case seems to fall clearly within he rule
declared in
Prouty v.
Ruggles, 16 Pet. 336;
Silsby v.
Foote, 14 How. 218;
McCormick v.
Talcott, 20 How. 402;
Vance v.
Campbell, 1 Black 427;
Eames v.
Godfrey, 1 Wall. 78;
Dunbar v. Myers,
94 U. S. 187;
Fuller v. Yentzer, 94 U. S. 288;
Imhaeuser v. Buerk, 101 U. S. 647;
Gage v. Herring, 107 U. S. 640;
Seymour v.
Osborne, 11 Wall. 516;
Gould
v. Rees, 15 Wall. 194;
Gill v.
Wells, 22 Wall. 1;
McMurray v. Mallory,
111 U. S. 97;
Fay v. Cordesman, 109 U. S. 408.
On the second branch of the issue as to infringement, we think
the case is quite as clearly for the defendants. In the patent, the
entire circuit operated by the single battery, and which is closed
at intermediate points for the purpose of displaying and concealing
the signals, is described as formed by means of two wires or other
conductors,
C and
Z, attached to the positive and
negative poles of the battery, extended to any required distance in
a direction parallel or nearly so to the line of the railroad.
These wires may be placed on poles, it is said, and should be
suitably insulated from each other and from the earth, and they are
declared to be virtually prolongations of the positive and negative
poles of the battery.
Page 114 U. S. 99
Throughout, the two conductors are designated as metallic, and
insulated from the earth, and they are embraced under that
description in each of the claims. On the other hand, the
defendant's plan does not include a metallic circuit, composed of
two conductors as thus described, but uses a circuit composed in
part of the earth itself. The material difference in the principle
or mode of operation of the two plans, as distinguished in this
particular, is indicated by Prof. Morton in the extract from his
testimony already quoted. It will become more apparent on further
explanation.
The object proposed by the plan of the patent is to operate with
one battery instead of several, along the line of a railroad, an
electric circuit of considerable length, divisible into a number of
subsidiary circuits, for the display of signals at many stations by
means of circuit-closers operated automatically by passing trains
in definite and predetermined succession. It is obvious that the
battery must have sufficient power, being placed at one end of the
entire circuit, to operate efficiently at the other extremity. The
force necessary for that purpose would be much greater than would
be needed for the subsidiary circuits, all of which, it will be
observed, are different in length, and this difference of force in
the battery might be so great, owing to the required length of the
whole circuit, as, when expended upon a shorter intermediate
circuit, to destroy its capacity for working the signals by
overheating. It becomes, therefore, a matter of importance, in some
way to equalize the resistance of these varying circuits. The
patent itself contemplates this necessity and undertakes to make
provision for it. It is said in the specification that
"the respective resistances of the several circuits should be so
adjusted that they will be as nearly as possible equal to each
other, as a much more perfect action of the apparatus will be
secured thereby."
The specification does not point out any particular methods for
that purpose, but it is stated in the evidence of experts that such
means were well known at the time and in common use, such as by
varying the dimensions of the wire on the magnets or the
introduction of resistance coils into the nearer circuits. These
devices would be independent of the apparatus described
Page 114 U. S. 100
in the patent, and would have to be adjusted to the peculiar
situation of each line of signals in practical use.
In the Hall system, as used by the defendants, no such necessity
exists. According to that plan, there is no necessity of equalizing
the resistance of the several subcircuits, for they are all exactly
equal by their construction, as the electric fluid in working the
signal at any point, when a subcircuit has been formed by a
circuit-closer, nevertheless traverses the whole extent of the
large circuit, and returns by means of the connection formed by the
earth to the battery. So that in effect the Hall plan forms its
apparatus, counting the connection through the earth, as though it
were a continuous wire, as it might be, by means of three lines of
conductors, of which two are combined by connecting wires with the
magnets which operate the signals at points where the circuit is
closed for that purpose, carrying the positive electricity
throughout the whole distance to the extreme point of the entire
circuit, and then returning it by the third line, which is the
connection by means of the earth. And inasmuch as a wire might be
used for this purpose, instead of the earth, it would then show
three metallic conductors, and Mr. Farmer, the complainants'
expert, is quite right in saying, as he does, that the equalization
of the resistances in the several subcircuits, accomplished in the
plan of Hall, "is due to the arrangement of the wires wholly, and
not at all to the fact that the earth is used as a portion of the
conductor."
This arrangement is altogether unlike that of the patent. It
introduces into the plan of the defendants new elements, a new
combination, and a new result. The two wire conductors are not the
same, for, in the patent, one conducts positive electricity, the
other returns the current and completes the circuit, while in the
other, both the metallic conductors carry the current forward,
while the earth returns it, and in this mode the desideratum is
obtained of securing equality of resistance by making all the
circuits equal in size.
The device cannot be regarded as a substitute or an equivalent
for anything contained in the complainants' patent. It is of itself
an independent invention, and, as such, forms the sole subject of a
patent granted to Hall and Snow July 13,
Page 114 U. S. 101
1875. To explain more satisfactorily the mode of its operation
so as to show that it differs substantially from the arrangement of
the complainants, the descriptive parts of the Hall and Snow
patent, and the attached drawings, are here given:
image:c
Page 114 U. S. 102
"In the drawing, the letters
A B designate two wires,
which extend along the line of a railroad track, or in other words,
form the line wires of a telegraph line. The wire
A
connects by a wire 10 with one -- say the positive -- pole of a
galvanic battery
G, and the other pole of this battery
connects by a wire 11 with the ground. The battery
G is
supposed to be situated at one end of the line, and at the opposite
end of said line the wire
B is made to connect by a wire
12 with the ground. Along the line are distributed a series of keys
or circuit-closers
C D, each of which is connected with
the line wires
A B, the connection of the circuit-closer
C being effected by wires 13 and 14 and that of the
circuit-closer
D by wires 15 and 16. If the circuit is
closed through the circuit-closer
C, the current passes
from the battery through wire 10, line wire
A, wire 13,
circuit-closer
C, wire 14, line wire
B, and wire
12 to the ground, and through the ground and wire 11 back to the
battery. If the circuit is closed through the circuit-closer
D, the current from the battery passes through wires 10 A
15, circuit-closer
D, wires 16, B, and 12, to the ground,
and through the ground and wire 11, back to the battery."
"From these two examples it will be seen that whenever the
circuit is closed along the line, the electric current has to
traverse the whole circuit, and consequently the resistance is the
same in all cases."
It thus clearly appears that the difference in this particular
between the invention claimed by the complainants and the alleged
infringement is a difference in the arrangement of the parts and in
the principle of the combination, with different elements
performing different functions, and that the difference is
something more than the mere substitution of a connection by means
of the earth for one of the conducting wires. The case is therefore
clearly distinguishable from that of
Electric Telegraph Co. v.
Brett, 10 C.B. 838, cited and relied on by counsel for the
appellants as in point, where the substitution of the earth for a
wire as a conductor, being the sole difference, was held under the
English patent laws not to be sufficient to destroy that identity
between the two competing devices which constituted in that case
the infringement alleged,
Page 114 U. S. 103
although the patent itself called only for metallic conductors.
Were that the only difference between the two plans under
examination in the present case, there might still be question, in
view of our own patent laws, whether the patentee had not made a
wholly metallic circuit a necessary part of his combination, to be
determined by considerations which we have not thought it necessary
to bring into view as bearing upon that point. For, as we have
seen, the difference on which we ground our conclusion that the
defendants are shown not to have infringed the complainant's patent
in this particular is not merely that they have used the earth for
the return of the current that completes the circuit instead of a
metallic conductor, but that they have arranged their conductors,
in reference to the battery, the magnets, the rails, and the earth
upon such a system and with such relations and connections that in
operating their signals by a single battery, the circuits are
equalized as to resistance, while in that of the plaintiffs, the
circuits are of unequal size and resistance, requiring for
successful practical use the equalization of the resistances thus
created by means of independent and additional devices. One plan
proceeds upon the idea of unequal circuits, to be afterwards
equalized; the other adopts and embodies the idea of avoiding the
necessity of subsequent rectification by an original adjustment of
equal resistances. The difference is inherent in the two
combinations and is substantial.
On the ground that, in the two points mentioned, the defendants'
system of signaling is shown not to be an infringement of that
described in the patent of the appellants, the decree of the
circuit court dismissing the bill is
Affirmed.