Electric Gas-Lighting Co. v. Fuller
Electric Gas-Lighting Co. v. Fuller
Opinion of the Court
This is a bill in equity, brought for the infringement of letters patent No. 22">,071, granted to Henry F. Packard, and No. 232,304, granted to Frank V. San ford, for improvements in electric gas-lighting apparatus. The patents relate to that form of electric gas-lighting where the burner is operated by hand, and which does away with the use of matches. Packard says in his specification:
“My invention consists in certain novel devices, hereinafter fully described, by means of which the gas is turned on by pressing or pulling down and then releasing a lever fitted loosely to the stem of the cock, and thereby causing a vibrating arm to sweep past the tip of the burner; also, in the combination, with the said devices, of an electric contact-point fixed upon the end of the said vibrating arm, and of a fixed electrode located in close proximity to the orifice from which the gas issues, one of the said electrodes being insulated from the burner, and which, by the action of the said devices, are caused to make and break contact when llie gas is turned on, thereby producing an electric spark and igniting the gas.”
The claims relied upon are the third and fourth,-which are as follows:
“3. In combination with a gas-burner, A, and a fixed electrode, n, the ratchet, J), pawl, h, spring, E, lever, E, pivoted loosely upon the stem of the cock and having two arms,/and g, to the latter of which is attached an elastic contact-point, and stop-pin, k, as and for the purposes set forth.
“4. In an electric gas-liglifcing apparatus, in combination with devices constructed and arranged to open and close the gas-passage to the tip at eacli alternate movement thereof, and, conjointly with such opening to ignite the gas by an electric spark generated by such movement, devices which shall, without actuating the gas-cock, repeat the electrical spark by the return movement of the opening devices to their normal position for further use, substantially as described and shown.”
The Sanford device is substantially like the Packard, with the addition of a chain which is attached to the arm of the lever. By pulling the
“Where the thing patented is an entirety, consisting of a separate device <5r of a single combination of old elements incapable of division or separate use, the respondent cannot make good the defence in question by proving that a part of the entire invention is found in one prior patent, printed publication, or machine,, and another part in another, and so on indefinitely, and from the whole or any given number expect the court to determine the issue of novelty adversely to the complainant. ”
The constituents of the Packard gas-burner are a fixed electrode; a •stop-cock with one way or several ways; a ratchet rigidty secured, so as to move with the stem of the cock, and having four teeth for a one-way stop-cock, and a proportionably increased number of teeth according to the number of ways through the cock; an angle-lever fitted loosely upon the stem of the cock, one of its arms for operating by hand, and the1 other extended so as to carry an electric contact point against and past the electrode fixed at the burner tip when the first arm is depressed; a pawl attached to the lever to engage with the ratchet; a spring to retract the lever when released after being depressed; and a stop-pin to limit the movement,of the lever. To light the gas, it is necessary to pull down the lever-arm once, whereby the pawl engages with and turns the ratchet, which opens the valve, and admits the gas through the orifice, while the other, lever-arm sweeps past the contact point across the fixed electrode, making and breaking the circuit, and thereby producing an igniting spark. Upon releasing the arm, the spring will return the lever to its position, making another spark on its return, and, the pawl not engaging with the ratchet on its return, the gas will be left burning. To extinguish the gas, a single pull will revolve the plug so as to close the cock, and the spring will return the lever to its position. No one of the prior devices referred to by the defendants discloses the combination of elements embraced in the Packard patent. Those devices, at most, contained huta part of the Packard mechanism; and, if practically operative, they seem to have been of doubtful utility. To have constructed the Packard apparatus, and so make a practical and useful burner, I think showed invention. The Smith patent, No. 20,805, shows a ratchet wheel fixed to a gas-cock, a lever moving freely on the gas-cock,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.