1 F. Cas. 728 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York | 1868
This is a suit in equity founded upon five different patents relating to the production of pulp fit for the manufacture of paper, which patents, it is alleged, the respondents have infringed. The questions raised in the case are so similar to those already considered in other actions founded upon the same patents, and especially in an action brought by the same complainants in the circuit court for the eastern district of Pennsylvania, [American Wood-Paper Co. v. Heft, Case No. 322,] and there decided since the commencement of the present suit, that I feel relieved of much of the responsibility which I should otherwise feel in disposing of questions of this character. In the light of these decisions, my way to a correct determination is not obscure.
As to two of the patents sued on, the patents reissued to Watt & Burgess, numbered 1448 and 1449, the determination of 'the court in the ease referred to furnishes an authority from which I should not feel at liberty, had I the inclination, to dissent. In accordance with that authority, it must here be held that the Watt & Burgess patent, No. 1448, which is for a pulp suitable for the manufacture of paper, made from wood or other vegetable substances by boiling the wood or other substances in an alkali, under pressure, as described, can not be sustained as a valid patent for a new product. Aside from that authority, I should feel bound to say that it appears impossible to consider that to be a new material, patentable as a new product,, which is simply a substance long well-known to exist in wood and other substances, left in a state “nearly pure,” and consequently fit for the manufacture of paper on being bleached by the removal from it of the intercellulose with which it is found to be combined in wood. The patent No. 1448, is for such a material as a new product, in the production of which, under the patent, if there be anything new, it is, as it seems to me, the process, not the product. The same authority must also dispose of the complainants’ case, so far as it rests upon the Watt & Burgess patent No. 1449, which is for the process of producing this material from wood and other vegetable substances as described.
As regards this patent, the learned judge of the district court who took part in the decision of the Pennsylvania case, in his opinion, as delivered, makes the case turn upon the question of fact whether the process described in the reissued patent was invented by Watt & Burgess prior to the issue of their original patent in 1853, and he finds upon evidence, in substance the same as the evidence before me in this case, that this process had not then been invented by Watt & Burgess. Such is also my conclusion; and I am also of the opinion that the reissued patent is for a process substantially different from any described in the original patent. So far, then, as the bill rests upon the two Watt & Burgess patents 144S and 1449, it must fail. But the complainants have not based their action upon the Watt & Burgess patents alone; they have also averred and proved the ownership of a patent issued to one Mellier on August 7, 1857, and numbered 17, 387. This patent is for the use of a vessel of a peculiar description for heating the material in the manufacture of paper pulp, and also for a process of disintegrating vegetable matter for the purpose of producing pure cellulose fit for the manufacture of paper. It is the latter claim alone which is called in question here. This patent also was brought to the consideration of the court in the Pennsylvania case referred to, where the judges differed in opinion respecting it. It has likewise been considered and passed upon by the circuit court of this circuit, in the case of Buchanan v. Howland, decided in Albany, March 23, 1863, Hall, I., [Case No. 2,074.]
To the claim based upon the patent of Mel-lier, the first ground of defense taken here is, that the evidence does not show Mellier to have been the first inventor of the process described in his patent. The same point was taken in the Pennsylvania case referred to, and there Judge Cadwalader held with the complainant and Mr. Justice Grier to the
The next ground of defense is, that the Mellier patent is for a method of treating straw, and does not cover bamboo, which is the material mostly used by the respondents. This point I can not consider to be free from doubt In the opinion delivered by Judge Hall in the Albany case, the patent is always spoken of as a patent relating •to straw; but in that case the infringement proved was in regard to straw, and the court had no occasion to consider, and expressed no opinion as to whether the patent extended •to any other substance. In the Pennsylvania case the point was fairly raised, and upon it Judge Oadwalader expressed the opinion that the patent would cover any librous vegetable substance requiring like treatment with straw for the purpose in view, and that wood was within its scope, while Mr. Justice Grier considered the patent to be •confined to straw et similia. It appears to me quite manifest, from the language of the specification, that the patentee considered his process as applicable and beneficial in the treatment, not only of straw, but also of other vegetable substances. He uses throughout, the phrase “straw and other vegetable fibrous materials requiring like treatment.” His description of his process nowhere limits it to the single article of straw, and his patent is for his process as described; but he does, in the last clause of his specification, say: “I also claim the within process for bleaching straw, consisting, etc. * * * substantially as described.” Now, his process described is not a process for bleaching, in the ordinary acceptation of that term, nor is it a process for treating straw alone. No person looking at the whole paper would fail to see that the patented discovery related to other material as well as straw; and in view of the peculiar phraseology of the last clause, which is called the claim, and of the intention manifest elsewhere in the instrument, I incline to the opinion that, according to the principles applicable in the construction of the patent, the last clause should not be held to be such a formal summing up and defining •of the limits of the invention as to restrict the patents to the single substance there mentioned, and this must have been the conclusion of Mr. Justice Grier, as well as of Judge Oadwalader. If, then, the patent extends to any other substance than straw, in the common and limited signification of the word, the respondents are within its scope by reason of their treatment of bamboo. They appear at times to have treated common straw, but their principal article is bamboo, which they use for the purpose of producing from it the desired pulp for the manufacture of paper, the stalks of this plant, which is the gigantic grass of the tropics, belonging to the same botanical order as wheat, oats, etc. The defendants, by means of a peculiar process of their own, shiver the bamboo into a mass of tendril-like shreds or strips very like a mass of straw, which they then boil in caustic alkali, under pressure, sometimes having previously boiled it in spirit alkali, in open vessels, and sometimes not. It is certainly a fibrous vegetable substance requiring like treatment for the purpose in question. It was treated by the respondents in the same way that they treated straw, and for the same purpose, and is in form and substance so very like to the common straw, that it must, in my opinion, be held to be within the scope of the Mellier patent. But again, it is said that the Mellier patent is claimed to a patent for a single-stage chemical process resulting in the production of pulp fit for paper, in which case the respondents do not infringe it, because their treatment is a two-stage process.
The principle of the Mellier discovery was that the effect of a solution of pure caustic soda upon certain vegetable substances could be increased by the use of it, under pressure, at a temperature not less than about 310°, so as to result in the production of nearly pure fiber- without resort to any other chemical process, thereby saving both alkali and time. The final process used by the defendants is, as I understand the evidence, a process which invokes the same principle to produce the same result, and in substantially the same way. If this be so, they do not escape the patent by a previous shivering of the material into shreds, or by a previous boiling it in an open vessel in spent alkali, or by putting it through a beating engine. The material so previously treated, is still a fibrous vegetable substance, requiring to be treated by the Mellier process to produce the pulp desired; and when the defendants apply that process to it they infringe. But the respondents insist that they do not infringe the Mellier patent because they use a pressure lower than the minimum pressure required by the Mellier process, which they claim to be the pressure represented by seventy pounds upon the steam gauge. . Upon this point I concur with Judge Oadwalader, in the opinion that the minimum pressure of the Mellier patent is the pressure indicated by fifty-five pounds upon the steam gauge instead of seventy pounds. It is true that the patent designated seventy pounds, but it says internal pressure, and gives 310° Fahrenheit as the corresponding temperature. Now, 310° Fah
I have thus considered the principal objection made to the complainants’ demand as based upon the Mellier patent, and my conclusion is, that the decree must be in favor of complainants, so far as that portion of their claim is concerned.
There remains to be considered the two boiler patents which are set out in the bill as to which it seems sufficient to say that the first boiler patent of Keen, No. 25,418, is for a combination of which the stirrers described are a material part; the evidence, however, shows that the stirrers are not used by the respondents; not using the complainant’s combination, they do not infringe his patent. The second boiler patent of 1863, No. 38,901, is also for a combination of which the diaphragm and well are material parts. The respondents use no well with the diaphragm, but charge-their boiler below the diaphragm. There is, then, no use of the defendants’ combination secured by the patent So far as the complainants’ case rests upon these two boiler patents, it must fail.
The decree must accordingly be in favor of the complainants, the terms of which may be settled on notice to the opposite party, when I will also dispose of the question of costs.