Brown v. Stilwell & Bierce Manuf'g Co.

57 F. 731 | 6th Cir. | 1893

Lead Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court for the southern district of Ohio, finding that the appellee, which was complainant below, the Stilwell & Bierce Manufacturing Company, is the owner by assignment of a valid patent issued to E. R. Stilwell for a live-steam feed-water heater and purifier, (letters patent 274,078, dated March 13, 1883,) and that the appellant and defendant below, S. N. Brown & Co., has infringed the same, and enjoining the appellant from further infringement. By stipulation, reference to a master was waived, and $150 was agreed upon as damages to be recovered by appellee if the decree is not reversed.

The appellee is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of steam machinery, and makes purifiers under the patent involved in this suit. The appellant does not manufacture purifiers, but is the user of the one claimed to be an infringement of appellee’s patent, which was purchased from the Hoppes Manufacturing Company, another manufacturing company of Springfield, and a competitor of the appellee.

The water available for use in steam boilers is frequently filled with impurities, which, after a constant use of the boiler for several days, clog it, and much interfere with its proper operation. Among the impurities are sulphate of lime, sulphate of iron, and other incrusting substances, which form a scale in the boiler, difficult to remove. It becomes important, therefore, to purify the water before it' is introduced into the boiler, and the patent in suit is for a device to do this. If the water is much heated, it will deposit as a sediment the objectionable substances. A well-known mode of heating the water has been to run *733it into a closed purifying chamber, where steam from the boiler is introduced. From this chamber the purified water runs into the boiler by force of gravity. The steam has generally been taken from the exhaust pipe of the engine, so that it comes into the purifier after it has done its main work. As the pressure of the exhaust steam is much less than that in the boiler, its heat is less, and is often not enough to purify water which holds a good deal of matter in solution. Several patents had been taken out before the one in suit, for taking the live steam direct from the boiler into the purifier, whereby the greater heat of the steam would more completely cleanse the water. But this plan did not work perfectly. The heating of the water not only deposited the solid impurities, but also released gases, which mingled with the steam, and materially reduced its quantity and its heating capacity. The problem then was to get rid of the gases. The objection to releasing them directly from the purifier into the air was that it would seriously affect, the pressure of the steam in the purifier and in the boiler. To obviate these difficulties, the patentee of appellee’s patent, in addition to the ordinary live-steam pipe connection between the boiler and purifier, also connected the top of the purifier to the steam dome of the boiler with what he called a. “gas-escape pipe,” on the theory that through the upper pipe the deleterious gases would find their way out of the purifier into the boiler dome, and thus allow the hot steam freely to circulate in the purifier.

After this general statement, the purifier of the appellee may lx: described as a cylindrical shell with cast-iron heads. In the upper part is an overflow cup, G-, into which the cold water is fed. Below this overflow cup are a number of trays, usually made of cast iron, through the bottom of which are openings to allow the water to flow down from one pan to the next lower. -Below the pans, and filling up one side of the purifier, is a filtering chamber. .1, with an entrance at the bottom. The purifier is connected with the boiler by pipes, If. T¿. and K. In operation, the water is pumped in at P, flowing downward from the overflow cup, Gf, over the trays into the chamber, II, a t the bottom, upward through the filter, J, and thence through the pipe, K, into the mud drum of the boiler, G. The steam enters the purifier from the boiler through the pipe, L, branched into the pipes L' and L". The pipe, M, connects the top part of the purifier with the steam dome of the boiler, B. In the words of the patent, “deleterious gases escaping from the water, as it is freed from impurities, rise into the space, (i. e. the top part; of the purifier;) and as the steam is taken from the steam dome these gases pass through pipe, M, directly into the steam dome, without passing through the boiler.” The two claims of the patent are as follows:

“(1) A live-steam feed-water purifying or heating apparatus, D, connected to the boiler by means of water pipe, K, steam-feed pipes, L, and gas-escape pipe, M, substantially as herein set forth.
*734“(2) A live-steam heater or feed-water purifier having a series of ■ pans vertically above the filter, and a space or chamber above the pans, and water inlet connected to the steam dome by a pipe, so as to discharge the gases from the top of the purifier directly into the boiler, substantially as herein set forth.”

It is very clear, and it is in fact conceded by counsel, that everything connected with the purifier of. appellee below is old, except the gas-escape pipe, H. Every feature except the gas-escape pipe was included in a patent issued to the same patentee in 1867, and is now public property.

The defenses are: Eirst, invalidity of the patent for want of utility, novelty, and invention; and, second, noninfringement. The court below found all these defenses to be unsupported, and rendered a decree as above stated.

Much evidence was introduced tending to show that the theory upon which the escape pipe is supposed by the appellee to carry the gases is unsound. The appellant’s experts testified that the •condensation of the steam in the purifier, caused by heating the cold water, would so reduce the pressure pf the steam there, compared with that of the boiler, as to produce a very rapid current of steam from the boiler into the purifier through both the steam pipe, L, and the gas-escape pipe, M, making it impossible for gases to be carried from the 'purifier to the boiler through either pipe. The theoretical evidence was supported by an experiment with one of the appellee’s purifiers. A tin curtain was lightly hung in each of the pipes, L and M, so that it would be affected by the lightest current of air or steam, and opposite the curtains in the pipes were inserted glass peep holes, permitting easy observation of the direction in which the curtains swung. It was established by half a dozen witnesses that when steam was up, and the engine was running, the current in both pipes, at the same time, kept both curtains swung in the direction of the purifier. The appellee’s expert gave it as his opinion that the curtains would interfere with the action, circulation, and movement of the gases, and that it was therefore not a demonstration of the claim based on it. Appellee’s expert made experiments of his own with complicated apparatus, the substance of which, shortly stated, was that he gathered in a test tank a sample of the gases and steam from the top of the purifier, and by condensing the steam determined the relative volumes of the steam and the gases, first when a single steam-pipe connection between the boiler and the purifier was open, ■and then when both steam-pipe connections were open. His calculations showed that the use of the second steam pipe much reduced the relative volume of the gases as compared with the steam. It is difficult for a court to judge of the relative weight to be given to these two experiments, though it should be said that the simplicity of the first experiment, and the result, agreeing as it does with the ordinary rules of mechanics governing the effect of pressures, are rather more persuasive than the complicated experiments of the appellee’s expert. It may be, on the other hand, *735Hurt the theory of pressures advanced on behalf of the appellant, by which a current is said to be created from the dome of Hie holier towards the purifier, does not give sufficient weight to Hie dilTeience between 1 lie pressure of the steam in (he boiler itself anti iu Hie si earn dome, caused by the fact that the steam is eonsnurtly being drawn from the steam dome through the main steam pipe to run the engine. This may not only reduce the pressure in the dome, but may also create a current of steam from the dome, which will exert an influence in the top of the purifier to carry the gases with it towards the engine. The evidence is conflicting as ro the practical working of the appellee’s purifier in keeping the boiler free from scale or other impurities. On the whole, the question is such a doubtful one that we are not disposed to differ from the finding' of the court below on this point that the device is operative.

Xor do we differ with the court below as to the novelty of the invention. It does appear that in the patent of Hayes, Jeffrey & Beldades, patented March 30, 1880, there is described a feed-water purifier for boilers, which is connected to the boiler by 1:wo pipes, through which steam would reach the purifier. The purifier, however, is very different from the one in suit. It is situated inside of the dome of the boiler. The steam pipes, connecting the purifier with the steam space of the boiler, are referred to as “one or more pipes;” and Hie two pipes, when used, are evidently not intended by the patentee to produce a circulation and release of gases, but rather to double the supply of steam to Hie purifier. The patent is never shown to have been put into operation, and the device is so small, as compared with the boiler, and so obviously without other devices necessary in a successful purifier, that we do not think it can be relied upon as an anticipation of the gas-escape pipe, M, in the patent we are considering, if that pipe in fact operates as gas-escape pipe. The oilier devices are much less like the patent of appellee than the one we have described.

Xor do we think there is any want of invention in supplying a gas-escape pipe, if it does the work claimed for it.

The remaining question is as to infringement. The axipellant is not the manufacturer of the device claimed to be an infringement. It purchased its purifier from the Hoppes Manufacturing Company. As manufactured and furnished to defendant, the purifier contained only one steam-pipe connection between tlie boiler and the purifier. The pans in the purifier made by the Hoppes Company are arranged somewhat differently from those of the appellee, and are said to be more efficient in removing the impurisies from Hie water by adopting what counsel call the “stalactite principle.” They are so made and placed that the hot wafer, after it has deposited a sediment of impurities inside the pan, overflows and runs under the bottom of the pan towards its middle, and then falls to the pan below. The result is an incrustation on *736the bottom of each pan. The pans are thus made under a patent issued to John J. Hoppes. After the appellant -had used the purifier for a short time, complaint was made to the Hoppes Company that it did not do the work for which it was sold. On the supposition that not enough steam was furnished by the boiler through the connecting steam pipe to the purifier, an additional steam-pipe connection was made between the boiler and the purifier. This did not increase materially the proper deposit of scale and other impurities in the purifier, and after five months’ use the second boiler connection was cut off, and for that Hoppes, of the Hoppes Company, substituted a pipe from the top of the purifier to the steam pump. This was the only pipe furnishing steam to the pump. The effect of the change was to make the purifier a part of the pipe connecting the boiler and the steam pump. The evidence is that after the change the deposit of impurities was' improved, though the feeding of the water to the boilers continued to be imperfect. The cause of the latter trouble was found to be a structural defect in the boilers themselves, and new boilers were put in.

The double steam-pipe connection between the boiler and the purifier, which was maintained for a few months only, is not relied on as an infringement of the patent, and was not the basis upon which damages were awarded to the complainant. The real issue in the case is between the Hoppes Company and the appellee, as to whether a live-steam purifier, which uses a gas-escape pipe connected to the steam pump, is an infringement of appellee’s patent. On that issue the court below found for the appellee. If this finding cannot be sustained, the decree must be reversed.

The patentee, in his specifications, says:

“One object of my invention is to connect the top of tbe beater or purifier with the top of the boiler or steam dome by a pipe, so as to allow the direct escape of gases generated in the heater.”

Again:

“L" represents a branch steam pipe, admitting steam at or near the bottom of the series of shelves, which passes up over the pans in the op>posite direction to the course of the water. By employing pipes, I/, L", of large area, say of two to four inches in diameter, the water in the purifier is kept at or near the same temperature as that in the boiler, and the space above overflow, <3, forms in- fact a part of the steam dome of the boiler. As a consequence, deleterious gases escaping from the water as it is being freed from impurities rise into the space, and, as steam is taken from the steam dome, these gases pass through pipe, M, directly into the steam dome, without passing through the boiler.”

And again:

“The principal features of my invention, which consists in connecting the top of the heater with the steam dome of the boiler, or with the steam space of the boiler, can be employed with a combined heater and purifier, or with either a heater or purifier. Thus this escape pipe would perform its office irrespective of the manner in which the heater would be constructed. For instance, either the shelf or the filter might be removed, so long as the feed water was heated by a current of live steam in a vessel *737directly connected to the boiler itself. The escape pipe, M, can he advantageously used in such construction, which is embraced in the first clause of the claims herein.”

And the claims, to state them again for the sake of clearness, are:

“(1) A live-steam feed-water purifying or heating apparatus, D, connected to the boiler by means of water pipe, K, steam-feed pipes, L, and gas-escape pipe, M, substantially as herein set forth.”
“(2) A live-steam heater or feed-water purifier having a series of pans vertically above the filter, and a space or chamber above the pans, and water inlet connected to the steam dome by a pipe, so as to discharge gases from the top of the purifier directly into the boiler, substantially as herein set forth.”

It is to be observed that these are, in effect, combination claims. The second claim covers a live-steam pnriñer having pans placed on a filter, and a gas-escape pipe connected to the steam dome of the boiler. This claim is not infringed by appellant's purifier, which is without pans vertically arranged over a filter. Appellant uses no filter. It is well settled that the omission in the alleged infringing device, of an element named in a combination claim of a patent said to be infringed, is a complete defense to the charge of infringement. Rowell v. Lindsay, 113 U. S. 97, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 507.

The first claim, however, in view of the statement in the specification that the gas-escape pipe will perform its office irrespective of the manner in which the purifier and heater is constructed, ought not to be limited to a combination of the heater and purifier exactly as described in the patent with the other parts named, but will include a combination of any live-steam purifier connected to the boiler by means of a water pipe and two steam pipes, as described. How, appellant's device is a live-steam purifier, and if it is connected to the boiler by three pipes, as described in the first claim, it is an infringement of the claim. It has the water pipe, K, and the steam pipe, L. Some point is made that the description of the claim uses the plural, "the steam pipes, L.” This probably refers to the fact that the pipe, L, enters the boiler by two branches. The appellant does not branch the pipe, L. It is contended that the use of a single pipe without branches for introducing the steam is an omission of an important element of the combination claimed, because this division of the pipe, L, into branches is mentioned in the specification as bringing about a more effective distribution of tbe hot steam over the water surface in the purifier. We do not decide this question, because the decree must be reversed on another and more satisfactory ground.

In our opinion, the gas-escape pipe of appellant is not covered by Hie gas-escape pipe claimed in the patent of appellee. The specifications connect the gas pipe, M, either with the dome of the boiler or the steam space of the boiler. "The steam space of the boiler” is any place within the shell of the boiler where steam is, and it does not include the steam space inside the pipes which lead from the boiler. The ordinary meaning of the phrase would have this limitation, and it is very clear from the evidence of the expert called *738by tbe appellee below that be understands tbe words in this sense. Moreover, tbe first claim describes tbe purifier as “connected to the boiler by means of * * * gas-escape pipe, M.” Tbe purpose of connecting the gas-escape pipe with the boiler was to make the purifier as much as possible a part of tbe boiler. Ajs is apparent from statement of appellee itself, hereafter quoted, tbe idea of tbe inventor was not only to produce circulation of tbe gases, but to produce as near as possible an equilibrium between tbe purifier and tbe boiler. A connection with pipes leading away from tbe boiler would not serve so well to maintain the equilibrium; We are forced to the conclusion that tbe inventor, in drawing bis specifications and claims, did not intend to cover anything but' a pipe connecting tbe top of tbe purifier with tbe steam dome or other part of the boiler.

We are confirmed in this opinion by the history of tbe case. Tbe patent in suit was issued in 1S83. In 1884 a patent was issued to J. EL Berkshire for a live-steam feed-water beater and purifier connected to tbe boiler by a water pipe, K, and a steam pipe, L, while a gas-escape pipe, M, connected the top of the purifier with the pipe, M, leading from tbe boiler to the engine, or with any other circulating pipe.” Tbe Hoppes Company own tbe Berkshire patent. August 12, 1890, a patent was issued to Ralph B. Day for a live-steam purifier, with a gas-escape pipe connecting tbe top of the purifier directly with tbe steam pump, — the exact device used by the appellant. Tbe Day patent was assigned to tbe appellee, and was originally set np in tbe bill of complaint in this case. J. J. Hoppes instituted interference proceedings in tbe patent office against the Day patent, based on an application for a patent which be bad made for tbe same device in 1888, and tbe controversy resulted in Hoppes’ favor. A patent was issued to him for bis device August 4,-1891. After this tbe appellee dismissed that part of its bill which alleged infringement of tbe Day patent. In. tbe competition between tbe appellee and tbe Hoppes Company, in tbe sale of live-steam purifiers tbe former published tbe following caution to tbe trade in 1890:

“Caution. We offer a word of caution to all intending purchasers of live-steam purifiers. We were the first to place on the market a practical live-steam purifier. In our experiments we discovered that two steam connections between the purifier and the boiler were necessary in order to obtain a perfect equilibrium of pressure between tbe two vessels, and perfect circulation, both of which are absolutely necessary to prevent tbe accumulation of dangerous and deleterious gases in tlie purifier, and to insure a regular and uniform feed from the purifier to the boiler. The patents granted to our Mr. Stilwell broadly cover tbe two steam connections with the boiler. When our would-be competitors put their purifiers into actual use, they also discovered the necessity above referred to. With the pressure of this necessity upon one hand, and the Stilwell patent confronting them upon the other hand, they have sought to escape the dilemma in which they were thus placed by suggesting to their customers that the necessary relief could be, obtained by carrying steam from tbe purifier to tbe steam pump, or some other machine, and in that manner getting up the necessary circulation. The desired end is in this way partially accomplished, and the per*739formance of tlie purifier rendered mueli more satisfactory; but, unfortunately for thorn, the arrangement indicated is broadly covered by a patent issued to It. B. Day, and which has beoi. assigned to us. We do not indulge in threats, but we shall insist on our patented rights being respected.”

It would seem to be. clear from this that the appellee, even at so late a day, and after the very controversy here involved was mooted, conceded that the Stilwell patent covered only the connection of the escape pipe with the boiler, and that the Hoppes Company (which is the competitor referred to) did not infringe that arrangement by connecting the escape pipe with the steam pump. In appellee’s view it was the Day patent, and not the SHI well patent, which the steam-pump connection infringed. As we have seen, the Day patent proved invalid, and now complainant. seeks to broaden the claims of the Stilwell patent beyond what was intended or expressed by the patentee, and beyond what, unlit the Day patent failed, the appellee ever asserted.

•Ir has been said by counsel at the bar that theories do not control the decision in patent cases; that it is facts and results which are all-important. This is true in the sense that if a man describes in his specifications a machine by which to get a certain result so that any one skilled in (he art can reproduce the machine and the result, he cannot be deprived of his exclusive right in the machine by a demonstration that his theory, stated- in the patent, of fhe causes producing the result, is untrue. But a correct and certain knowledge of the principle by which the result is reached will often enable the patentee, or his solicitor, to cover, with general words, many different devices in which it may be applied. If he fails to use broad enough language to do so, then one of two things is true: either that he does not fully understand the true principle, and the other devices are not part, of his real invention, or else, knowing the principle, and its possible wider application, he has chosen to limit his claim for a monopoly to one particularly described device, and has abandoned the others to the public. Whichever horn of the dilemma he chooses, the court has no power to broaden the claims. In ihe case at bar, therefore, even if the connection of the gas-escape pipe with the steam pump is only anofher and similar device for the application of the same principle which is embodied in the Stilwell patent in suit, as contended by counsel for appellee, the patentee did not cover that device in his patent, for he limited his claim and specification to a connection with the steam dome of the boiler, or some other part of the boiler; and a connection with the steam pump is not a connection with the steam dome or the steam space of the boiler. They may now appear to be equivalent, but they were not known to be such when appellee’s patent was issued, and the patentee did not meniion them as such in his specifications. The doctrine of equivalents, therefore, does not aid the appellee. Rowell v. Lindsay, 113 U. S. 97, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 507.

As the patentee has expressly limited himself to a connection with the boiler, he has given io the defendant below, and to the *740world, so far as he is concerned, the right to make the connection at any point outside the boher and the steam dome, without infringing his patent. This rule in the construction of patents is so well established as hardly to need authority. One of the leading cases is that of Keystone Bridge Co. v. Phoenix Iron Co., 95 U. S. 274. In that case the patentee claimed an invention for wide and thin drilled eye bars applied on edge for use in the lower chords of iron truss bridges. The alleged infringement was round or cylindrical bars, flattened or drilled at the eye for the same use. It was held that, as the patentee had specified wide and thin bars in his claim, he was limited to that description, although the same function was performed by the alleged infringing devices. Mr. Justice Bradley said, (page 278:)

“When a claim is so explicit, the courts cannot alter or enlarge it. If the patentees have not claimed the whole of their invention, and the omission has been the result of inadvertence, they should have sought to correct the error fly a surrender of their patent, and an application for a reissue. They cannot expect the courts to wade through the history of the art, and speil out what they might have claimed, but have not claimed. Since the act of 1836 the patent laws require that an applicant for a patent shall not only, by a specification in writing, fully explain his invention, but that he ‘shall particularly specify and point out the part, improvement, or combination which he claims as his own invention or discovery.’ This provision was inserted in the law for the purpose of relieving the courts of the duty of ascertaining the exact invention of the patentee by inference and conjecture, derived from a laborious examination of previous inventions, and a comparison thereof with that claimed by him. This duty is now cast upon the patent office. There his claim is, or is supposed to be, examined, scrutinized, limited, and made to conform to what he is entitled. to. If the office refuses to allow him all that he asks, he has an appeal. But the courts have no right to enlarge a patent beyond the scope of its claim as allowed by the patent office, or the appellate tribunal to which contested applications are referred. When the terms of a claim in a patent are clear and distinct, (as they always should be,) the patentee, in a suit brought upon the patent, is bound by it. Merrill v. Yeomans, 94 U. S. 568. He can claim nothing beyond it. But the defendant may at all times, under proper pleadings, resort to prior use and the general history of the art to assail the validity of a patent, or to restrain its construction. The door is then opened to the plaintiff to resort to the same kind of evidence in rebuttal; but he can never go beyond his claim. As patents are procured ex parte, the public is not bound by them, but the patentees are. And the latter cannot show their invention is broader than the terms of their claim; or, if broader, they must be held to have surrendered the surplus to the public.”

See, also, Harris v. Allen, 15 Fed. Rep. 106; Manufacturing Co. v. Rosenstock, 30 Fed. Rep. 67; Smith v. Putnam, 45 Fed. Rep. 202; Otley v. Watkins, 36 Fed. Rep. 323; Burns v. Meyer, 100 U. S. 671; Klein v. Russell, 19 Wall. 433,

But it.is said this is a pioneer patent, one which constitutes a decided step in the art, and that as such the courts should be liberal in construing it to cover what the patentee really invented. In our opinion, all the patentee really invented was the gas-escape pipe connection with the boiler. There is nothing to show in his specifications or in the evidence that he had in mind, as feasible, *741the connection which was made in the Day or the Hoppes patent with the steam pump. And even if there were, the words the patentee used in his claim are too plain to admit of construction. He set limits to his monopoly in language the effect of which no liberality in construction can avoid.

We must therefore reverse the decree, with instructions to dismiss the bill.






Rehearing

On Rehearing.

(October 2, 1893.)

A motion for rehearing has been made in this case. The chief argument for the motion is based on the fact which the record discloses, that a short time after the issuance of the S til well patent the appellee erected a purifier for the Dayton Manufacturing Company’s works, in which the gas-escape pipe was connected not with the steam dome, but with a live-steam pipe, near its boiler outlet, which supplied the steam-heating apparatus and the feed pump. This tends to weaken the conclusion of fact reached in The foregoing opinion that Stilwell, when he obtained his patent, did not know that anything but a connection with the boiler direct would accomplish his purpose; but we cannot see how it affects the reasoning and result reached in the opinion, which are based on the language of claim,- — one which excludes from the monopoly of the patent .anything but a connection with the steam space of the boiler. Even if we were to concede that a connection with a live-steam pipe near its boiler outlet was a connection with the steam space of the boiler, it is to be noted that the escape pipe of appellant does not connect with the boiler or any outlet from the boiler. It is an outlet of the purifier away from the boiler. It is true that it connects with a steam-using device, but it furnishes the steam to this device itself. In other .words, the purifier, with its siugle boiler connection and the escape pipe to the feed pump, makes a single live-steam connection between the boiler and the feed pump. This is a different device from that described in the patent, and no construction of the language of the latter can bring the former within it.

Before closing, reference should he made to the averment of the original hill filed by appellee in this action in reference to the Day patent, which, as has béen said, was identical with the device used by appellant:

“And your orator further complains and says, on information and belief, that heretofore, and before the 9th day of June, 1890, Ralph B. Day, of Mansfield, Ohio, was the original and first inventor of a certain new and useful improvement in live-steam purifiers, fully described in the letters patent hereinafter mentioned, and which had not been known or used by others in this country, and not patented or described in any printed publication in this or any other country, before his invention or discovery thereof, and not in public use or on sale for more than two years prior to his application for a patent therefor.”

*742This averment does not work an estoppel against the appellee and complainant below, for when the interference proceedings between Day and Hoppes resulted in the issuance of Hoppes’ patent, and the consequent defeat of Day, the averment was withdrawn in an amended bill; but it has much probative force to show that the complainant below did regard the Day device as different from that patented to Stilwell, and owned by it. This, too, is the only effect of the circular referred to in the opinion. Counsel for appellee seem to think that the court has treated the circular as an estoppel. In this they are mistaken. Beferenee was made to it as evidence of the construction given to its own patent by the complainant below.

The motion for a rehearing is denied.

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