131 F.2d 884 | 5th Cir. | 1942
The suit was for infringement of a method claim of one
“A whipstock”, as appellant’s brief described it, “is, broadly speaking, a rotatable wedge with a grooved inclined face, and its purpose is to deflect or change the direction of drilling by guiding the drill bit down its face. It is used to change the course of the well or to direct the bit back to the perpendicular line of the well to straighten the hole. The practice in connection with the use of it has been to first make a preliminary survey of the well bore by means of an instrument, called a single shot or a multiple shot, to determine the degree of inclination from the perpendicular and the direction of inclination. This preliminary survey informs the operator as to the degree of inclination of the well bore and usually the direction of slant with relation to the Earth’s magnetic north. For instance, it may be found that the well bore is inclining eight degrees from the perpendicular and is directed fifteen degrees west of north. This survey is made prior to the performance of the method here in controversy. When the drill pipe with the whipstock is lowered into the well and brought to rest the operator does not know in which direction the whipstock is facing, therefore, he must run a second survey; and such survey is the sub j ect matter of this controversy.”
The claim was that defendant was infringing these claims by employing a method and device substantially the equivalent of those claimed in plaintiff’s patents. The defenses were lack of invention, anticipation, noninfringement, and, as to the Hyer Patent, that he was not the true inventor. The district judge, of the opinion that the patents were valid and infringed, gave judgment accordingly.
Appellant here urging upon us the same contentions it made below, insists that Hyer’s admission that he had nothing to do with putting, and did not put, in the patent drawings the figure 4, disclosing the indirect method of obtaining the indications sought, shows that he was not the sole and only inventor and avoids the patent. But its main argument is directed to the issues of anticipation, and therefore lack of invention, and non-infringement. Insisting that the claims of both Palmer and Hyer are anticipated by, and invalid under Straatman2
Examining claim 33 of the Palmer patent in the light the governing prin
Claim 33 of A. B. Palmer et al., U. S. Patent No. 2,012,138 application Nov. 28, 1933, patented Aug. 20, 1935, reading as follows: “The method of orienting a whipstock within a bore-hole including lowering the whipstock into the bore-hole by means of a sectional drill stem, determining the azimuthal position of the whipstock while it is still attached to the drill stem by means of an instrument bearing a known relationship to the whip-stock, and fixing the whipstock in position.”
Method claims Nos. 1, 5, 6 and 7 and apparatus claims Nos. 3 and 8 of R. S. Hyer, U. S. Patent No. 2,120,670, application July 5, 1935, patented June 14, 1938. All of these claims deal with a method or apparatus for mechanically indicating azimuth in a bore-hole, and for reading or otherwise determining these indications when the indicating means have been withdrawn from the hole. Of these claims, while each of them very closely resembles every other, 6, 7 and 8 are a little broader than 1, 3 and 5 in that claims 1, 3 and 5 refer to “a magnet”, while 6, 7 and 8 refer to a “magnetic element”, a broader term, so that claims 6, 7 and 8 are necessarily infringed if claims 1, 3 and 5 are. Of these three, claim 5 is somewhat broader tiran claim 1 in that claim 5 is not limited, as claim 1, is to any recording and does not specify the particular fashion in which the “determining”, i. e., the making determinable or fixing the relative indications is carried out so that they may be ascertained at the surface. Apparatus claim 3 follows the teaching of method claim 1.
U. S. Patent No. 1,806,509, patented May 19, 1931. This invention relating to a process and apparatus for straightening out and giving deviations to boreholes by means of a whipstock recited: “It is known that by means of a whip-
German Patent No. 197,213 patented April, 1907, describing it as a method of orienting the course of bore-holes and reciting that use of the compass for orientation has not led to reliable results, the inventor declares that the method, described in his patent, has for its purpose making use of magnetic needle for orientation. He then described the method thus: “A magnetic needle is placed in a strong, artificially produced magnetic field and that then through alternate lowering of the magnetic needle and of the magnetic field the rotation of a scale connected with the magnetic field is effected.” This was the claim of the patent: “Process for ascertaining the course of bore-holes characterized in that a magnetic needle connected with a scale is placed in a powerful, artificially excited magnetic field and that by alternate repression of the magnetic needle and of the magnetic field the rotation of the scale will be determined.”