8 F. 322 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1881
This is a bill to recover damages for the alleged infringement of a patent issued on the third of May, 1864, to the complainants for an improvement in pitching the inside of barrels.
From the functions of the different parts of this machine it is obvious that some of them will wear out much faster than others, and I think there can be no doubt that the defendant has the right to replace those parts as often as necessary, so long as the identity of the machine is retained. The proof in this case shows, to my satisfaction, that as the grates, pipes, and blowers wore worn out, they were renewed, and therefore the identity of the machine is retained. If, for instance, this patent had- been upon a peculiar grate, and there had been no patent upon the other parts of the machine, when the grate was worn out the defendant would have no right to put in another like it, because the grate was covered by the patent; but if the grate is only a part of an entire combination, I think it has a right to replace the worn-out parts, and it cannot be said to be -a different machine. Chaffee v. The Boston Belting Co. 22 How. 217; Wilson v. Simpson, 9 How. 109-124.
It is also admitted that the defendant uses what is known in the trade as a “Krauseh machine.” This machine is constructed upon what seems to me a substantially different principle from that of the complainants. The complainants’ invention operates by driving a blast of air by means of a blower through a bed of ignited coals into
It is claimed by the complainants that the essential principle involved in their patent is the burning out of the oxygen from the air driven by the blast through the fire, so that, although it passes into the cask heated to a very high degree, it will not burn the inside of the cask; in other words, that it involves the process of heating barrels for pitching by means of a hot blast which is deprived of its oxygen before use, and thus rendered incapable of injurious burning.
I do not consider it necessary to discuss this question, for, in my view, the Krauseh machine operates upon a different principle. It consists of a furnace or fire-box, containing a coil of steam-pipes so arranged that the steam passing through the pipes will be superheated. This superheated steam is let into the barrels, and heats the inside so as to melt the pitch, so that it can be evenly distributed or coated over the inside. -The fire in the fire-box is stimulated or kept going by a steam exhaust, which passes out of the top of the box so as to induce a blast through the fire, and the pipe used for letting the steam into the large casts is so arranged that it passes through a larger pipe from the upper part of the fire-box over "the grate, and which might possibly, by reason of the draft occasioned by the jet of steam, carry into the cask some of the burnt air and products of combustion which are contained in the fire-box above the fire. But it is obvious that this burnt air wquld be only a very small part of the means by which the heating is accomplished, and is not the main process by which the heating is secured. I think, therefore, the defendant does not infringe complainants’patent by'the use of the Krausch machine.
The complainants’ bill will therefore be dismissed, on the ground that no infringement of their patent is shown.