132 F. 607 | N.D.N.Y. | 1904
This is a suit to establish infringement of United States letters patent No. 644,367, granted to Romedius Panzl February 27, 1900, for new and useful improvements in composition of material for lining vessels for storing or boiling corrosive liquids. The object of the patentee was to invent a composition for lining of digesters which would be absolute proof against the corrosive solutions necessarily involved in the sulphite wood-pulp process.
The defendants Battle Island Paper & Pulp Company, George C. Webb, Richard J. Cullen, and John Kovagec are now before the
“Such lining for boilers and tanks used for storing or boiling of corrosive chemicals, as heretofore produced of hydraulic cement mixed with sand and of tiles applied thereon, being from five to seven inches thick, greatly diminishes the capacity of the vessel, and is not absolutely impervious to such corrosive fluids. Superlining with glazed acid-proof tiles is not sufficient to protect the lining material from disintegration.”
The specification further states that by the use of hydraulic cement and sand a swelling and contracting of the mass is produced, which results in forming cavities in the lining, through which the acids penetrate and destroy the boiler or vessel. The patentee declares that as a result of experiment he has discovered that a composition of hydraulic or burnt cement, chamotte, and quartz, or some other silicious material, finely powdered, and then mixed with diluted silicate of soda, will produce a plastic material, and may readily be applied to the interior sides of walls of the boiler or vessel. When so applied the material is absolutely impermeable to corrodible fluids, and protects the iron or metal of which the vessels are necessarily constructed. The claims of the patent, three in number, all of which are alleged to be infringed by defendants, read as follows:
“(1) A composition of matter for acid-proof lining of boilers, tanks, and similar vessels, composed of hydraulic cement, chamotte, some silicious material, water, and silicate of soda.
“(2) A composition of matter for acid-proof lining of boilers, tanks, and similar vessels, composed of hydraulic cement, pulverized chamotte and quartz, and of diluted silicate of soda.
“(3) A composition of matter for acid-proof lining of boilers, tanks, and similar vessels, composed of twenty-six per cent, of hydraulic cement, twelve per cent, chamotte, twenty-one per cent, of quartz and of a suitable quantity of diluted silicate of soda.”
The proportions of the materials enumerated and the description of the method adopted by the patentee in preparing his lining, are substantially as follows: Twenty-six parts hydraulic cement, 12 parts pulverized chamotte, 17 parts commercial silicate of soda, 21 parts silicious material (preferably pulverized quartz), and 24 parts pure water. The proportions of these materials, expressed in parts, and measured by volume, may be moderately varied according to their qualities from the standard set out in the patent. The chamotte and quartz are finely pulverized, and mixed with the cement while dry. To assimilate the silicate of soda with water, a suitable boiler is filled with the latter, and the proportion of silicate of soda
“Tlie chamotte, owing to its chemical characteristics and porosity, acts in such composition also as a storage medium or repository for the silicate of soda. It retains a considerable quantity of silicate of soda in its unchanged condition. This, silicate is held by the chamotte, and is gradually drawn upon by the cement, thus extending the period of setting or hardening of the mass, thereby facilitating its application to the digester, and increasing greatly the durability of the lining and its resistive powers.”
According to the expert witnesses for defendants, chamotte is merely crushed fire brick — that is, clay without sand, heated to a high temperature — and hence is the identical material referred to as fire brick in the patents of Wenzl, Kellner, No. 4,959, Norton, No. 480,934, and others contained in the record. If the consideration given to the word “chamotte” in order to ascertain its exact meaning and import impelled the acceptance of the view of the defendants’ expert witnesses, the invalidity of the Panzl patent because of the prior art would seem plain, and the combination of the materials mentioned in the claims would lack invention. But it is apparent from the definitions above quoted that the term “chamotte” technically is accorded a wider signification than that claimed by the defendants, and that it is not restricted to ordinary fire brick with which furnaces are lined, though in its classification burnt clay or fire brick is included. The evidence shows that chamotte and a silicious material compounded with hydraulic cement and silicate of soda produces the desired even distribution of,the particles forming the cement, and prevents the formation of inequalities and cracks in the hardened mass. The' action of the mixture is thus explained by complainant’s expert witness:
“Wben tbe cement and the silicate of soda- react upon each other, there is formed mono calcium silicate and caustic soda. If the caustic soda would remain uncombined, treatment with water would remove it from the mass, thereby causing a certain porosity, which eventually would allow the acid liquors in the digester to penetrate the mass and corrode the shell. The chamotte, however, as well as the silicious material, of whatever nature it may be, possesses an affinity to the soda thus liberated. It is mainly the chamotte that shows the greater affinity to the soda with which it combines to form an insoluble compound, whereby a very hard, stony mass is produced. The soda is then not washed out, and the porosity which otherwise would follow is prevented.”
As has been indicated, ordinary fire brick does not possess the properties of chamotte. The density of the mass or body which is formed when it is mixed or united with the silicious material is
The next point in controversy arises out of the joinder as defendants of various alleged infringers. The bill charges a conspiracy between the defendants, several of whom were former employés of the patentee. Complainant claims that each of the defendants should be enjoined from further infringement of complainant’s patent. Defendants Webb and Cullen acted solely in the capacity of agent for the defendant corporation in purchasing the necessary materials for mixing and in directing the work, and were not specially interested, except to receive compensation for their services. Though Cullen had prior knowledge of the Panzl' process, and himself claims to have invented the process by which defendants’ digester was lined, I am nevertheless of the opinion that the bill should be dismissed as to him and the other individual defendants. The record is devoid of establishing a conspiracy between defendants to wrong the complainant, and the defendant corporation is not charged with insolvency. Young v. Foerster (C. C.) 37 Fed. 203; Consolidated Fastener Co. v. Columbian Fastener Co. (C. C.) 79 Fed. 795; Green v. Buckley (C. C.) 120 Fed. 955.
A decree may be entered restraining the defendant corporation and for an accounting, and dismissing the bill as to the remaining defendants.
On Application for Rehearing;
(October 24, 1904.)
The Russell patent broadly covers a homogeneous digester lining. The decision of the court is not limited to the materials employed, but
“And we think, upon principle and authority, that Russell, having discovered that cement material generally possesses the qualities required for his conception of a homogeneous digester lining, should not be limited to such materials in the class of cementitious mixtures as he had chemically and commercially isolated as individuals, but that his claims and descriptions should be construed as including all cementitious mixtures which ordinary skilled practical chemists might be expected to find as answering the requirements of the described conditions, or such as would naturally develop in the growth of the art without invention.”
It may fairly be presumed that the Commissioner of Patents, in granting the patent in suit, believed that the ingredients specifically named in the specification and the process of mixing the same were within the realm of patentability, and accordingly that it contributed something new and useful to the art. There being no sufficient proof to the contrary, the presumption of validity to which the patent is entitled is not overcome by the defendant’s evidence. On the contrary, the proofs show that the improvement produced an absolutely acid-proof lining, and one that would permanently withstand the influences of corrosive substances. The Russell patent is also for a protection to the iron from the corroding influences of the acid, but it is not pretended that the protection is permanent. Whether Panzl in his process includes ingredients claimed by Russell need not here be decided. As was said in Cochrane v. Deener, 94 U. S. 787, 24 L. Ed. 139, in speaking of the fact of prior process patents:
“His invention and his patent are equally entitled to protection from infringement as if they were independent of any connection with them.”
The petition for reargument is denied.
The petition to reopen the case for the purpose of taking additional testimony to show that the ingredient chamotte, used by the defendant in its digester, contained simply crushed fire brick, is also denied, on the authority of Pittsburgh Reduction Co. v. Cowles Electric Smelting & Aluminum Co. (C. C.) 64 Fed. 125; Wilson v. Freedley (C. C.) 129 Fed. 835; Rose v. Stephens & Condit Transo. Co. (C. C.) 19 Fed. 808.
So ordered.