190 F. 760 | 9th Cir. | 1911
In both these views 1 is the water supply pipe, and 2 the curved nozzle provided with the needle valve, 3. The nozzle is pivoted to the supply pipe in the plane of the nozzle’s sinuosity. It is curved so as to permit, the insertion of the stem 14 of the needle valve 3. The needle valve stem in extended through the nozzle casing in order to permit the use of external means for moving the needle valve back and forth. In order to permit the insertion of the needle valve, it is apparent that the nozzle must be curved, but in the use of a curved nozzle there necessarily results a reactive force from the outer curve, tending strongly, and proportionately to the pressure of the jet, to turn the nozzle in the opposite direction. Said the patentee in his specifications:
“The nozzle illustrated is drawn from an example intended for a pressure of eight hundred pounds per inch of area, and a jet two inches in diameter would produce a reactive .force of more than two thousand five hundred pounds, which would produce a turning strain if there was a vertical axis at right angles to the axis in figure 1. * ® * X overcome this 'by placing the pivot pin at right angles to the line of discharge from the supply pipe, and in the plane in which the nozzle is bent.”
This last sentence discloses the distinctive feature of the appellee’s patent. Curved nozzles with needle valves had been used before, but they had always been hinged to the supply pipe at right angles to the plane of the. nozzle’s curvature. Sometimes the curvature was downward and sometimes upward, but in either case the jet struck the curve creating a strong reactive force which tended to turn the nozzle upward or downward on the axis in accordance with the direction, of the curve. Various devices were resorted to to overcome, this. In some cases heavy counterbalancing weights were used, but, as the force of the jet was variable, there was nearly always a considerable -resistance or inertia to be" overcome by the governor, resulting in
It is urged that the addition of this feature to the combination does not show invention; that it was to do the obvious thing, that which" any mechanic would have done when called upon to remedy the known defects of prior devices. To this it is to be said, among other things, that although the defects of the nozzles which had been iri use for many years prior to Doble’s invention were well known and recognized, and mechanics and engineers had been called upon to remedy them, no one prior to Doble thought of the simple expedient of changing the axis of the pipe from the horizontal to the perpendicular. That one step in the art marked success in the combination. It was obvious that the reactive force in a curved nozzle could be counterbalanced by counterweights, and that, if the force were constantly uniform, it would be possible to adjust the weights so nicely as to counterbalance the same perfectly, and render the nozzle sensitive to the deflecting force of the governor. But the use of the needle valve made such counterbalancing impracticable, for the reason that the needle valye was intended to control and reduce the stream when occasion demanded, and with the reduction of the stream "there was a corresponding reduction of the reactive force, and consequently a heavy weight to he overcome by the governor. The use of the needle valve in the combination, therefore, created the problem which confronted the engineers and those skilled in the art, and which, for several years, they endeavored to solve. The problem was submitted to two engineers of the Risdon Iron & Locomotive Works, to George J. Henry, the engineer of the appellant, and to the engineer of the ap-pellee. The result of their efforts was the construction oí'two or three devices. One was a straight nozzle inside of which was a flexible needle valve. Another was a nozzle with a stationary needle valve, relative to which the nozzle itself was made movable by means of a sliding tip. Mr: Henry in his testimony admitted that at that time the solution of the problem was not obvious. In the year 1902 Doble; the inventor of the Doble patent, constructed and installed for the Santa Ana Water Company two nozzles, pivoted in the plane of the nozzle’s curvature. These were the first that were designed and used under his invention. Henry, the engineer of the appellant, saw this nozzle in use, and conceived the idea of an improvement upon it by adding a reactory support mounted upon its own pivot in the plane of the pivot of the nozzle itself. For this improvement he applied for a patent on June 3, 1903. Doble filed his application on October' 17; 1903, and his patent was issued on February 9, 1904. A week later he filed an application for a reissue. On May 6, 1905, Henry, upon the suggestion of the Patent Office that he insert in his application claims sufficiently broad to cover the invention disclosed in his drawings, amended his claims so as to cover the Doblé invention as his own: Interference was declared, and the result was that Doble - was ad
While these facts are not sufficient to estop the appellant to deny “that the appellee’s combination involves invention, they may properly be considered as tending to show that at that time the appellee and' its engineer deemed the improvement patentable. While it seems a very simple matter to overcome the reactive force of the jet with reference to the governor by changing the plane of the nozzle, the question of the invention involved in a combination of which that is an element should be regarded as it appeared to those who were skilled in the art who were called upon to deal with the problem, rather than in the light ©f its subsequent solution. All nozzles with needle valves theretofore used had been made in a curved form, and had been hinged at right angles to the curvature, with the needle valves so inserted as to be operated from a point outside the nozzle. The defects of that construction were well known. The problem of their correction was submitted, not to mere mechanics, but to the most skillful engineers in the art. After a period of some three years of experiment and investigation, Doble solved the problem, and his combination went into immediate and general use. In view of all these facts and the presumption arising from the issuance of the patent, we think the court below did not err in finding invention in the appellee’s combination.
It is earnestly contended that there is to be found in the prior art a full and complete anticipation of each of the claims of the patent sued on. .The nozzle principally relied upon as showing anticipation of the Doble nozzle is that which is designated in the record “Exhibit 11.” It was. installed by the appellant in 1896 at the Mill Creek plant No. 1 of the Redlands Electric Eight & Power Company. It is a symmetrical nozzle, having two curved branches for the purpose of dividing the stream which issues from the supply pipe, and distributing it in the form of two jets upon the respective buckets of two wheels mounted upon a single shaft. The pivot of the nozzle is in the plane of the curves of the two branches thereof. To understand the value of this device as showing anticipation, it is important to consider.its history and the circumstances under which it was installed. Prior to 1896 the head of water at the place where it was installed was 366 feet. There were in use two independent water wheels on a single shaft. Each wheel was driven by two jets issuing from a deflecting nozzle provided with two tips. Each nozzle was pivoted to the pipe line by a ball joint. In 1896 the head of the water was increased to 530 feet. Two jets were no longer required to operate each of the wheels, consequently the nozzles were changed for the purpose of adaptation to the increased head of water. The discharge pipe was placed midway between the wheels, and a single nozzle with branches curved laterally was pivoted thereon. There was no needle valve in either of the nozzles, as the head of water was uniform, and there was no occasion to exercise economy in the use of the water. As to the
But it is said that by the use of that nozzle the reactive force of the water jets was counterbalanced. This is true. The reactive force in each jet counterbalanced the force in the other, so that no reactive force was perceptible. But it does not follow that Hagmaier was the inventor of an improvement which anticipates that element of the ■appellee’s patent, or that he conceived the basic idea which was subsequently embodied therein. The question of counterbalancing a reactive force in a nozzle was not presented to him. It did not exist in the nozzles which were replaced by the installation of Exhibit 11, for the pressure had been constant, there had been no means of varying the volume of the jets, and the reactive force had been counterbalanced by fixed weights. The construction and use of Exhibit No. 11 would not in itself have the effect too suggest either the existence of reactive forces or their remedy. Such forces were not obvious, for they were in equilibrium. That nozzle never went into general use. None has been made in the last ten years, and only four were ever made.
Nor is the appellee’s combination anticipated by the drawing shown in defendant’s Exhibit No. 2, a drawing unaccompanied by text or description, and found in Bulletin No. 9, California State Mining Bureau. It shows a straight nozzle with a chamber for the mounting of the bearings of a needle valve stem. The nozzle is attached to a curved elbow whereby it is connected to the supply pipe which is curved upward so as to meet the elbow. The nature of the joint between the supply pipe and the elbow is not clearly indicated in the drawing. It appears to be a rotatable joint. If it is such a joint, it permits the lateral deflection of the nozzle from the water wheel, but it does not present a nozzle pivoted in the plane of its curvature. Nor is it pivoted in any other plane, unless it is said that it is pivoted in the plane in which it rotates, and in that case the plane is at right angles to the curvature of the nozzle. There is nothing in the drawing to suggest the solution of the problem of overcoming reactive force in the nozzle, and there is no proof in the evidence that any
! ■: Several patents were exhibited for the purpose of showing the prior art, but they are so plainly variant from the appellee’s combination as to require no discussion. The patent to S- Adams of February 7, 1871, shows a straight nozzle secured to a rubber hose which is •connected to a curved pipe, which, in turn, is connected by a rotatable joint to the supply pipe. The patent to Flendy and Loveridge of November 27, 1888, shows, a straight nozzle attached to' an elbow, and the elbow attached to the pipe bj^ rotatable joint. The Richardson patent of March 17, 1896, has a straight nozzle .pivotally supported and con1 nected with a supply pipe. The Ilookwalter patent of December- 17, •1895, shows a curved nozzle connected to the pipe by a rotatable joint. The friction at the point of juncture is regulated by a perpendicular bolt, fastened through the nozzle and pipe and through a coiled spring above the pipe. There is no needle valve, and the plane of deflection of the pipe is at right angles to the curvature of the nozzle. The Lrawford patent shows a straight nozzle connected to the -pipe by a ball and socket joint, with no valve or other means of regulating the jet. . . '
We find no error in the decree of the court below. It is accordingly affirmed.