20 F. Cas. 911 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1872
In Roberts v. Dickey [supra] the complainant’s patent for a method of increasing the capacity of oil-wells, etc., was earnestly contested, but its validity was sustained in an elaborate opinion delivered by Mr.- Justice STRONG,
Ipropose only to notice the able argument of. the counsel by stating the conclusions which I have reached in reference to it. 1. Construing Roberts’ patent as must be done with reference to the previous state of the art, his method is distinguished from ail others by the use of fluid tamping in deep wells of small caliber, the intended effect of which is to give a lateral direction to the force of the explosion, and thus, by shattering the walls of the wells, to open new seams for the liberation of oil or to clear out obstructions in seams already opened. It is apparent that the employment of water distinctively is not contemplated, but water as a fluid merely, because it is its agency as a fluid only, which the patentee describes, as essential to effectuate his method. This is the import of the opinion in Roberts v. Dickey [supra]. It follows that the use of benzine, or any other substance possessing that property of water which is made available in the patentee’s process, is within the scope of the patent, as a manifest equivalent. And this is so, whether the object be to open new seams or to remove obstructions from old ones. 2. The function of the tamping is to confine the force of the explosion to the vicinity of the torpedo. A superincumbent column of fluid of sufficient gravity to accomplish this, is all that is needed to the complete effect specified by the patentee as the object of his process. If this effect is produced by filling the well only half full, or by means of a shorter column of fluid, all is done that the patentee’s process requires. Any one, therefore, who produces the result contemplated by the pat-entee, by such use only of the described means as is essential to that end, uses his process and is an infringer.
At my suggestion, the arguments of counsel were written out and printed, and, together with the affidavits on both sides, were submitted to Judge STRONG; and he authorizes me to say that, after a careful examination of them, he concurs in the conclusions above stated, and in the allowance of the complainant’s motion. A preliminary injunction is therefore ordered.