This is аn appeal from the dismissal of a complaint charging that certain intake manifolds used on the internal combustion engines of the appellee in its Dodge, Plymouth and De Soto automobiles infringe Swan patents 1,636,721 and 1,536,044. Claims 5 and 7 of patent 1,636,721, and claims 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 13, 22 and 23 of patent
Both of these patents have been before this and other courts in prior litigation.
Appellant urges that certain inter partes tests of appellee’s and other engines show that the accused devices have an operation identical with that of Swan; that numerous material findings of the District Court were erroneous, due to its misunderstanding of the evidence resulting from failure to observe these tests, and that the District Court, in finding non-infringement, has failed to follow the rulings of this and other courts with reference to infringement of the same patents by devices substantially identical with appellee’s manifolds.
Road tests covering hill climbing, fuel economy, and acceleration were conducted with great detail by both parties. In appellant’s tests the Dodge and Plymouth downdraft manifold was compared with the downdraft manifold of the Swan preferred form.
We think that under this record the court’s absence from the tеsts in no way impairs the validity of its conclusions as to their significance. Since both parties admit that substantially identical performance was secured under all the inter partes tests, and since the District Court’s findings emphasized this fact, the circumstance that the District Court was absent when the tests were conducted is immaterial.
We are not impressed by the appellant’s contention that the substantially identical results secured by the operation of these various manifolds demonstrates infringement. All of the inter partes tests were conducted upon manifolds which were equipped with and employed appellee’s heating device, and the claims in suit do not provide for the use of any heating means. It is settled law that a claim for a result will not support a patent. Mitchell v. Tilghman,
It is not inconceivable that the same desirable result in vaporization of the heavy particles of gasoline secured by Swan’s peculiar form of manifold might be achieved by totally different means. The fact that Matheson and Fiat, which did not use heat, were classed as failures because they did not solve the problem does not require the conclusion that the problem never could be solved by the application of heat to Matheson and Fiat and that it has not been solved by appellee. The holding of this court that Swan solved the problem in one way does not exclude the conclusion that with the rapid advance of the automotive arts a similar result could be and was achieved through forms of manifolds theretofore found to be failures in handling a wet fuel mixture, to which an efficient and carefully controlled heating means is applied. The District Court found that appellee’s manifolds follow the prior art instead of Swan, that they secure efficient results in equally distributing the fuel mixture through the use of a “hot-spot” exhaust heat jacket at the junction of the header and riser, and that appellee’s manifolds are dependent upon this heating device for their sаtisfactory operation. Ex parte tests conducted by the appellant in which the operation of the heating means was modified or practically eliminated were relied upon to support a contrary conclusion. These tests were incomplete, and the District Court was free to accept appellee’s testimony, based on other tests, that appellee’s devices would not operate successfully without the application of heat.
Appellant argues that heating devices were used upon manifolds adjudicated in prior cases, and that a holding of non-infringement disregards the former holdings of this court. But the former cases involved totally different heating units. In the first General Motors case [
Nor does the presence of liquid fuel in appellee’s fuel mixture at certain times establish infringement as contended. The controlling question is whether appellee’s devices equally distribute the fuel mixture by use of the Swan invention. If not, there is no infringement.
We do not consider it controlling that this court has held in two former cases based uрon other records that Matheson and Fiat, to which the accused manifolds are closer than they are to Swan, failed to solve the problem of the equal distribution of low volatile gasoline. Matheson disappeared from the market long prior to the present' litigation [
Since appellee does not claim that Matheson and Fiat anticipate Swan, but merely that appellee follows Matheson and Fiat rather than Swan, the authorities urged upon us to the effect that an improved prior art cannot under the decisions be held to anticipate Swan, have no bearing.
Appellant’s principal contention is that the hot-spot operation of appellee’s manifold has to be supplemented with the Swan structure, and the Swan mode of operation, in order to secure equal distribution. But this record amply supports a contrary conclusion.
Appellee’s accused devices, the Dodge-Plymouth downdraft manifold, the De Soto downdraft manifold, and the Dodge updraft manifold are equipped with hot-spot heaters. None of the claims in suit disclose the use of heat, and the specifications call attention to the loss of satisfactory engine performance involved in such use. Swan solved the problem simply by the configuration of his manifold.
This court held [
Appellant asserts that claim 5 is infringed by all of the accused manifolds. The Dodge and Plymouth downdraft plainly does not present this claim’s essential features. Its header is not “level throughout its length” nor “devoid of curves and recesses in the direction of flow of the fuel mixture.” It lacks the sharp inside corners аt the end-bends, presented in the Reeke-Nash device, and does not have a “distributing zone with a non-recessed roof.” The same elements are also lacking in the De Soto downdraft manifold. While the end-bends of the De Soto manifold have a radius of curvature less than that of the Dodge and Plymouth downdraft manifold, there are no right angle inside corners and the branches аre neither “perpendicular” nor “substantially perpendicular” to the header. The Dodge updraft manifold lacks the sharp angles of the inside corners specified by Swan both at the
Only the Dodge updraft manifold is charged to infringe claim 7. This claim presents all the above-quoted features of claim 5 except that it substitutes in the distributing zone a roof “having a curved portion” for a “non-recessed roof.” Since the Dodge updraft manifold does not disclose essential features common to both claims it does not infringe claim 7.
It is also charged that the downdraft manifolds infringe claim 13 of patent 1,536,044. This claim provides for “a distributing chamber being formed of wаlls the intersections of which form straight lines.” This feature was stressed before the Patent Office as being the important element of the claim; but none of the accused devices have any walls whose intersections form straight lines, and hence this claim is not infringed.
Claim 22 of patent 1,536,044 relates to the part of the roof of the header which is opposite the riser and requires it to be “symetrically formed and situated with reference to the outlets to uniformly influence entering mixture and cause the same to distribute in uniform character in the successive directions determined by the outlets and induction cycles of the engine.”
Appellant’s expert, Sessions, stated that it made no substantial difference whether the wall opposite the riser is flat (like Swan’s preferred form), or curved (like Matheson and Fiat), and concedes that this claim adds nothing to the practical utility of the Swan invention. The claim describes the added element in terms of function and result, and hence is invalid.
Claim 23 of patent 1,536,044, in addition to presenting the above quoted feature of claim 22, provides: “ * * * the outlet branches being angularly formed to register with the intakes of pairs of cylinders, and the angular formations being shaped and situated so that passing mixture will be influenced thereby in a manner tending to distribute equally to the cylinders of the pair to which the branches respectively relate.”
As shown above, in the accused devices the outlet branches are not angularly formed, and hence this claim is not infringed.
The method clаims, 4, 5, 8, 9, and 10 of patent 1,536,044, remain to be considered. Typical is claim 4, which reads as follows:
“A method of distributing a fuel mixture to an engine which consists in moving the mixture in a straight line to a zone from which it is distributed to a plurality of engine cylinders, directing said movement by forces which tend to distribute the mixture uniformly in all directions in a plane transverse to said movement, and further directing the movement of thе mixture by forces tending to move it successively in a plurality of directions transverse to the original direction, to the cylinders.”
While we did not deem it necessary in the General Motors case, supra, to pass upon these method claims, we now give them full consideration and conclude that they are all invalid. They describe no method of operation and no process except that which results from passing the fuel mixture through a manifold which is permanent and static in form. Mitchell v. Tilghman, supra; Fuller v. Yentzer,
The decree is affirmed.
Notes
In Swan Carburetor Co. v. General Motors Co., D.C.,
A similar result was reached when the patents were before this court in two actions for royalties, General Motors Corp. v. Swan Carburetor Co., 6 Cir.,
The accused devices include both updraft and downdraft manifolds. In the downdraft devices the position of the header' and riser is reversed and the fuel mixture passes in a downward direction from the carburetor into the header. It is conceded by both parties that this fact does not affect the question of infringement.
