15 F. 739 | S.D.N.Y. | 1883
This suit is brought for the infringement of claims 1 and 4 of letters patent No. 93,157, granted to Isaac Adams, Jr., August 3, J869, for an “improvement in the electro-deposition of nickel.” The patent was before this court in United Nickel Co. v. Harris, 15 Blatchf. C. C. 319, and in United Nickel Co. v. Manhattan Brass Co. 16 Blatchf. C. C. 68. It was also before Judge Shepley, in United Nickel Co. v. Anthes, 1 Holmes, 155, and in United Nickel Co. v. Keith, Id. 328.
Claims 1 and 4 are as follows s
“ (1) The electro-deposition of nickel by means of a solution of the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia, or a solution of the double chloride of nickel and ammonium, prepared and used in such a manner as to be free from the presence of potash, soda, alumina, lime, or nitric acid, or from any acid or alkaline reaction. (4) The electroplating of metals with a coating of compact, coherent, tenacious, flexible nickel, of sufficient thickness to protect the metal upon which the deposit is made from the action of corrosive agents with which the article may be brought in contact.”
In the Anthes Case, in May, 1872, the validity of the patent was sustained, and infringement was adjudged of claim 1, as the defendant had used the solutions of the patent. 1
In the Keith Case, in February, 1874, the validity of the patent was again, sustained, and infringement of claim 1 was adjudged, because of the use, in the electro-deposition of nickel, of a solution of the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia, although such solution contained a small proportion of tartrate of ammonia, and a small proportion of ammonia, the first of these being an inert substance in the solution,-and the second being speedily eliminated by evaporation when the solution was used.
In the Harris Case, in October, 1878; the patent was held valid. Claim 1 was held to be a claim to the electro-deposition of nickel by means of any solution of the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia,
In the Manhattan Brass Co. Case, in March, 1879, infringement of claim 1 was adjudged, and it was held that that claim was infringed, although the salts of potash and soda were introduced into the solution, provided the solution was not so used as to liberate free potash or free soda.
In the present case questions arise which were not under considderation in the other cases. In none of those cases was claim 4 involved separately from claim 1, because in all of them infringement of claim 1 was adjudged, and in all of them no solution was under consideration but the solutions named in claim 1. The present defendant uses another solution. The answer avers that he is making, using, and selling a nickel-plating solution, consisting of oxide of nickel and acetic acid, forming an acetate of nickel solution, which solution contains an excess of acid and has an acid reaction, and that ho does this under letters patent No. 232,615, granted to him September 28, 1880, and in tho manner described and claimed therein. The evidence supports this averment. In addition to this the record contains an admission by the defendant that a certain padlock offered in evidence by the plaintiff was electroplated by the defendant after the plaintiff’s patent was issued and before this suit was brought, and that it is a metallic article, covered with a coating of compact, coherent, tenacious, and flexible nickel.- Tho evidence shows that it is the article claimed in claim 4 of the plaintiff’s patent. It does not appear whether it was plated in the defendant’s solution or not. The specification of the defendant’s patent says:
“ The object of my invention relates to a new and improved process of preparing solutions of oxide of nickel and acetic acid for nickel-plating purposes. I am aware that solutions of oxide of nickel and acetic acid have been used*742 to some extent in nickel-plating; but these solutions have not hitherto been so successful as to give satisfactory results, the work plated in them being imperfect, ununiform, and often covered with a deposit of black oxide of nickel. I have discovered the causes of these difficulties and the method by which they can be obviated. These difficulties in the preparation and use of solutions of oxide of nickel and acetic acid may arise from the impurities of the materials used, the cure of which is obvious to all, but are principally due to two facts: First, that when acetic acid is added to oxide of nickel the chemical changes taking place between constituent parts of these materials require some time, and if, as is now the practice in making said solutions, water is added to the combined acids and nickel before the chemical changes have fully taken place, chemical action is delayed and continues slowly during the use of the solution in plating; second, that this class of solutions—that is, acetate of nickel solutions—require to be prepared with an excess of acid and to be kept markedly acid while in use; otherwise the solution will not give satisfactory results. I prepare my solution as follows: I prefer to make it in quantities of 50 gallons, as this is a proper quantity for ordinary tanks used in nickel-plating, though either great or less quantities may be prepared at one time, if desired. To prepare 50 gallons of said solution, I take about 20 pounds of oxide of nickel, and add to.it about 10 gallons of acetic acid. I then allow this mixture of oxide of nickel and acetic acid to stand for such length of time that the gases generated by their chemical action are thoroughly evolved and pass off. In preparing said solution I would recommend that at least 24 hours should be allowed to elapse before adding the water to the mixture. The mixture of oxide of nickel and acetic acid may be placed on a stove or sand-bath for the purpose of hastening the chemical changes in the mixture by heating it. After allowing the mixture to stand for such length of time as to allow the gases to pass off, the water is added, and the solution is then ready for use. In preparing solutions of greater or less quantities than 50 gallons, the quantities of oxide of nickel and acetic acid are, of course, varied; but the same relative proportions are preserved between'them. Great care should be taken in the preparation and use of this solution, that it shall contain at all times an excess of acetic acid, and if, in making and testing it, the solution is found not to have an acid reaction, sufficient acetic acid should be added' to produce a markedly acid reaction. Th'ese solutions, thus prepared and used, do not become depleted in using, and require no addition of nickel to keep up their strength, other than that derived from the nickel of the anode. As no materials are used in the preparation of these solutions but oxide of nickel and acetic acid, they are free from sulphates and chlorides of nickel, and any of the compounds of ammonium and any other salts.’’
The claims of the patent aye these:
“ (1) In the art of nickel-plating, an acid solution of acetate of nickel, consisting of oxide of nickel and acetic acid, said solution having an excess of acid. (2) The method of making acid solutions of acetate of nickel consisting in slowly digesting oxide of nickel and acetic acid with or without heat, so as to have an excess of the acid in solution, substantially as described.”
The defendant’s "solution is an acetate of nickel solution resulting from the treatment of oxide of nickel with acetic acid. The solution is free from the injurious substances specified in the Adams patent as injurious, unless the addition of an excess of acetic acid is a departure from the precautions pointed out by Adams. The defendant’s solution is free from 'potash, soda, alumina, lime, and nitric acid, and is a pure solution, in the sense of being free from those substances, which substances, Adams states, in his patent, must be eliminated, either by dispensing with their use or effectually removing them if they are employed. The defendant’s specification requires freedom from all foreign metallic salts. The evidence shows that a pure acetate of nickel, used without an excess of acetic acid, will, under proper conditions of strength of current and strength of solution, produce such a reguline deposit of niekql as Adams’ patent contemplates, and that the absence of any acid or alkaline reaction in the acetate produces the best results especially as to the quantity of
At the time of Adams’ invention it was known that the addition of a slight excess of acid to a simple salt of nickel would prevent the deposit of oxide' of nickel upon the cathode, by taking up the oxide, and thus act in the same manner as ammonia salts in the solutions of the Adams patent. Under the foregoing premises, as a simple acetate will produce a greater deposit of nickel for the same amount of current in a given time than will a simple acetate with a slight excess of acetic acid, and as such slight excess of acetic acid will prevent the injurious deposit of oxide of nickel in case certain alkaline impurities are present, and as that result is accomplished in the same way as by the use of ammonia salts in the solutions of Adams’ patent, those solutions and the defendant’s solution are equivalent in nickel-plating, and in their mode of operation and in the character of the deposit.
The fair reading of the Adams specification is that, in order to obtain the best results, the solution should be as nearly neutral as pos-' sible, and should be especially free from acid. The invention of Adams, as shown in his specification, so far as respects sulphuric and hydrochloric acid, was that the presence of such quantities of those acids as would be likely to get into the solutions named in claim 1, in preparing and using them, would prevent any useful result. Infringement of the claim cannot be avoided by introducing such small quantities of any of the injurious substances named by Adams as will produce no practical injurious effect.
But there is another view of claim 1 which leads to the same conclusion.- Practical nickel-plating, as an art, had its origin in the
The case of Tilghman v. Proctor, 102 U. S. 707, is an authority for the conclusion that, on the foregoing facts, claim 1 of the Adams patent ought to have the construction above indicated, and that, so construed, it is infringed by the defendant. It is a claim for a process which Adams invented. He describes a mode, and the best mode then known, of carrying it out with success. All that the defendant has done is not to vary the process, or its mode of working, or its essential conditions, but to apply a new solution worked in the same way and under the same conditions. It must, therefore, be held that infringement of claim 1 is established.
As to claim 4 it is distinctly a claim to a product or article of manufacture, and patentable as a manufacture. It was a new product, never known before Adams’ invention. As already said, that claim was never construed, in any case before referred to, where a decision was made sustaining claim 1. Notwithstanding anything said in the Harris Case, the conclusion I have now reached is that claim 4 is a valid claim, irrespective of any employment of the invention covered by claim 1, and that that claim has been infringed. It is contended that .claim 4 claims .a result, an idea, an abstract principle, and that its invalidity is shown by the decision in the case of O’Reilly v. Morse,
In Cohn v. U. S. Corset Co. 93 U. S. 366, a patent for a corset having certain features, and which did not describe any process of making it, was defeated by a prior description of the corset. In the present case the patent describes the product, and the mode of making it, and claims it. The text of the specification sets forth as one of the inventions deposits of nickel having certain characteristics, which are defined, and it states that they were never produced before.
There must be á decree for the plaintiff as to claims 1 and 4, for an account and an injunction, as prayed in the bill, with costs.