Ace Combustion Engineering Co. v. Shreveport Foundry & Machine Co.

31 F.2d 780, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1725
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 24, 1928
DocketNo. 317
StatusPublished

This text of 31 F.2d 780 (Ace Combustion Engineering Co. v. Shreveport Foundry & Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ace Combustion Engineering Co. v. Shreveport Foundry & Machine Co., 31 F.2d 780, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1725 (W.D. La. 1928).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Complainant alleges itself to be the owner, through proper assignments, of letters patent No. 1,-625,992, granted to Godsey-Murphy Company, Inc., April 28, 1927, pursuant to an application filed by H. Mitchell Godsey on September 14, 1923. As finally granted the patent rested upon a single claim as follows: “A gas burner comprising a block, a gas chamber adapted to receive a gaseous fuel and supported in spaced relation to the inner end of said block, the space between said block and said chamber being open to the atmosphere, said block having a plurality of Venturi passages formed therein and extending from said air space to the outer end of said block to form burner ports, said block also having a plurality of air passages arranged to conduct air to the outer end of said block adjacent said burner ports, and a plurality of discharge ports for said gas chamber adjacent said air space and directed towards the inner ends of said Venturi passages to discharge streams of gas through the spaee and into the Venturi passages.”

Diagrams of the drawings of the invention, with copy of the specifications, are attached hereto and will be printed in the margin of the reports.1

Complainant further alleges that respondents are infringing said letters patent by making and selling the identical structure. It prays for an injuneion and accounting in the usual manner.

Respondents attack the validity of the patent for want of novelty or invention, further averring that the complainant has never manufactured or sold burners according to the claim and specifications of the patent, but an entirely different structure. They further “admit they have manufactured and sold burners described in the leaflet attached to the petition as alleged in paragraph ‘14’ of the bill, defendant Shreveport Foundry & Machine Co., Inc., doing the manufacturing and both doing the selling, defendant Murphy receiving a commission for his services in such sales, but they deny that such burners infringe the patent sued on by plaintiff, and they aver that said Company manufactures a number of other styles of burners.”

They further set up some 40 patents issued to specifically named patentees'over the [781]*781period from 1874 to 1921, as anticipating and disclosing all of the elements of complainant’s structure; without, however, pointing out in any manner in the answer the pertinency of these numerous references. It is also charged that the claim as finally allowed covered subject-matter not contained in the original application, and hence was not accompanied by the necessary supporting oath. In the alternative, if said patent is not held invalid, respondents aver that in view of the prior art and the patents cited, the one in suit “cannot be given an interpretation which will bring the burner complained of, or any of the burners manufactured and sold by defendants, within the scope thereof.”

The respondents- aver further that complainant has wantonly and maliciously interfered with their customers by informing them that all of the burners manufactured and sold by respondents were infringements upon complainant’s patent, regardless of the fact that many of them were entirely dissimilar to that of complainant, causing cancellation of orders and refusal to pay for purchases by said customers; that respondents have expended large sums of money in perfecting and improving the burners so manufactured and sold; and that the conduct of complainant has seriously injured the business of respondents, for which they have no adequate remedy at law.

Respondents prayed that the complainant be enjoined from interfering with their business in the manner indicated and from bringing any other suits under said letters patent, No. 1,625,992; for damages and such other relief as might seem just and proper. Further: “Defendants therefore deny that plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded in its bill of complaint or any relief whatsoever, and they pray that the complaint be dismissed with costs.”

Opinion.

The main feature of complainant’s structure, as disclosed in the specifications and claim and as emphasized in the correspondence with the Patent Office, was the use of both primary and secondary air to form at the point of ignition within a furnace a gaseous mixture producing, as it is claimed, a high degree of combustion; the object being to conserve fuel, such as natural gas, and to produce greater heat. This the patentee sought to accomplish by a combination of the old Bunsen principle of conveying into the furnace gas mixed with (primary) air, drawn from the atmosphere as the gas passes from the chamber below into tubes placed immediately above but separated by the open air from the gas chamber, with what it is claimed was new, to wit, the transmission of additional (secondary) air to the outer or port ends of said tubes within the furnace, where combustion takes place, in such manner as to produce, as it is claimed, greater efficiency in heat and saving of fuel. As originally disclosed and shown by the drawings in the margin, the openings for conveying secondary air to the port ends of the gas tubes were parallel passages, the openings of which can best be described as resembling a four-pointed star. However, shortly after commencing manufacture, tins means was abandoned; that is, the openings between the gas tubes were closed and the secondary air was admitted through passages from the outside formed by either inclosing the block in a ease of the same metal, cast iron, held apart from the tubes by ribs moulded integrally with and running longitudinally with the pipes, or by inserting the block into the furnace wall in such a way that the sides of the latter' would perform the function of the easing, i. e., produce orifices or openings for the admission of secondary air. The complainant also manufactures some of its structures with nondetachable easing; that is, the easing and block of tubes are molded, with ribs running along the center of the gas tubes on the tops and bottoms and joined to the sides of what correspond to the upper and lower sides of the easing so as to form openings for the passage of secondary air from the outside to the port .ends of the burner tubes in the furnace.

The last-described. structure is substantially that which the respondents are making and selling, and which it is claimed infringes the patent of plaintiff..

Validity of the Patent.

It is claimed by respondents that all the elements of complainant’s structure are old, being disclosed by the prior art as appears from the numerous cited patents. No attempt was made on the part, of respondents to analyze the 40-odd references, hut the Patent Office folders were simply dumped into the record, and counsel attempts in brief to point out the features of anticipation and disclosure. I shall therefore discuss only those which appear to me to have any pertinency to the issue here, to wit: Ashcroft, No. 328,914, October 27, 1885; Denayrouze, 684,921, October 22, 1901; Denayrouze, 736,943, August 25,1903; Quinlan, No. 1,164,210, December 14, 1915; Humphrey, No. 1,245,347, November 6,1917; [782]*782and Humphrey, No. 1,396,210, November 8, 1921.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 780, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ace-combustion-engineering-co-v-shreveport-foundry-machine-co-lawd-1928.