Akme Flue, Inc. v. Aluminite Flexible Flue Cap Co.
This text of 27 F.2d 736 (Akme Flue, Inc. v. Aluminite Flexible Flue Cap Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is a patent for á “consumer of flue impurities,” and discloses both a process and an apparatus for getting rid of greasy soot from kitchen range ovens by passing the fumes from the oven through a flue having a filter mat of steel wool; the object being to prevent the fouling of kitchen walls and hangings. The specifications recite that the attempt to remove the soot and grease from heated gases by asbestos fiber and other filters has been unsuccessful, because the filtering material quickly becomes foul, but that the inventor has discovered that steel wool will catch and consume soot and grease without becoming fouled over a long period of use.
Claims 1 and 2 relate to the process. It will be sufficient to quote claim 1, which reads as follows:
“1. The method of eliminating soot and grease from cooking vapors which comprises leading said vapors through a flue containing metal wool to separate out and consume the soot and grease by slow combustion.”
Claims 3 to 6, inclusive, relate to the apparatus. Claim 4 may be quoted as representative of all:
“4. The combination with a flue pipe through which greasy and sooty vapors and gases are adapted to be passed, of a non-fouling steel wool cooperating with said flue pipe, so that the vapora and gases contact therewith before being discharged from the flue pipe to lessen staining.”
The District Court found infringement if the patent were valid, but held it invalid because anticipated by patent No. 1,215,385 to Kling and by Koehler’s own prior patent, No. 1,377,694.
The Kling patent discloses the use of steel wool as a filtering medium to catch the fine metallic dust carried in gases issuing from a blast furnace. Its object is declared to be to clean the gases, so as to give them maximum efficiency for subsequent use for heating or power purposes. Kling sought a means to catch and hold inorganic and noncombustible dust particles in blast furnace gases; and the later patent to Kling and Weidlin, No. 1,395,833, shows a device for shaking from the steel wool filter mat the dust so caught. Koehler, on the other hand, was working with organic particles of grease and soot from cooking ovens, and sought a means not merely to catch and hold them, but to consume them by some chemical action. To hold that there is any suggestion in Kling’s patent of what Koehler did, or that “the applicability of steel wool to the new use” Koehler made of it would occur to any person of ordinary skill in the art seems to us unwarranted. The filtering of inorganic dust from combustible gases is a very different problem than the consuming of greasy soot carried by kitchen oven vapors.
Nor is Koehler’s first patent an anticipa-' tion. That disclosed “mineral wool asbestos, hair, or the like” as a filtering medium [737]*737for cooking oven vapors. It had nothing to do with the process of consuming soot and grease by contact with the filtering material. It is conceded that mineral wool asbestos is not an express disclosure of steel wool. The addition of the phrase “or the like” is not enough to include it when one considers what is required for anticipation. The evidence shows a progressive discovery of Koehler’s final invention. Some effort is made to argue that steel wool does not really operate to consume the grease and soot, as the inventor claims. No evidence, however, was introduced to prove the patent inoperative, and on this record we accept it at its face value. The presumption of validity has not been overcome.
Foil’s patent, however, was a plain anticipation, inasmuch as he discloses steel wool, though accompanied by a layer of asbestos, to filter the fumes of a gas stove oven. Thus Koehler must rely upon his proof of discovery before March 13, 1922, the date of Foil’s application. His testimony is that as the result of experiments with steel wool and asbestos filter mats, he learned by May, 1921, that the steel wool alone consumed the greases and was superior to steel wool and asbestos in contact. He sold his first patent, which discloses an asbestos filter, to Tyson & Frame in June, 1921, and then advised them to use the steel wool mat. There is ample corroborative oral testimony as to his use of steel wool in flues made in the spring of 1921. Documentary corroboration is offered in a catalogue gotten out by Tyson & Frame, Exhibit M-l. No date appears thereon, but Tyson says it was put out in the latter part of 1921. On the whole, we are satisfied that Koehler has proved that his invention antedated March 13, 1922.
Other patents in the art were thoroughly discussed by the District Judge, and nothing need be added to his clear exposition of them.1
We are satisfied that upon this record the patent in suit is not shown to have been anticipated and should be held valid. The [738]*738substitution of a known material has frequently been held to constitute invention. Smith v. Goodyear Dental, etc., Co., 93 U. S. 486, 23 L. Ed. 952; George Frost Co. v. Cohn, 119 F. 505 (C. C. A. 2); Westmoreland Specialty Co. v. Hogan, 167 F. 327 (C. C. A. 3); General Elec. Co. v. Hoskins Mfg. Co., 224 F. 464 (C. C. A. 7).
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for injunction and accounting.
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27 F.2d 736, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akme-flue-inc-v-aluminite-flexible-flue-cap-co-ca2-1928.