Allinson Mfg. Co. v. Ideal Filter Co.

21 F.2d 22, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2687
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1927
Docket7603
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 22 (Allinson Mfg. Co. v. Ideal Filter Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allinson Mfg. Co. v. Ideal Filter Co., 21 F.2d 22, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2687 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

Appellant’s bill of complaint charges that it is the owner by assignment made December 28, 1921, of all rights granted to William Allinson by U. S. Letters Patent No. 1,395,694, of date November 1, 1921, for an apparatus for purifying gasoline and for which Allinson made bis application on October 9, 1920; that appellee, subsequent to the date of said Letters, has made and sold machines of the kind therein described and thus infringed on claims 14 and 15, which are in these words;

“14. An apparatus for purifying gasoline or the like, comprising a tank, a container below said tank, a restricted neck or passage leading from the bottom of said tank to the top of said container, an intake tube leading into the lower part of said container, and valve controlled, vertically spaced outlets for said tank.”
“15.- -This claim is in the same words as claim 14, with the addition thereto of this clause: “And a pump for forcing gasoline or the”like through said intake pipe.”

The relief sought was judgment for profits and damages and that appellee be enjoined .from further infringement. Appellee answered and the case went to final hearing on the issues of (a) infringement; (b) anticipation of Allinson’s discovery, as, shown in prior named patents; (e) public use by Allinson of the claimed invention for more than, two years prior to the filing of his application; and (d) abandonment by him prior to said application. The court found in' favor of appellee on the two last .named issues and dismissed the bill; no opinion or finding was expressed or made on the other two. Either issue decided by the trial court disposes of the whole controversy, if it was adjudged correctly; and that is the primary challenge in this appeal. The inquiry on both issues arises from constitutional provision and statutory requirements on the subject of patents. The first (article I, § 8):

“The Congress shall have power * * * to promote the progress of science and useful’ arts, by securing for limited times to authors- and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”

*23 The second, passed in exercise of the power (R. S. §§ 4886,4920 [35 USCA §§ 31, 69; Comp. St. §§ 9430, 9466]), are these:

“Any person who has invented * • • any new and useful * * * machine, * * * unless the same is proved to have been abandoned, may * * * obtain a patent therefor.” “In any action for infringement the defendant * * * may prove on trial * * * that it had been in public use or on sale in this country for more than two years before his application for a patent, or had been abandoned to the public.”

And these requirements, both as tor prior use and abandonment, present here questions of fact which were decided against appellant.

These issues are, of course, different— one a statutory bar, and the other at large on facts to be established; but, plainly the latter may be made out on proof directed to what occurred either before or after the bar had fallen. The patentee may make his application within the two years limitation period, and yet if it be shown that within that period he relinquish all claim to his discovery, his inchoate right is thereby lost to him, for it is a sound principle that:

“This inchoate right, thus gone, cannot afterwards be resumed at his pleasure; for when gifts are once made to the public in this way, they become absolute.” Shaw v. Cooper, 7 Pet. 292, 318 (8 L. Ed. 689).
The limitation period may have fully ¡run, but poverty, ill-health or other circumstances over which the patentee had no control may relieve him from the bar. Smith v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co., 93 U. S. 486, 501, 23 L. Ed. 952; Planing Machine Co. v. Keith, 101 U. S. 479, 488, 25 L. Ed. 939.

And yet lapse of time, silence and inaction thereafter in making application for the monopoly may constitute abandonment. This is characterized as willful or negligent postponement, in contravention of the policy and objects of the Constitution and Acts of Congress on the subject, operating as a forfeiture of the patentee’s rights and thus constituting abandonment by him, although there «be no proof of an express intention on his part to relinquish his inchoate rights to the public. With these principles in mind, which, we think, the authorities hereinafter cited sustain, we will attempt to state all of the proof bearing on these two subjects. Before doing so we think it necessary to give a general account of the situation at the time Allinson first made his discovery and constructed and used his apparatus in 1914.

Gasoline is used, and for long has been used in clothes cleaning establishments for the removal of dirt, grease, oil and other soiling substances which accumulate on and in clothing and other textile fabrics. As it is used the gasoline becomes mixed with this refuse, both in solution and suspension, and they must be removed before it can be used again for cleaning purposes. Prior to 1914, or thereabout, there were several methods for doing this. Perhaps the first was the settling tank, into which the gasoline was poured and time given for precipitation, but this did not remove all impurities. In using this method it had become a common practice to put into the gasoline and thoroughly mix with it a solution of Gold Dust, caustic soda or like chemical as an aid to clarification. The filtration method was also used, and redistillation. Allinson was using the latter in his cleaning establishment at Des Moines in 1914. In July of that year he conceived the idea disclosed in his patent. He stopped using the distillation method. He thereafter used the egg-shaped container, in which he had been distilling dirty gasoline, as a tank, placing below it an inverted cone-shaped member (called “container” in his patent) and connecting the two with a neck or narrow passage; he then extended his supply pipe through the tank (old still), on through the neck and into the cone-shaped member below, to within two inches of its bottom; he poured into the upper part of the tank a solution of caustic soda or other like chemical mixture, which sank through the neck and settled in a bed on the converging bottom of the cone-shaped member. Then by means of a pump attached to his supply pipe he forced the dirty gasoline into the bottom of the cone and it gradually rose through the chemical bed, through the. neck or narrow passage and into the tank above, and was thus cleansed of its impurities and drawn off ready for reuse. This was a distinct improvement on the old methods. More of the gasoline was recovered and made fit.for reuse and it was done more cheaply and more quickly than had been done by the older practices. As the gasoline passed upward through the chemical bed the removed greases and oils formed a soapy and dirty mixture which settled on top of the chemical and through which the rising gasoline must also pass, and this was in aid to the cleansing of the gasoline. The narrow passage between the cone below and tank above retarded the movement of gasoline upward and the narrowness and depth of the chemical prevented the forcing of open passageways by the rising gasoline through the accumulating bed.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 22, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allinson-mfg-co-v-ideal-filter-co-ca8-1927.