American Sulphite Pulp Co. v. Howland Falls Pulp Co.

80 F. 395, 25 C.C.A. 500, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1825
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1897
DocketNo. 186
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 80 F. 395 (American Sulphite Pulp Co. v. Howland Falls Pulp Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Sulphite Pulp Co. v. Howland Falls Pulp Co., 80 F. 395, 25 C.C.A. 500, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1825 (1st Cir. 1897).

Opinion

ALDRICH, District Judge.

This cause involves the validity of a patent for an invention relating to improvements in the construction of vessels ordinarily called “digesters,” and, as a leading feature of', the improved construction, provides for what the complainant calls a “protective lining” for the shells thereof. These digesters are used in the sulphite wood-pulp process, and may be either stationary or rotary, and are constructed with an outer shell of iron. The structures-are large and expensive, varying in size (sometimes 15 feet in diameter by 30 in length), and are designed to receive blocks of wood and wood substances to be subjected to the sulphite -process; and the metal shell, being corrodible by the acids and gas used in the process of cooking or dissolving the wood fiber, requires an interior protective lining. It is manifest—indeed, it is conceded—-that the practical workings of' the sulphite process had disclosed a fundamental and imperative-necessity for some means of protection against the hazard and explosive dangers incident to the corroding influences and the great pressure, under highly-heated conditions, of bisulphite acid solutions necessarily involved in the process for dissolving the wood substances; and in this connection we cannot do better than quote from the opinion of the circuit court on this phase .of the case, where it is said:

“It is very evident that the art to which the patent relates had been for a long time urgent for a practical lining for the iron or steel shells of digesters, which would be reasonably economical, and that the urgency had been so-[397]*397great as to have become a fundamental necessity.' For several years no one nad been able to respond; so that, under the circumstances, whoever should solve the whole problem, or should make advances of practical use jn that direction, whether by adoption from other arts or otherwise, would have been entitled to be held an inventor, both by the common judgment and by the courts. Mitscherlich accomplished this in part, but he always had a lead lining in direct juxtaposition with the shell, and his interior material was not continuous. Tlie Russell device displaced the lead, and furnished a continuous and homogeneous lining.”

The prior state of the art, the anticipatory character of American and foreign patents, questions of fraud in reissue in respect to the patent in suit, questions as to prior public use in the United States and in foreign countries, and finally the question whether the problem presented to the patentee involved patentable novelty, are not raised by the assignment of errors, and are not before us. These questions were all resolved in favor of the patent in suit by the circuit court, and thus our investigations are narrowed to the question whether George Fred Russell’s conception and discovery in August, 1889, at the time -he received information from Cologne, were so far reduced to operation and practical use, or, in other words, had so far generated an idea of practically operative means, as to become a discovery or an invention entitled to patentable protection; and, if the problem of invention is determined favorably to the patent, then the question as to the validity and meaning of the claims and specification, and the question of infringement, will require our consideration. The claims are stated in the reissue patent as follows:

“I claim: (1) The improved pulp digester herein described, having an outer shell, A, and a continuous lining or coat, B,” of cement, as described, applied to the interior of the said shell, for the purpose set forth. (2) The improved pulp digester herein described, having an outer shell, A, a continuous lining or coat, B, of cement, substantially as described, applied to the interior of the said shell, and an interior lining of tiles, 0, all substantially as set forth.”

The complainant contends for a broad construction of his claims, and that his device and process, under reasonable construction—

“Consists in an improved pulp digester, in which the metal shell, corrodible by the acid solution employed, is protected against its attacks by a continuous coat or lining of cement of proper thickness applied upon the interior of the shell; the term ‘cement’ including any material or mixture of materials which resists the acid solution under high heat and pressure, and which is capable of being made plastic and adhesive to the digester shell, and so compact as, in practice, to prevent the acid solution from reaching the iron shell in consequence of the high steam pressure used in the process.”

On the other hand, the defendant in error stands here, as in the court below, upon the defense that, while Russell was experimenting in that direction, he had made no advance in the art at the time he received information from Cologne that Wenzel, an Austrian, was successfully lining digesters with hydraulic cement and sand. The defendant does not urge that the Russell claims should be limited to hydraulic cement, and it may be here remarked that the learned counsel on both sides agree, in argument, that the construction limiting Russell’s claims to hydraulic cement is impossible, and cannot stand. The scope of the claims, however, will be considered later. The position of counsel in argument is given in this connection for the purpose of better understanding the questions which we are to consider.

[398]*398The patentee claims a' broad discovery, to become operative by applying, without joints or seams, plastic materials in the nature of cement, which he says he had sufficiently described, while the defendant, admitting that Russell had conceived the idea of a homogeneous protective lining, insists that he had made no invention, that he had not advanced beyond the held of experiment, had not discovered the material necessary to reduce his conception to practice, and that his claims, covering all materials or mixtures of materials which will serve as a one-piece or continuous lining, are void. There would seem to be no doubt, upon the evidence, that Wilhelm Wenzel had conceived the idea of a continuous digester lining, and that he was using a composition of cement and sand successfully for that purpose, before Russell’s discovery. Wenzel covered his device as early as May, 1888, by a secret Austro-Hungarian patent for an acid-resisting protective material, and on August 15, 1889, secured a Swedish patent covering the same device, which was not, however, published until November, 1889. On the 30th of July, 1889, Mr. Springer, who was connected with the Russell Paper Company, and then traveling abroad, sent a communication to William A. Russell from Cologne, in which he said, in speaking of digesters:

“I have found a cement lining which, if it turns out to be what it now appears, is the best thing yet. It is simply a cement and is put on as one would plaster a wall.”

This information was conveyed to the patentee, Russell, early in August in the same year. It therefore becomes necessary to ascertain how far Russell had progressed in his discovery and invention, and whether he had so far advanced the art at the time he received knowledge of the Springer letter from Cologne as to entitle him to protection as an inventor.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F. 395, 25 C.C.A. 500, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-sulphite-pulp-co-v-howland-falls-pulp-co-ca1-1897.