Atlantic Giant Powder Co. v. Mowbray

2 F. Cas. 138, 2 Ban. & A. 442
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 138 (Atlantic Giant Powder Co. v. Mowbray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Giant Powder Co. v. Mowbray, 2 F. Cas. 138, 2 Ban. & A. 442 (circtdma 1876).

Opinion

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge.

This bill is founded on three patents, one being reissue No. 5,798, for an improvement in methods of exploding nitro-glycerine, the claims in which are for a process or certain described modes of utilizing nitro-glycerine as an explosive by means of fire, heat, electricity, or an initial explosion, communicated to the mass under a condition of confinement, so as to produce an instantaneous explosion of the entire. mass, and generally by effecting an impulse of explosion by the detonation of an explosive substance communicated to the mass under such condition as to produce an instantaneous explosion of the whole mass. This may be briefly described as the process patent. The second one is reissue No. 5,800, in which there are seven claims for as many different igniters or exploders for initiating the impulse of explosion in a charge of nitroglycerine. This will be styled, for the sake of brevity, the exploder patent. The third patent, reissue No. 5,799, for an improvement in explosive compounds, is for the combination of nitro-glycerine with infusorial earth, or other equivalent absorbent substance, as a new explosive compound. This compound is generally spoken of as dynamite, and therefore this may appropriately be called the dynamite patent. This last-named patent will be first considered. In 1847, Ascagne Sobrero (soon after the discovery by Sehonbein, in the same year, of gun-cotton) invented nitro-glycerine, an explosive substance prepared by treating glyc-erine with a mixture of nitric and sulphuric acids. For a long time after the invention of nitro-glycerine by Sobrero in 1847, in fact, until 18G3, when Nobel’s inventions began, although nitro-glycerine was well known to be a very powerful explosive as compared with gunpowder and gun-cotton, it was veiy little used for blasting purposes. This delay in the introduction of nitroglycerine as an explosive to practical use appears to have been attributable, first, to the enormous danger to life and property attending its manipulation, transportation, and use in its fluid state; and secondly, to a practical difficulty, amounting almost to an impossibility, of exploding the whole mass of fluid nitro-glycerine, no instantaneous decomposition of the whole mass following from the application of heat or of a blow, as in case of gunpowder or gun-cotton when fire is applied. To overcome this last objection was the object of the exploder and the process patents. The object of the dynamite patent was to remedy the first objection of enormous danger to life and property, and to combine the nitroglycerine with some absorbent substance, whereby the condition of the nitro-glycerine is so modified as to render the resulting compound more practically useful and effective as an explosive, and far more safe and convenient for handling, storage, and transportation, than nitro-glycerine in its ordinary condition as a liquid. Objection is made to the reissue of the dynamite patent, on the ground that the description of the invention is broader in the reissue than in the original patent; but the description of, the invention in the original patent appears to describe in general terms, although without minutely demonstrating all the peculiarities of operation in the new compound, all that is more specifically described in the reissue. The invention is described in general terms to “consist in mixing with nitroglycerine a substance which possesses a very great absorbent capacity, and which at the same time is free from any quality which will decompose, destroy, or injure the nitro-glycerine or its explosiveness.” A certain kind of silieious earth, known under the several names of silieious marl, tripoli, rotten stone, etc., the preferred variety being infusorial earth, is described as the inert matter which he mixes with the nitroglycerine. The described advantages are, that it will, by reason of its great absorbent capacity, take up about three times its own weight of nitro-glycerine, and still retain its powder form, mus leaving the nitroglycerine so compact and concentrated as to have nearly its original explosive power. The patent also points out the result of insensibility of the compound to ordinary concussions without loss of the great explosive power of the liquid nitro-glycerine, where it describes it “as being far more safe and convenient for transportation, storage, and use, than nitro-glycerine.” It is true that the original patent does not undertake to enunciate the law of the explosion of nitroglycerine by concussion, or to explain fully the peculiarities of operation attending the use of the compound. This was not necessary to the validity of the patent any further than might be requisite to instruct others as to the qualities to be inherent in other substances to be used as equivalents for the silieious earth described, and I hardly think essential for that purpose. If, in this respect, there was any need of more specific detailed description in addition to the. general words in the patent, it has been corrected, and, as far as I can judge, properly corrected in the reissue. Without giving that extended comparison and collocation of corresponding passages in the original and reissue which would be necessary to [140]*140properly answer all the objections raised in the argument, I must content myself with stating that such careful comparison has failed to satisfy me that the reissued dynamite patent is open to objection on the ground of its being for an invention broader than, or different from, the' one described in the original. The omission of the word “inexplosive’’ might seem to • indicate, as it perhaps does, a disposition to enlarge the scope of the patent; but, as I think, when a question shall arise on that expression in the patent, the court will look to the specifications in both the original and the reissue, in aid of the true construction of the reissue, as stated in Forsyth v. Clapp, [Case No. 4,949.] I do not think the omission of that word renders the reissue defective. The construction which the court would give as to what would be an equivalent for the silicious earth would be the same under the reissue as on the original patent.

The patent to Shaffner for a mode of tamping, and for a combination of sand with nitro-glycerine in the blast-hole, does not anticipate the invention of Nobel. It does not approach any nearer, to it than the explosion of nitro-glycerine in the sand and gravel, in front of the stable at Titus-ville, approaches Mowbray’s perfected invention of mica powder, although it suggested the train of experiments which resulted finally in that invention. The defendants have used mica powder, an invention of the defendant Mowbray, a great improvement in the art of blasting with nitro-giycerlne. the valuable properties of which have been signally demonstrated in the use which has been made of it in blasting operations in the Hoosac Tunnel, attaining the result of the highest efficiency and greatest economy consistent with perfect safety, as compared with all other highly explosive substances. Mica powder, so called, is prepared by pouring tri-nitro-glycerine, at a temperature of about seventy degrees, in the proportions of about fifty-two and one-half pounds of tri-nitro-glycerine to about forty-seven and one-half pounds of mica scales, over mica scales prepared by triturating mica or Muscovy talc into scales of about one-thousandth of an inch in thickness, and exceedingly minute surfaces, and free from the powder or dust of mica, in such a manner that the surfaces of the minute mica scales are painted or coated with the trinitro-glycerine, and the mass of forty-seven and one-half pounds of mica scales retains or holds in suspension the fifty-two and one-half pounds of tri-nitroglycerine.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Malignani v. Hill-Wright Electric Co.
177 F. 430 (S.D. New York, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 138, 2 Ban. & A. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-giant-powder-co-v-mowbray-circtdma-1876.