Auditorium Ventilating Corp. v. Greater Rochester Properties, Inc.

59 F.2d 450, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1159
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJuly 31, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 450 (Auditorium Ventilating Corp. v. Greater Rochester Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auditorium Ventilating Corp. v. Greater Rochester Properties, Inc., 59 F.2d 450, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1159 (W.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

HAZEL, District Judge.

In this suit in equity we are concerned with the asserted infringement by defendant of two United States letters patent owned by plaintiff; the first (16,611) granted to Leo L. Lewis by reissue on May 3,1927, for method and apparatus for cooling and ventilating, and the second (1,670,656) for a ventilating system to Walter L. Fleisher, granted May 22, 1928. Both these patents were assigned to plaintiff in December, 1927. The typical claims of the Lewis patent, to which I shall make further reference, are 13 and 14 (though 8, 10, 13, 14, and 17 are also involved), and of the Fleisher claims 1 and 20, including process and system (though 1, 3, and 5 are also involved). The defenses, in the main, are noninfringement, restriction of claims, prior use, and anticipation.

The patents have particularly to do with supplying humidified air to auditoriums, theaters, schools, and other large buildings for ventilating purposes, and especially to eliminate such problems and difficulties to successful ventilation as generally present themselves to congregations of persons in the summer months, or where a relatively high humidity prevails, say greater than 50 per cent., causing discomfort, and problems relating to refrigeration or supplying continuous humidified air, taking out vitiated air and replacing it by new or revivified air and maintaining a relatively low humidity, together with a suitable apparatus for attaining the results. The objects and purposes of both patentees were to secure proper temperature and a proper degree of moisture in theaters, regardless of hot or cooler weather or climatic changes, or the number of patrons, few or many, within the theater or assembly room, who emit body moisture and proportional quantity of heat. The desirability of proper ventilation and uniform humidity within amusement places by frequent change of air, and reuse of respired air in lieu of all fresh air (in some instances as many as 12 times per hour) is claimed to have had its impetus in the expansion and, development of moving picture houses, which not infrequently accommodate as many as 300 to 6,000 persons.

Ventilating systems generally, or systems for conditioning air in a building, that [451]*451is, by heating and artificial cooling, passing it over or around the conditioner, controlling the temperature by thermostat and thus humidifying the air, or adding moisture and removing moisture, all regulated by control instrumentalities, wore well known in the art prior to the patents in issue; and, indeed, there were cooling and heating methods in use at theaters, which, however, did not attain good results, in that insufficient air for cooling was provided in some instances, and in others the air was either cooled too much or the moisture was not sufficiently dried out. It was also old to regulate and control the relative humidity or tho so-called dew point, or control tho temperature in washer spaces or chambers (Buffalo Forge Co. v. City of Buffalo [C. C. A.] 255 F. 83), and to circulate return air, tempering or mixing it with conditioned fresh air under regulation in drying rooms of factories, while temperature was lowered at will or maintained constant by suitable devices.

Plaintiff claims that the atmospheric conditions in these earlier structures used in industry and the cooling of theaters were fixed and certain without any interfering or retarding alternations in the air, such as ordinarily result from mugginess or dampness or changes in the audience of a theater (groups coming in and going out during the performance), or from emanating, normal body heat and moisture. To give proper purification of the interior air by use of the Lewis reissue and Fleisher methods, outdoor air was constantly needed for admixture with the air in the theater. The evidence shows that 25 per cent, of tho total quantity of air in a modem theater or moving picture house is continuously introduced from outside the building, and, by the processes in suit, controlled proportionately and correspondingly to the fluctuations constantly arising from variable conditions. It was air of! uniform distribution and character, to eliminate dampness and discomfort in playhouses, that chiefly concerned the inventors. It was important to get rid of the heat and moisture given off by the audience, estimated at 400 British thermal units of heat, which, added to the exudation of moisture and heat from electric lights, leaks from walls and roots, especially in the summer months, interfered with wholesome temperature. Better and proper ventilation was the object of the patentees. By the use of their processes and apparatus, the heating plant need not be used in summer and the interior warm air utilized. Or, on the other hand, the air taken from tho ulterior may, if desired, be reheated to a proper temperature. To revivify the air conditions of the interior of a theater, as specified in both patents in suit, was a new and novel conception. The alternate variations of heat and moisture, to eliminate dampness and chilliness, necessitated the introduction of a certain amount of fresh air to attain efficient cooling and ventilation regardless of outside or inside conditions. This was not an easy task. Lewis’ problem was to originate means for compensating for these varying conditions extant in large, modern theaters, and securing continuous pure and comfortable air conditions at minimum expense of installation and maintenance. He accomplished his object by automatically conditioning, mixing, and heating tho fresh air with air drawn through conduits from the inside of the theater, and then returning it to the theater for ventilation.

Although means for ventilating theaters, by passing the air through an apparatus for removal of moisture, were in use at the date of the Lewis reissue, as before stated, yet such prior adaptations were inefficient and expensive, since the cold air required hot sir or steam for reheating before the air was let into the theater or room. Approximately 108,000 cubic feet of air per minute is ordinarily used in theater ventilation, and manifestly would entail an expense for cooling and an expense for reheating the air during different seasons of the year. In prior devices, the record shows, tho temperature of the air was lowered by washing or spraying, which was objectionable, because it raised the humidity and left the air damp and unevenly distributed. No equable temperature or correct humidity was obtainable since no means were provided for compensating changes in alternate air, resulting from interior variability. In plaintiff’s adaptations, the bulk of the air, taken from the theater, is recirculated or reused without first conditioning it. It is important to note that Fleisher utilizes three kinds of air, namely, fresh air from outdoors, return air from the theater, proper for humidifying or dehumidifying by the conditioner, and air from the theater for reuse without conditioning, known as recirculated air, which," in both patents in suit, is used to mingle with saturated fresh air, or with return air, and comes from the conditioner as a new air. The recirculated air is of higher temperature than the conditioned air. It passes to tho mixing chamber for uniting with tho conditioned air before dis-[452]*452enarge through pipes or duets at the openings in the theater, and its larger volume increases the temperature of the conditioned air, and also imparts a lower relative humidity to the mixed air.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 450, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auditorium-ventilating-corp-v-greater-rochester-properties-inc-nywd-1929.