Beaton v. Tennessee Coal, Iron & R.

69 F.2d 246, 20 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 291, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3505
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1934
DocketNo. 6936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 F.2d 246 (Beaton v. Tennessee Coal, Iron & R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaton v. Tennessee Coal, Iron & R., 69 F.2d 246, 20 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 291, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3505 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

By bill in equity the appellants charged infringement bv the appellee of the following claims of Uiiited States patent No. 1,517,-185, issued November 25, 1924, to George Beaton, for blast furnace tnyere:

“1. A blast furnace tuyere comprising a cylindrical body portion, an annular water jacket in the body portion, the body portion being formed with a cored out recess in the nose, and a filling of refractory material in the recessed nose.
. . . “2 A blast furnace tuyere comprising a cylindrical body portion, an annular water jacket in the body portion the body portion being formed with a cored out annular recess m the nose, and a filling of refractory material m the recessed nose.
. . “4. A blast furnace tuyere comprising a cylindrical body portion, an annular water jacket in the body portion, the nose of the body portion being formed with a recess on the side to be nearest the health of the furnace and a filling of refractory material in tho recess.
“8. A blast furnace tuyere comprising a cylindrical body portion, an annular water jacket in the body portion, the body portion noso being formed with a recess, a filling of refractory material m the recess, the recess waits being slotted, as and lor the purpose ■speci led.

The granting of the relief sought was resisted on the grounds that the patent is invalid, and that, if it is valid, it was not infringed. The bill was dismissed; it ap~ pea ring from an oral opinion rendered that the court ruled that the patent is valid, but that it was not in fringed by the appellee.

A blast furnace tuyere is the nozzle through which the air blast is delivered to the furnace-^the furnace end of the conduit through which air is carried into the furnace. jyiany attempts have been made to solve saiis£be problem of protecting blast furnaeo tUyereg from the destructive effects of the intense heat to which they are subjected, or of molten metal or other things in the fnr™«;e coming in contact with them, tuyeres be™g located in the zone of the furnace into which come molten metal and other things produced or let down in the operation of the fumaee_ With0ut such protection, the life of & ^ fnmace t £ brief, it being soon dosiroyed when the furnace is in operation, with resulting interruptions of operation, and consequent increase in the expense of metal production. No one of the elements in-eluded in the combination described in any of the above set out claims of the patent was novel. Prior to the issue of the patent, there had been in use tuyeres the body portions of which were cylindrical, tuyeres the body porof which were cooled by being encased ™ ^ 3aeke^ tuyeres the body portions f were with recesses or cavitl(* “ OT neaf th« nose and tuyeres having factory material placed or fixed m or about tllGlr “’ tthe P™*08® of preventing or arreting the fusing or melting of the metal at winch the bodies at the tuyeres were mada Thfl aboTC get mt daims of ^ tent gued on coveli onl eombinati none o£ ^ c]aims wag infri ^ b a devico wbicb (M ^ embod aU tho elementg of at least ^ of those comHnations. Eaeh of the ele. , „ ,, . . ,. , ., ments ot the combinations described in those • cbu;ms being old, the patent is not a pioneer onej and £be paton£ed combinations are of gueb a narrow character of invention that the patentee is not entitled to any considerable Tmge of equivalents, but must be practically limited to the means sbown by tbo inven_ tor. Computing Scale Co. v. Automatic Scale Co., 204 U. S. 609, 621, 27 S. Ct. 307, 51 L. Ed. 645.

Appellee’s alleged infringing tuyere comprises a cyiindricai body portion> an annlllar water jacket in the ^ and £;avities or recesses extendin& fmm tho surfaee of the end of the nose in the direction of the water jacket, and being concentric and parallel, with the result of forming three circular parallel ribs or flanges surrounding the round [248]*248mouth or opening of the nose, and extending throughout the eireumferenee thereof; one of those ribs or flanges being the wall of the mouth of the nose, another forming the outer rim of the nose body, and the third being between the other two and separated from each of them by a space which is empty when the tuyere is installed in a blast furnace and put into use. A tuyere embodying the elements of any of the claims in question of the patent sued on differs from the alleged infringing one, in that the former, when installed in a furnace and put into use, has refractory material in the cavity or recess formed in its nose body, while the latter, when installed in a furnace and put into use, has empty cavities or recesses in the body of its nose,- no refractory material ever being therein except such as may get into them during the operation of the furnace. Evidence showed that, after appellee’s tuyere is installed in a furnace and put into use, substances, mostly slag, as a result of forces brought into play by the operation of the furnace, may, and frequently do-, get into the cavities or recesses of the nose part, though sometimes such cavities or recesses remain empty or only partially filled for considerable periods during which the furnace is in operation.

Construing the claims in question of the patent in suit in the light of statements in the specification of the patent as to the use of refractory material, there is some ground for a contention that the refractory material contemplated by the patentee is such as existed before the tuyere is completed and put into use, and does not include a refractory material, such as slag, which comes into existence as a result of the operation of a furnace after the tuyeres have been installed therein. The specification contains an enumeration of sundry materials, each of which may be the refractory material called for by the description in a claim in question of one of the elements of the patented combination. Slag is not mentioned in that enumeration. Nothing contained in the patent indicates that the pat-entee contemplated that anything used or produced in the operation of a blast furnace might serve the purpose of the element of any of the patented combinations which includes the use of a refractory material. According to testimony introduced by the ap-pellee, the term “refractory,” as used in blast furnace practice, does not include slag. However that may be, and though slag is to be regarded as a refractory material contemplated by the patentee, due significance and effect must be accorded to- the fact that appellee’s tuyere is not protected by any refractory material until after the tuyere is put into use, but thereafter may be afforded some-such protection as a result of slag, during the operation of the furnace, getting and remaining in the previously empty recesses or cavities formed in the tuyere’s nose body.

Though, by reason of the probability of slag getting and remaining in the recesses or cavities formed in the nose part of appellee’s tuyere while the furnace in which the tuyere is installed is in operation, that tuyere is to be regarded as embodying a provision for its protection by a refractory material, the means of providing such protection are different from those called for by the description in each of the claims in question of the patent in suit of one of the elements of the patented combination.

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Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 246, 20 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 291, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaton-v-tennessee-coal-iron-r-ca5-1934.