Bishop-Babcock-Becker Co. v. Arnholt & Schaefer Brewing Co.

220 F. 675, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1728
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 6, 1915
DocketNo. 543
StatusPublished

This text of 220 F. 675 (Bishop-Babcock-Becker Co. v. Arnholt & Schaefer Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop-Babcock-Becker Co. v. Arnholt & Schaefer Brewing Co., 220 F. 675, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1728 (E.D. Pa. 1915).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

The bill charges infringement of letters patent No. 956,285, for a bottle filling machine, issued April 26, 1910, to the complainant, as assignee of Joseph H. Champ, and prays for an injunction and accounting. The defendant of record is using at its brewery in Philadelphia two bottle filling machines which are alleged to embody the mechanism set forth in the claims in issue of the Champ patent. The suit is defended by Henes & Keller Company, a copartnership, of Menominee, Mich., which manufactures and sells the machines which are alleged to infringe.

Claim 1 of the patent, which may be regarded as fairly illustrative of all the claims, reads:

“In a bottle filling machine, the combination of a rotatable upright shaft, a tank carried by said shaft, a series of bottle filling valves connected to said tank, a series of fluid pressure bottle lifts carried by said shaft, and means for automatically operating said bottle lifts by said fluid pressure during the rotation of the shaft.”

The complainant’s and the defendant’s machines are both used and adapted for use in filling bottles with beer. Leaving out of consideration, as unessential to the consideration of the case, various me[676]*676chanical appliances, which are described in detail and at great length by the experts, the machine of the complainant, as well as that of the defendant, consists of a rotatable upright shaft supporting a tank to which the beer, charged with carbonic acid gas,, is conveyed, and above the level of the beer in the tank compressed air is conveyed to prevent the escape of the gas from the beer while in the tank. A series of bottle filling valves are connected to the tank and to tubes through which the beer flows when the bottles are in place for filling. The revolving shaft also carries a series of bottle lifts operated by air pressure for lifting the bottles, so that as the bottle is rising the filling tubes are inserted into the necks of the bottles and reach a point near the bottom of the bottles. The air lifts hold the mouth of the bottle against a sealing device, and by means of the valves the compressed air in the beer tank is introduced into the bottles before the flow of beer begins. When the pressure of the compressed air is the same in the bottle as in the beer tank, the beer is allowed to flow into the bottle. By this means the beer flows gently into the bottom of 'the bottle without the escape of the gas and consequent foaming of the beer, and by automatic action incident to the revolution of the shaft the valves are closed. When the bottle is filled, the flow of beer is shut off, and the bottle lowered from around-the filling tube, making way for the next bottle on the next air lift.

The means for filling bottles from a tank containing beer and coin-pressed air, mounted upon a rotatable shaft and the introduction of compressed air into the bottles from the tank prior to the introduction of"the beer, in order to prevent escape of the gas and consequent foaming of the beer and flatness after bottling, are common to what is known as rotary, counter pressure, bottle filling machines, are not new, and are features of defendant’s patent, No. 655,443, -of August 7, 1900, to Keller. The claims in suit are for a combination of the actual filling mechanism with the automatic air lift operating during and by means of the rotation of the shaft. The machine claimed to be. embodied in the Champ invention and in defendant’s construction constitutes what is commercially, known as a rotary, automatic air lift, counter pressure, bottle filling machine. The advantage of the air lift in this combination over the old means of raising the bottle and pressing it against the sealing head is claimed to result from the gentle action of compressed air as a meáns of operating the lifts. Shock or violence in the handling of beer causes the gas to be released from the liquid, causing foaming and flatness, and such action as will avoid turbulence is eminently desirable in filling and handling beer in bottles.

The invention is claimed to be an improvement over counter pressure filling machines, in which the bottles are lifted to, held in, and' lowered from filling position by the mechanical action of a cam during the rotation of the machine, in the results accomplished by its gentle action during the process of filling, its capacity for accommodation to bottles of various sizes, economy of power, and the absence of the strain upon the .shaft and wearing parts of the machine during rotation, which had been caused by the harsh action and heavy pressure of the previously used cam lift.

[677]*677It is conceded that the defendant’s machine was not manufactured and sold prior to the filing of the Champ application, but was manufactured and sold prior to the issue of the Champ patent.

The defenses set up are noninfringement, upon the ground that the defendant’s machine is constructed upon the principle of the Keller patent, No. 655,443, patented August 7, 1900, prior to Champ’s alleged invention of the machine of the patent in suit, and more than two years prior to Champ’s application for the patent in suit, in combination with compressed air clamps, which are alleged to be clamps of general application, and to' have no other function in the filling of bottles than the function of clamps either in the defendant’s machine or in the machine of the Champ patent; and invalidity of the claims sued on, because the elements of the claims constitute mere aggregation, as distinguished from a patentable combination, and because they are completely anticipated by the prior art pleaded and proved by the defendant.

[1] Before considering the case upon the merits, disposition will be made of a preliminary motion of the defendant to strike out the exhibits offered in evidence by the complainant, consisting of Bastían patent, No. 1,000,971, and the Patent Office and the Court of Appeals record in interference No. 25,958, on the ground that they are incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial items of evidence to either prove or disprove any issue in this cause. The defendant, during the taking of proofs, introduced in evidence the file wrapper and contents of the Champ patent, No. 956,285, which is the patent in suit. There is no dispute as to the materiality of the file wrapper to show the Patent Office history of the application, as bearing upon the validity and scope of the patent in suit.

During the pendency of the application for a patent, it was in interference with the Bastian patent above referred to, and the exhibits of the interference proceedings are offered in evidence for the purpose of showing what consideration the Patent Office gave to the questions of invention and patentability before the patent in suit was granted. Their admissibility for the purpose of augmenting the presumption of validity arising from the allowance by the Patent Office after a serious contest, which must have developed the characteristics of the patent and brought them pointedly into view, has been sustained in a number of cases. Milner Seating Co. v. Yesbera (C. C. A., 6th Cir.) 111 Fed. 386, 49 C. C. A. 397; Western Electric Co. v. Williams-Abbott Electric Co. (C. C.) 83 Fed. 842; Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Stanley Instrument Co. (C. C. A., 1st Cir.) 133 Fed. 167, 68 C. C. A. 523.

The defendant objects to the admissibility of this evidence, under the authority of the opinion of the Circuit "Court of Appeals for this circuit in Elliott & Co. v. Youngstown Car Mfg. Co., 181 Fed. 345, 104 C. C. A. 175.

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Related

A. R. Milner Seating Co. v. Yesbera
111 F. 386 (Sixth Circuit, 1901)
Elliott & Co. v. Youngstown Car Mfg. Co.
181 F. 345 (Third Circuit, 1910)
Western Electric Co. v. Williams-Abbott Electric Co.
83 F. 842 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 F. 675, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-babcock-becker-co-v-arnholt-schaefer-brewing-co-paed-1915.