Blaw-Knox Company v. Hartsville Oil Mill and the French Oil MacHinery Company

394 F.2d 877, 157 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 475, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7475
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 1968
Docket11680_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 394 F.2d 877 (Blaw-Knox Company v. Hartsville Oil Mill and the French Oil MacHinery Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaw-Knox Company v. Hartsville Oil Mill and the French Oil MacHinery Company, 394 F.2d 877, 157 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 475, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7475 (4th Cir. 1968).

Opinions

ALBERT V. BRYAN, Circuit Judge:

Means and methods for extracting oil from soybeans and cottonseed, by the use of solvents, are the subject of patent No. 2,840,459 issued June 24, 1958, on the assignment of George B. Karnofsky, to Blaw-Knox Company, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Under it Blaw-Knox (BK) manufactured the Rotocel extractor and sued French Oil Mill Machinery Company, Piqua, Ohio, for infringement by French’s product fashioned from patent No. 3,021,201 procured by Charles B. Upton, February 13, 1962.1 The District Court upheld BK’s patent against French’s counterassault on its validity and also found French an infringer.

We disagree only on the finding of infringement. The plaintiff did not contend that its patent read on Upton. Reliance was put solely on the doctrine of equivalents, but Upton’s equivalence of Karnofsky was not proved.

Oil of this kind is used principally in the manufacture of margarine, salad oils and shortenings. Extraction by solvents was first commercially successful about [878]*8781900 in Germany. An exoteric’s description of the operation follows.

Basically, the process is to percolate a solvent, such as hexane, a gasoline derivative, through seed containing oil, for instance, soybeans or cottonseed. Usually the seed has been converted into flakes, something like corn flakes, which expose a greater surface to the solvent than does the unprepared seed. The flakes are placed in a container and the solvent passed through them. In this contact the oil in the seed is dissolved and removed by absorption in the solvent. This solution of solvent and oil — known as miscella — is run through the flakes again and again. According to the number of runs warranted, the first product is designated as quarter miscella, the next as half miscella and, if no more runs, the last is the full miscella. When saturation is complete, the miscella is drawn off, the solvent captured for reuse through evaporation. Likewise, the spent flakes are collected and treated for sale as stock feed.

This rudimentary principle is applied with a precise technique requiring complex structures of considerable dimensions. For instance, although its size may be varied, the Karnofsky patent in one embodiment is cylindrical in shape, approximately 25 or 30 feet in height with a horizontal diameter of about 40 feet. It treats several hundred tons of seed daily in a continuous operation.

The Karnofsky machine, labeled the “Rotocel”, is composed of upright cells, arranged as segments of a cylinder, with a central vertical axis and common division walls. The cells are the containers and, open at the top, are pie-shaped, pointing towards the centre with the arc at the outside. They are attached at their apex to, and are rotated by, a pow[879]*879er-driven central, vertical, axial shaft. The whole structure is enclosed. As the cells revolve the seed flakes are fed into them. At the same time the solvent is sprayed from above upon the flakes.

[878]*878[[Image here]]

[879]*879The floor of each cell is perforated, and as the solvent leaches through the seeds in the cell, it picks up the oil, forms the miscella, and drips through the floor holes into containers below the rotating cells. Until full, the miscella is repump-ed to the top to be sprinkled again upon the oil-bearing material.

On their outside rim the cells rest on wheels running on a track. The cell floras are hinged on one side, and after a cell has been drained of its miscella, a gap in the track allows the other side of the cell floor to drop, emptying the spent flakes. The blow of the fall also shakes the residual loose from the floor. The wheel then ascends on a ramp-like segment of the track and re-closes the floor. Residual so deposited is then carried from the unit to an appropriate container. All of these movements are uninterrupted.

The esoteric’s description of the operation is found in claims 8 and 32 of the Karnofsky patent, respectively typical of the apparatus and method claims of the patent. They are as follows:

“8. A continuous solvent extractor for vegetable oils or the like, comprising, a rotor having a substantially vertical axis, a plurality of substantially vertically and radically divided cells disposed around said axis, said cells being open at the top and adapted to contain oil-bearing solid material for intimate contact therein with solvent and solvent solution of varying degrees of richness during the rotation thereof, a perforated closure adjacent the bottom of said cells adapted to permit the continuous draining of said solvent and solvent solution through said cells, a plurality of compartments positioned adjacent the bottom of said cells along the path of their rotation and adapted to collect said solvent and solvent solutions draining from said cells, means connected to a majority of said compartments for circulating the contents thereof to said cells at a plurality of separated positions respectively along said path of rotation to effect substantially countercurrent flow of solvent and solvent solution of solid material.”
“32. In a continuous system for the solvent extraction of oils or the like from solid particles, the steps comprising, separately confining a succession of masses of solid oil-containing particles independently from one another, moving said succession of masses through a closed rotary path in a substantially horizontal plane, supplying a flow of solvent substantially from above to each of said succession of masses at spaced intervals along said path of rotary movement, repeatedly draining solvent so supplied from said succession of masses into a succession of separate solvent-receiving zones positioned beneath said succession of masses and along said rotary path, and circulating solvent from a plurality of said separate solvent-receiving zones to a plurality of said supplying steps.”

Concededly, this is a combination patent. It is attacked by French as having no novelty, only utilizing old horizontal processes in a merry-go-round movement. French alleges that the combination is not patentable because “the several elements of which it is composed” do not “produce by their joint action an * * * old result in a * * * more advantageous way”. Colgate-Palmolive Co. v. Carter Products, 230 F.2d 855, 862 (4 Cir. 1956), cert. denied, 352 U.S. 843, 77 S.Ct. 43, 1 L.Ed.2d 59 (1956). The District Court found to the contrary.

We think a consideration of the “content of the prior art * * *; differences between the prior art and the claims at issue * * * and the level of ordinary skill in the pertinent art” reveals that the Karnofsky patent possesses novelty, usefulness and a more desirable means and method of extraction than theretofore available to oil producers. Cf. Graham v. John Deere Co., [880]*880383 U.S. 1, 17, 86 S.Ct. 684, 15 L.Ed.2d 545 (1966).

By 1938 the principal extractor types in operation in the United States consisted of Bollmann British patent No. 156,905, issued in 1921 and the German Hildebrandt. We do not descant upon the latter. Its modus operandi is plainly so foreign to the extractors in suit that discussion of it would be valueless. Suffice it to say, that Hildebrandt has been likened, and not entirely inaccurately, to a meat grinder. U-Shaped, the seed flakes are fed into it from the top of the lefthand column and work down by gravity. Additionally, motored screws push them down and around the U.

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Bluebook (online)
394 F.2d 877, 157 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 475, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaw-knox-company-v-hartsville-oil-mill-and-the-french-oil-machinery-ca4-1968.