Carlton v. Bokee

84 U.S. 463, 21 L. Ed. 517, 17 Wall. 463, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1386
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 463 (Carlton v. Bokee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlton v. Bokee, 84 U.S. 463, 21 L. Ed. 517, 17 Wall. 463, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1386 (1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice BRADLEY

stated the facts and delivered the opinion of the court.

The lamp, as patented to Reiehmann, was one of a large *464 number of attempts made about the time to utilize petroleum aud its various products for purposes of illuminatiou. The old lamps adapted to sperm oil, lard, and other gross and sluggish oils were unfitted for the use of so volatile and dangerous a substance. In them the flame was set close to the lamp, and the tube holding the wick was projected downward into the oil, so' that the heat of the' flame might be communicated thereto in order to render it more fluid aud susceptible to the capillary attraction of the wick. Such an arrangement as .this with.petroleum would have produced a speedy explosion. This article required that the flame should be elevated as far as possible above the lamp and that the metallic wick tube should not communicate any heat'to the fluid. This w7as one object to be attained in tlie burners required for the use of the new illuminator. Another was some contrivance for concentrating a current of air.upon the flame itself, so as. to consume as perfectly as possible all the rapidly escaping volatile gases, both as a-saving of light and as a preventive, of the disagreeable odors-which they w'ould otherwise diffuse.

Fig. 1.

Beicflmanu’s burner, illustrated in Figure 1, was intended to’ accomplish these main objects as well as some subsidiary ones, which will . hereafter appear. It consisted of several distinct .parts, combined and arranged in a particular manner First, a flat *465 wick-tube (indicated in the figure by the letter c) attached to the cap or stopper of the lamp, and rising above the same one or two inches, more or less, according to the size of the burner, but not projecting into the lamp below. Secondly, ratchet-wheels attached to the side of the wick-tube on a small shaft (g), for raising and lowering the wick. Thirdly, a slide or sleeve (i) fitted to slip up and down over the wick-tube, and sufficiently tight to stay in any position- thereon, and furnished with arms (o, o), two or- more, for supporting above the wick-tube a dome or deflector (m). Fourthly, the dome aforesaid, having an oval or oblong slot for the flame to pass through, so that part of the flame might be above the dome and part below it. The object of this dome was to collect and concentrate the air upon the flame, in order to make it burn more brightly aud consume the liydfo-carbon and other gases which emanated from the petroleum. It also acted as a deflector of the light proceeding from the lower part of the flame, whereby it was thrown downward towards and around the lamp, whereas the light from that part of the flame above the,dome was all thrown upward or horizontally about the room. Fifthly, around the periphery of the dome several narrow slips of the metal (k) were turned up, to act as arms or supports to the glass chimney of the lamp, and between these arms spaces were cut out of the edge of the dome, to allow air to pass up between the dome and chimney for the purpose of guiding the fL,.ne and feeding it with additional oxygen. Sixthly, the chimney itself (p), which was placed inside of and upon the said arms or supports, and held in its position thereby.

This was the combination of elements of which Beiehmann’s burner consisted, and it will be perceived that the chimney was so elevated that the flame of the lamp below the dome was exposed on every side, and a current of air or a rapid movement of the lamp would extinguish it. This, was the.great defect of the burner, which prevented its introduction into general use, and rendered it of little value. The principal-advantage which Beichmann in his patent claimed for it was that it allowed the light from the under side of *466 the deflector to be reflected or thrown downward upon the table or' lamp. This was effected by the use of upright, slender arms to support the dome, so that the space around and underneath the dome was left open and uninclosed. He also claimed some' less important advantages in his arrangement of the ratchet-wheels for raising the wick, and one or two other things of no importance in this controversy.

The patent had but one claim and that amounted to the general combination of elements referred to and their peculiar arrangement. It was in these words:

“ Whát I claim as new and desire to secure by letters-patent is, in combination with the lamp, the slotted, open, bell-shaped cap (i. e., the dome), when so constructed, arranged, and operating as to allow light to be deflected downwards, substantially in the manner and for the purpose herein set forth and explained.”

In order to understand how narrow this claim really wras, it is necessary to know a little of the history of the art. Two well-known burners are conceded to have been in use before Reichmann’s invention, which have a material bearing on his'claims; the Vienna burner and Stuber’s burner. These have been exhibited to us.

The Vienna burner, shown in Figure 2, contained the flat ..wick-tube, the ratchet-wheel attached thereto (but covered and hot exposed as in Reichmann’s), and a slotted dome above the wick for the flame to pass through, and á chimney; but the dome was not supported by slender arms, as in Reichmaun’s, but was connected with a gallery, which supported the chimney and surrounded the wick-tube and dome, and rested on- the lamp or cap b'elow, so that all the light of the flame below'the dome was inclosed and lost and could not issue out as in Reichmann’s burner. The drawing shows the dome (a), the surrounding gallery (5), and the lower part of the wick-tube (c).

The Stuber burner, invented by John Stuber in 1856, and made in considerable quantities in that and the following years at Utica, New York (shown, in Figure 3), was an im *468 provemeut on the Vienna burner, in this, that the gallery ' was so low as to leave a considerable open space under the dome for the reflected light to pass out in a downward di-rection, and the dome was supported by slender arms (d), but these arms were attached to the gallery and not to a sleeve fitted on to the wick-tube. It differed, therefore, from Reichmann’s in these respects: the chimney was supported on a low gallery instead of the dome itself, and the dome was supported by arms (d) attached to this gallery instead of arms attached to a sleeve on the wick-tube. * Therefore, with these burners before us, all the invention wre can discover in Reichmann’s burner is the peculiar mode of supporting his dome by slender arms attached to a sleeve fitted on to the wick-tube, and the elevation of the chimney on the outer edge of the dome. The latter peculiarity, as we have seen, is a defect which rendered the burner nearly useless.

*467 Fig. 2.

*468 The lamp made and sold by the defendants is substantially exhibited (in a sectional view) in Figure 5, which was patented to L. J. Atwood, October 18th, 1863. The dome and chimney are lifted from their place on the cap of the lamp to show the parts.

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Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 463, 21 L. Ed. 517, 17 Wall. 463, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlton-v-bokee-scotus-1872.