Carson v. American Smelting & Refining Co.

4 F.2d 463, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3014
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1925
Docket4304
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 463 (Carson v. American Smelting & Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carson v. American Smelting & Refining Co., 4 F.2d 463, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3014 (9th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

GILBERT, Circuit Judge.

The appellant brought suit for the infringement of the claims of two patents. The suit was dismissed on the ground that the claims were anticipated by the British patent to Siemens, No. 2,413, issued in 1866. The appellant’s claims relate both to open-hearth and reverberatory furnaces used in smelting copper ores. His first patent, No. 1,149,495, issued August 10, 1915, is entitled “Metallurgical Furnace.” The second patent, No. 1,302,307, entitled “Construction of Roof of Open-Hearth and Reverberatory Furnaces,” was issued April 29, 1919, on a divisional application. The application for the first patent was filed January 15, 1907. It epntained 12 claims. The appellant acted as his own attorney and drafted his claims and specifications. Owing to that fact and his lack of skill and knowledge of Patent Office procedure, his application met with many objections and much delay. The first obje *464 ction was that the claims covered two distinct and independent inventions. It was not until August 10, 1915, that the first patent was allowed and issued, with a single claim.

Two months before it issued, the appellant filed the divisional' .application. It contained five claims, and, as the appellant again acted as his own attorney, it was not until four years later that the patent was granted. The principal ground of objection to that application was that the claims were anticipated by the British patent to Siemens. Upon a second appeal to the Board of Examiners, however, it was held that, while the application was a proper divisional application, the claims were not so Worded as to avoid anticipation by Siemens. Said the Board of Examiners: “We think appellant has made an invention that is not disclosed in or suggested by Siemens, although the. appealed claim does not define it. That invention may best be expressed in terms of propess or method, although it may also be defined in terms of apparatus. Considering it to be the duty of .this office to render all reasonable and proper assistance possible to applicants for patents, we are suggesting herein two, claims that- we think state the invention appellant has made and has been attempting to patent, and we recommend their allowance, if presented in lieu of the appealed claim.” The claims so recommended were adopted by the appellant, and they are claims 2 and 3 of the patent as it was finally issued.

The claim of the first patent is as follows:

“Im a metallurgical furnace having receptacles arranged above the roof thereof passages from. said receptacles leading to said furnace.arranged in such a manner that the material in said receptacles passes out into said furnace by gravity and forms the lining thereof.”

In the second patentthe claims here involved are as follows:

■' “2. The method of protecting the walls of an open hearth or reverberatory furnace which consists in feeding the ores or fettling materials into the furnace chamber near the upper-part thereof, and in causing the sáme to form á sloping embankment resting upon the floor of the furnace chamber and along thé walls within the chamber between the bath and walls.
“3.’ In' an open hearth or reverberatory furnace, a floor, walls extending upwardly from the floor, and feeding ports leading into the upper part of the furnace chamber and being’so located that the ores or fettling materials entering therethrough may have unrestricted vertical movement downwardly to .the said floor near the walls and may form sloping embankments against the walls to protect the latter from the heat and corrosive action of the metal bath.”
Subsequently the appellant filed a disclaimer eliminating from the claims the words “or fettling materials.”

The reverberatory furnaces in use prior to the appellant’s invention were rectangular in shape, usually 120 feet long, 20 feet wide, and covered by an arched roof about 9 feet, above the floor. The walls were perpendicular. The ore was introduced through a series of openings extending along the center of the line of the roof. The heat was introduced at one end. It was necessary to bank clay or similar material against the side walls in order to prevent disintegration caused by the excessive heat. The operation of leveling the piles of ore and the operation of banking the clay against the sides of -the furnace were performed through apertures in the sides of the furnace. Both operations entailed loss of time and loss of heat. The appellant’s invention-consisted in supplying the ores through openings in the roof at the sides of the furnace and in utilizing the , ore itself as it fell and was piled against the sides of the furnace as a protection against injury to the sidewalls in the smelting^ operation. It marked a distinct forward step in the construction and operation of reverberatory furnaces, and of' its utility there can be no question.

Upon a careful consideration of the evidence, we are of the opinion that the Board of Examiners at the Patent Office correctly held' that the appellant’s invention is not anticipated by the Siemens patent. The- Siemens patent, granted in 1866, was for -a blast furnace designed for the proposed purpose of 'producing steel, directly, from iron ore, although Siemens added that it might be “used with advantage for the reduction of copper and other metallic ores.” Siemens declared his invention to consist in exposing a mass of ore, “which may or may not be mixed with reducing agents - or fluxes, to the surface action of intense heat produced by the combustion of highly heated air and gaseous fuel.” The anticipatory feature of the Siemens furnace is claimed to be the sloping side walls of the reducing chamber, into which ore was to be supplied by gravity, so as to maintain the mass of ore upon the sides of the chamber in proportion as it is converted and fused, “so as to protect - the walls- or inclined -sur *465 faces thereof from the heat of the furnace and the corrosive action of the slags or cinders of the metallic bath by the interposition of the ore itself.”

There was nothing new in constructing the bottom of the furnace with inclined sides. In so doing Siemens adopted the well-known and usual form of blast furnaces. Certain expressions in the Siemens patent are relied upon as indicating the anticipation of the appellant’s patent. Thus he refers to the fact that the mass of ore is maintained upon the inclined planes by its own gravity, and that the principal advantage of his furnace is that the sides are protected against fusion by the presence of the ore or other substance to be melted, “particularly at the surface line of the liquid cinders whore brickwork is rapidly destroyed,” and in the speeifigations he says that his invention “consists in exposing a mass of ore to the surface action of intense heat, * * * the mass of ore being arranged in such a manner, by preference upon inclined plane and upon inclined surfaces, that the fused metal produced at the surface readily passes away therefrom, so as to leave such surface always exposed to the action of the heat.”

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Bluebook (online)
4 F.2d 463, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-american-smelting-refining-co-ca9-1925.