Chicago Sugar-Refining Co. v. Charles Pope Glucose Co.

84 F. 977, 28 C.C.A. 594, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1985
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 1898
DocketNo. 383
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 84 F. 977 (Chicago Sugar-Refining Co. v. Charles Pope Glucose Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Sugar-Refining Co. v. Charles Pope Glucose Co., 84 F. 977, 28 C.C.A. 594, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1985 (7th Cir. 1898).

Opinions

SHOW ALTER, Circuit Judge.

The circuit court upon final hearing dismissed for want of equity a bill wherein this appellant charged infringement by appellees of the one claim of letters patent of the United States No. 247,152, and the first and fifth claims of letters patent of the United States No. 247,153. These patents were issued in 1881 to Arno JBehr. They became later the property of [978]*978this appellant, by assignment. This appeal is taken from the decree of dismissal.

If grains of corn be dropped into a basin of water, they will sink, and lie on the bottom of the basin. If grains of corn be crushed, so that the germ of each is separated from the hull, and if the broken grains be then sifted, so that all loosened or liberated particles of the flour or starchy matter are remoyed, and the remainder dropped into a vat or basin containing water, both the germs and hulls will sink, and lie in a mass, on the bottom, the germs above, the hulls below, since the germs, each of which contains a globule of oil, are lighter (that is to say, of less specific gravity) than the hulls. By means of some foreign substance capable of being held in suspension, or of uniting in solution with the water, the density of the liquid may be increased so that the germs will rise and float on the surface, while the hulls remain on the bottom. If in such case an opening or chute be provided near the upper edge of the containing vessel, and if provision be made for introducing into the vessel, by a regulated feed, additional crushed grains, mixed in due proportion with liquid of the appropriate density, then, while a portion of the hulls already separated, and equal in quantity to the increment of hulls, is constantly being removed (this being so done that the action of the liquid in continuously raising the germs from the hulls as so introduced is not interfered with), the liquid, together with the germs, will flow out of the chute continuously, and in a regulated volume. If a vibrating sieve, inclined outward from the lower exterior edge of the chute, and downward towards some receptacle with which it may be connected by an open mouth or spout, and having- underneath a second vessel, be also provided, then the germs will pass over the sieve into the one receptacle, and the overflowing liquid will pass through the sieve into the other. By this process the mass of crushed corn and liquid, kept constant in volume by a regulated feed, may be continuously separated; the liquid passing into one receptacle, the germs into another, and the hulls into a third.

The first of the patents in suit concerns the treatment of corn, and involves a process' in general outline as already suggested. The stratum of hulls lies in the bottom (a cross section of which is a half circle) of a long compartment, vat, or trough, wherein is contained longitudinally a revolving shaft, supplied with transversely projecting blades, set angularly to their planes of revolution. By the action of these blades (whose orbits do not approach or disturb the upper surface of the liquid) the stratum of hulls, as the germs part and rise through the liquid to the surface, is continuously stirred and moved from the receiving end of the trough to the opposite end, where a series of perforated scoops, attached to a belt running on a pulley affixed to the shaft and another pulley above, continuously lifts the hulls so accumulated, and deposits them upon an inclined, vibrating sieve, whence they pass into a receptacle provided to receive them. Water from pipes above this sieve is sprayed over the passing hulls, washing off the dense, adhering liquid [979]*979brought up from the trough, which liquid, together with the increment of water, passes into a receptacle below the sieve, and thence, by a pipe, back into the main vat or trough. In the yirocess 0f this patent the particles of starchy matter or flour are not removed initially from the broken grains. The grains, having been previously softened by soaking, or in some other way, arc* then crushed. The crushed grains are then mixed with water and stirred, and this mixture' is continuously fed into the receiving end of the long vat, through a pipe which connects with the vat near its bottom, in order that the surface of the contained liquid may not be disturbed. The liquid made' use of in tills process is water brought to the requisite density for floating the germs by the particles of starchy matter or flour softened in the preliminary soaking, atad released and dissolved in the preliminary crushing and stirring, and by the action of the bladed shaft already mentioned. These dissolved or comminuted particles are held in suspension in the water, and the proportions of crushed com and water, and (lie rapidity of the operation, are graduated so that the appropriate density in the liquid (10° or 32° Baume) is permanently maintained. ' If the degree of density be too low, the germs will sink; if too high, the hulls will float along with the germs. In other words, the separating liquid, formed as stated, and called “starch milk” in the x>atent, is maintained at such density that the germs float and the hulls sink. By this process the mass of crushed corn and water divides itself, and forms a lower stratum of hulls, a middle stratum of starch suspended in water, and an upper stratum of germs. Each subdivision is gradually and continuously separated froni the mass; the starch milk and the germs passing through the chute together by gravity, and the starch milk by gravity parting from the germs, and passing into the receptacle below the sieve. The claim of this patent is expressed in the following words:

“The process of treating corn in the manufacture of starch, glucose, anti other producís ilierefrom, herein described, which consists in mixing with corn, which has been softened and crushed, sufficient water to form a mixture of such density that the germs of the com will tend to separate from the hulls and other heavier portions, and rise to the surface of tire mixture, and in mechanically stirring such mixture in a separating tank or compartment provided at the top with a suitable chute, and thereby causing 1lie germs and piece's of germs to be carried off in a surface current caused to overflow through tlie chute by the influx of crushed corn and water into the separating tank, and in removing the hulls and adherent matter from the lower stratum of the mixture by mechanical means; the materials removed from the separating' tank being respectively screened in the usual manner, and the purified mixture of the mealy parts of the corn and water being collected in a suitable reservoir.”

It is said that this claim is void prima facie. Counsel for ap-pellees insists that the claim “is void upon its face,” and independently of the prior art. “This position,” he says, “is based upon the well-known principle that that which is shown but not claimed in a patent is thereby disclaimed, and conceded to be old and public property. It is apparent upon the face of the process patent in suit that Behr made no attempt to claim broadly the separation [980]*980of the germs from the perisperms by immersing a mixture of the two in a liquid of intermediate specific gravity.

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Bluebook (online)
84 F. 977, 28 C.C.A. 594, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-sugar-refining-co-v-charles-pope-glucose-co-ca7-1898.