Cleveland Gas Burner & Appliance Co. v. American Heater Corporation

38 F.2d 760, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 185, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2393
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 11, 1930
Docket8634
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 38 F.2d 760 (Cleveland Gas Burner & Appliance Co. v. American Heater Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Gas Burner & Appliance Co. v. American Heater Corporation, 38 F.2d 760, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 185, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2393 (8th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBÜRGH, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, plaintiff below, sued appellee, defendant below, for patent infringement, praying for injunction, accounting, and damages. Erom a decree below dismissing its bill appellant brings this suit.

Appellant is the owner of letters patent No. 1,560,248, issued November 3, 1925, to Harry Kerr, for an improvement in gas burners, and more particularly in a burner of the type disclosed in letters patent theretofore issued to W. J. Barber, No. 1,267,355, in which two streams of gas are commingled and caused to bum without initial admixture with air. The object aimed at and the nature of the improvement are thus stated by the patentee in his specification:

“My present object is to provide an effective burner in which separate streams or jets of gas are brought into confluence at converging angles together with separate streams of air to promote perfect combustion under either low or high gas pressure conditions, to prevent back-firing under a lowi or fluctuating gas pressure, and to produce a spreading flame which- may be readily controlled and efficiently applied in restricted or confined spaces. To attain my general object I provide a burner body having reversely-inelinejd burner nozzles which atfe particularly constructed to discharge attenuated streams or jets of gas into confluence with considerable force so as to spread the gas and produce an ovoidal body of flame, the nozzles being also particularly constructed to permit the gas streams to entrain just the right amount of air to maintain a sheath of flame around each jet or stream of gas under high-pressure operating conditions and also to promote a proper mixture of gas and air and a constant flame without hack-flring under low-pressure conditions.”

Figure 1, accompanying the application sufficiently illustrates the nature and scope of the invention.

*761 The entire specification deals with converging streams of gas, brought into confluence by means of reversely inclined burner nozzles so disposed and constructed as to spread the gas and produce an ovoidal body of flame. This conception is carried consistently and exclusively through the first four or the six claims of the patent, of whieh claim two is typical:

“A gas burner for heating purposes adapted to produce perfect combustion equally with either natural or manufactured gas or such gases mixed, at either low or high gas pressures, and under fluctuating pressures, comprising a hollow burner body having screw-threaded openings therein extending upwardly toward each other at substantially right angles, and separate nozzles screwed into said openings having enlarged gas intakes terminating in short axial gas orifices and formed with side air intake openings in their base portions in substantially the same plane as the outlet end of the orifices adapted to bring separate streams of air and gas into confluence.”

While Kerr’s application was pending his solicitors received the following communication from the Examiner in the Pat-en Office who had his application under consideration :

“The following claims have been found allowable in a eopending application, and have been suggested to applicant for interference purposes,
“1. A gas burner comprising an unob-" strueted eommingler tube having a cross port forming an air inlet thereto and a gas jet aperture in the surface of said cross port aligned with said eommingler tube, said air inlet port being restricted in area to retard the rate of flame propagation in the mixture whereby said tube will be swept free from all flame at mixture velocities obtainable with normal gas pressures.
“2. In a gas burner, a pair of opposed jet tubes in slightly offset relation, whereby the resulting flame extends at an oblique angle to said jets.
“If applicant desires to make the above claims he should do so within thirty days. Failure to do so will be considered as a disclaimer of invention of the subject matter thereof.
“The claims of this application are not considered patentable over the issue of the interference.”

Thereupon, Kean? copied and incorporated the two claims suggested in this-letter of the Patent Office, and an interference was declared with the copending application referred to — that of an inventor named Shuell —which was owned by the Ever Hot Heater Company of Detroit, Mich. The interference was decided in favor of Kerr by what is termed “a concession of priority” by Shuell. In return for this concession the defeated party in the interference was granted a license to make burners like those purporting to be covered by the patent in suit upon payment of the nominal sum of $50 per year. Thus the first of the two claims suggested in the letter of the patent office became claim 5 of the Kerr patent now before us, and this is the only claim involved in this litigation.

Appellee’s structure contains no reversely inclined nozzles, but is a ring burner using a series of small Bunsen burner tubes which project the flame against a superimposed wall of metal, a mechanical obstruction, whieh acts as a baffle. Each nozzle operates independently of the others and is provided with a separate baffle member. A baffle in the art is some form of obstruction, mechanical or otherwise, whieh prevents the flame from extinguishing itself by being carried too far from the mouth of the burner tube. In the absence of something of this kind the flame will form at too great a distance from the tube or will be blown out entirely. In appellant’s structure, as described in the specification, this baffle or eheek is produced by the arrangement of the reversely inclined nozzles, whereby the jet of one burner is projected against that of another. In appellee’s device the nozzles are not so reversely inclined, and the baffle is produced by the mechanical obstruction referred to.

Appellee is charged with infringement of claim 5 of the patent in suit. That claim deals with a single tube, and contains no reference to a baffle of any sort. It describes a tube having a cross port forming an air inlet and a gas jet aperture in the surface of this cross port, the air inlet being restricted in area to retard the rate of flame propagation in the mixture whereby the tube will be swept free of all flame at mixture velocities obtainable with normal gas pressure. There is in this no new element nor combination of elements, not found commonly in the prior art, unless it be in the proposal to “retard the rate of flame propagation in the mixture whereby said tube will be swept free from all flame at mixture velocities obtainable with normal gas pressure.” The burner described is a typical Bunsen burner whieh is thus defined:

*762 “A gas burner invented by R. W. Bunsen, consisting essentially of a tube so arranged that air is drawn in through, openings at the base, where it unites with the gas and produces an extremely hot, nonluminous flame.” New Standard Dictionary.

So far as essential elements are0 concerned, the claim in suit reads aptly upon a Bunsen burner.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F.2d 760, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 185, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-gas-burner-appliance-co-v-american-heater-corporation-ca8-1930.