Consolidated Oil Well Packer Co. v. Baton, Cole & Burnham Co.

12 F. 865, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2602
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 20, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 F. 865 (Consolidated Oil Well Packer Co. v. Baton, Cole & Burnham Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Oil Well Packer Co. v. Baton, Cole & Burnham Co., 12 F. 865, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2602 (circtdct 1882).

Opinion

Shipman, D. J.

This is a bill in equity to restrain the defendant from the further infringement of reissued letters patent, dated February 6, 1877, to H. H. Doubleday, assignee by mesne assignments of Owen liedmond; also of reissued letters patent, dated July 3,1877, to H. H. Bliss, assignee of John R. Cross; also of reissued letters patent, dated July 25, 1876, to H. H. Doubleday, assignee of Francis Martin; also of reissued letters patent, dated November 12, 1878, to Alonzo H. Fowler; the original patent being to said Fowler and Edward J. Morgan, and said Fowler being the assignee of said Morgan. All the patents are for improvements in packing for oil or deep wells. The bill also prays for an accounting of the profits and damages arising from prior infringements. The original patents wore issued as follows: The Redmond patent, upon October 30, 1866; the Cross patent, upon February 7, 1865; the Martin patent, upon September 12, 1865; and tlie Fowler and Morgan patent, upon November 28, 1865.

Oil wells formerly had ordinarily a diameter of about five and one-half inches, and were lined with an iron tube of about two and one-half inches in diameter. The space between the tube and the walls of the well must be closed at some point between the oil-producing rock and tlie water fissures, else the surface water would prevent the oil from flowing into the well. The common method» of shutting off this water was to use a leather bag “of about the same diameter of the bore of the well, and from four to six feet in length. This bag was placed on the outside of the tubing, and located at such point on the tubing as had been previously determined would shut off the surface water, the bag being secured to the tubing by being tied with a string at its lower end. It was then filled with flaxseed and loosely tied to the tubing at its upper end.” The tube was lowered into the well, [866]*866and in a short time the seed, having become moistened, swelled and packed the space between the wall and tube. , Packers of various kinds are now used for the same purpose, and also to prevent the gas from escaping between the tube and the wall of the well.

The defendant, a manufacturing corporation, made, between June 10, 1878, and October 9, 1878, in Bridgeport, in this district, and shipped to a corporation in Bradford, Pennsylvania, to be there used, 17 complete and 165 incomplete packers. The incomplete packers had nearly all the requisite parts, and were purposely made to receive the omitted parts, which were to be supplied in Pennsylvania.

The defendant’s packer “consists of a telescopic joint formed of two membérs, the lower member being a cylinder having as its lower end an internal screw thread adapted to receive a section of casing or tubing commonly called an anchor, — being so called, as I understand it, because the lower end of the anchor rests upon the bottom of the well when the packer is in position; the upper end of the anchor being provided with a flange, on which rests a rubber annulus or packing cylinder, which in this Baton packer is composed of four, five, or more rubber rings encircling the pumping tube; the lower end of the pumping tube sliding within the upper end of the anchor section or member, and provided with a projecting flange, which, when the parts are in position, rests upon the rubber in such manner that the weight of the upper section of tubing presses the upper flange upon the rubber, and thus packs the rubber against the wall of the well, and also against the pumping tube, thereby preventing water or oil from passing between the pumping tube and the wall of the well.”

A flange projects from the upper end of the cylinder, which also has an inner shoulder at its upper end. The lower end of the oil tube slides within the upper end of the cylinder, and has an out-' wardly-projecting flange, which overlaps this inner shoulder of the cylinder. When the tube is removed from the well its shoulder engages the corresponding rim or shoulder upon the packer support, and the packer is also drawn out at the same time. This packer, or the Eaton packer, as it is commonly called, infringes the first and fifth claims of the Bedmond reissued patent, if those claims are valid, and are to be literally construed. They are as follows:

“ (1) .The combination in an oil-well packer of a flexible packing material and a pressing device, arranged outside of the discharging tube, which presses .the packing material against the wall of the well, substantially.as set forth.”
[867]*867“(5) In combination with the discharging tube of an oil well, flexible packing material pressing against both the tube and the wall of the well, substantially as set forth.”

But the description of the Bedmond packer contained in the specification of the original patent shows that the invention consisted “primarily in the employment of an adjustable packing device, sliding up and down on the central elevating tube, being operated from the top of the well by wires, rods, chains, cords, or equivalent, and packing both the shaft or boro of the well and the elevating tube, so as to prevent the passage of water downward. The essential advantages attained are that the packing can be raised and lowered to adapt it to any desired position, or can be entirely removed from the well without raising the elevating tube.” The patentee also says: “The packing device may be of any construction that will secure the following effects, viz., slide up and down on the central elevating tube so as to be fixed in position at any desired place without removing the tubing, and pack both the shaft and the tube. ” The Eaton packer was of a very different character. It had no adjustable device for raising or lowering the packer without removing the tubing. The broadest claim of the original was as follows:

“ (1) A packing devico for artesian wells, packing both the tubing and the sides of the well, when the device is capable either of being adjusted higher or lower upon the tubing, or viceversa, the tubing adjusted higher or lower within the packing, substantially as specified.”

The first and fifth claims of the reissue, if construed to indicate anything more than the first claim of the original patent, are undue expansions of the original and are void.

The Eaton packer also infringes the first and second claims of the Cross reissue, if those claims are to be literally construed, and are valid. They are—

“ (1) In an artesian well packer, a flexible or yielding packing material in combination with devices which press said material against both the wall of the well and the discharging tube.
“ (2) In an artesian well packer, the combination with the discharging tube of a flexible or yielding packing material, and two flanges or disks which approach each other and compress the yielding packing material between them.”

Tho specification of the original patent shows that the invention consisted of two flanges surrounding the oil tubo. Two screw rods passed through both flanges, the upper flange being fixed in position by moans of a collar or other device. The rods revolved freely in [868]*868this flange, and were connected with the lower one by a screw thread, which caused it to approach or recede from the upper or stationary flange. The space between the two flanges was filled with fibrous and suitable packing material.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. 865, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-oil-well-packer-co-v-baton-cole-burnham-co-circtdct-1882.