Dorr Co. v. Yabucoa Sugar Co.

119 F.2d 521, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 407, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1941
DocketNo. 3598
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 119 F.2d 521 (Dorr Co. v. Yabucoa Sugar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorr Co. v. Yabucoa Sugar Co., 119 F.2d 521, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 407, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3776 (1st Cir. 1941).

Opinion

MAGRUDER, Circuit Judge.

The complaint charges infringement of two patents owned by the plaintiffs. This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court dismissing the bill of complaint ori the ground that both the patents are invalid.

One of the patents in suit is McHugh No. 1,503,657, issued August 5, 1924, now owned by the plaintiff The Dorr Company, Inc., and under which the co-plaintiff Com-pania de Ingenieros Petree y Dorr is exclusive licensee. The other patent in suit is Coe No. 1,686,203, issued October 2, 1928, now owned by the said Petree y Dorr.

Plaintiffs rest their case for infringement upon claims 1, 3 and 4 of McHugh and upon claim 2 of Coe. Each of these claims has been held invalid by the court below.

The McHugh patent covers a described process for clarifying sugar juice in the manufacture of sugar. The Coe patent is for an improved thickening or clarifying apparatus, “particularly adapted for the treatment of hot solid-liquid suspensions such as the muds and solutions obtained in the process of sugar production”. In manufacturing sugar the defendant uses a so-called Seip clarifier, the accused apparatus, covered by patent No. 2,103,828 (1937). It is alleged that in using the Seip clarifier to clarify cane sugar juice the defendant is infringing the Coe apparatus patent and at the same time is practising the clarifying process patented by Mc-Hugh.

The District Court found that “The accused device infringes both the Coe and the McHugh patents, assuming the validity of the said patents”. This finding is challenged by the defendant; but it is unnecessary for us to examine into its correctness, because we feel obliged to affirm the court below in its conclusion that the McHugh and Coe claims in suit are invalid.

McHugh claim No. 1 describes a process for separating sugar juices from solid matter admixed therewith which comprises (1) “subjecting a mixture of sugar juice and solid matter in a stratum of substantially uniform depth to sedimentation and decantation in the course of which solid matter settles by gravity towards the bottom of the stratum and sugar juice is continuously decanted from near the top of the stratum, (2) continuously feeding a mixture of sugar juice and solid matter to the stratum, (3) continuously and mechanically moving the settled solid matter in proximity to the bottom of the stratum towards the center thereof, and (4) continuously discharging solid matter from near the bottom of said stratum in the form of a thickened product of such density that the total amount of solid matter discharged in a given time interval is approximately the same average amount of solid matter fed to the stratum during the same time interval”. (Numbering of the steps supplied.) In practising the process Mc-Hugh’s specifications recommend the use of a “gravitational separator, preferably of the Dorr thickener type”, a tank structure in which solid matter is separated from the liquid.

It is conceded that all the steps in the process set forth in claim 1 are old, as applied to liquids generally, as distinguished from sugar juice clarification. The whole process is disclosed, for example, in Blomfield, British Patent No. 110,188 (1917), a tank apparatus for separating liquids from solids in fluid suspension by the continuous gravity settling process. A similar disclosure is made in the expired Dorr patent No. 867,958 (1907), which covers an apparatus primarily for the treatment of metallurgical slimes, “but it will be understood that this apparatus may be employed for separating other solid matter from liquid in various processes”.

The District Court found that sugar clarification is closely analogous to, if not identical with, the art of clarifying dirty liquids generally. There is considerable evidence in the record so indicating. For example, Pickering, British Patent No. 4834 (1901), covers a continuous sub-sider “for cleaning sugar juice, or any other liquid subject to subsidence”. Likewise, Deming No. 885,451, describes a “process of treating liquids carrying solids in suspension, and specifically saccharine solutions”. Coe himself, in the patent in suit, does not limit his apparatus to sugar clarification. In his specifications he describes it as “particularly adapted for the treatment of hot solid-liquid suspensions such as the muds and solutions obtained in [523]*523the process of sugar production”; and broadly he claims “an apparatus for separating solids in hot solid-liquid suspensions”.

It is contended, however, that in two respects sugar juice clarification presents unique problems which serve to differentiate it from the general art of separating liquids from solids in suspension:

The impure sugar juice with its sludge component, before being poured into the settling tank, is heated to about its boiling temperature. Among the impurities of the sugar juice are certain albumens which are coagulated when the heat is applied. The coagulated albumens are in the form of flock* which differ slightly in specific gravity from the sugar juice in which they are suspended and are hard to separate from the juice. Milk of lime is added to neutralize the natural acidity of the sugar juice and to accelerate the flocculation of some of the impurities which must be removed from the juice. All this, of course, was standard practice in the art of clarifying sugar juice long before McHugh. It may be that the particular albumen impurities found in unclarified sugar juice are not present in other liquids such as met-tallurgical slimes, sewage and dirty water, in the treatment of which the Dorr and Blomfield type of clarifiers had previously been used. But flocculation in the process of sedimentation is not peculiar to sugar juice, as the plaintiffs’ expert witness Dennis conceded. Peck No. 1,392,214 (1921), covering an apparatus for treating sewage, states that “the treated sewage is subjected to sedimentation and decantation to settle out the flocculated particles, called the activated sludge, and to permit the escape of a relatively clear and stable effluent by overflow”. Dorr No. 867,958, previously referred to, describes the pulp passing from the ore pulverizer as containing cyanide solution or water, sands, and slimes “consisting mainly of amorphous or flocculent matter” derived from the earthy material of the ore. What McHugh claims to have found was that the Dorr type of thickener in general use for separation of liquids from suspended solids was so constructed as to work particularly well in facilitating the settling of flocculent impurities in sugar juice.

The other point which is said to render sugar juice clarification unique is the problem of minimizing sugar losses through inversion and fermentation. These deteriorating chemical changes are the greater the longer the solid impurities are in contact with the sugar juices; hence the time element in the separation process is of importance. This, again, was known long before McHugh. He found, or claims to have found, that the process of continuous decantation of clarified sugar juice, and continuous discharge of the sedimented “mud” from the bottom of a settling tank of the Dorr type accomplishes the separation of the juices from the solid impurities in a minimum of time, thereby avoiding much loss from inversion and fermentation. But the very fact that this problem of chemistry in the manufacture of sugar found its solution, as asserted by McHugh, in the utilization of a process and apparatus already common property in the general art of separating liquids from solids in fluid suspension, indeed suggests that the clarification of sugar juices bears a close affinity to that general art.

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Bluebook (online)
119 F.2d 521, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 407, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorr-co-v-yabucoa-sugar-co-ca1-1941.