Dowless v. Hooks

125 F. Supp. 96, 102 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 386, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2630
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 24, 1954
DocketCiv. No. 477
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 F. Supp. 96 (Dowless v. Hooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dowless v. Hooks, 125 F. Supp. 96, 102 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 386, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2630 (E.D.N.C. 1954).

Opinion

GILLIAM, District Judge.

This case arose under the patent laws of the United States, and W. B. Dowless, et al., plaintiffs, seek to enjoin defendant Hooks from further infringement on patents granted to Dowless. W. B. Dowless, et ah, having filed a motion for a new trial and for amendment of the findings of fact and of the judgment, and to alter and amend the said judgment, and to set aside certain findings of fact and conclusions of law and the judgment entered herein, — the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law, to-wit:

Findings of Fact

1. On November 26, 1940, Dowless was granted U. S. Patent No. 2,223,301 for “Improvement in Tobacco Drying and Curing Means.” On July 6, 1948, he was granted U. S. Patent No. 2,444,814 for an additional improvement in drying and curing means, this patent having been applied for November 19, 1945.

. 2. By separate agreements dated November 1, 1947 and November 13, 1950, Dowless assigned to E. D. Lennon and A. A. Price the sole and exclusive right to make, use and vend a curer bearing the trademark “Dowless Tobacco Curer”, together with complete title and interest in and to the two patents above named and such amendments and improvements as Dowless may secure for the same.

3. On August 5, 1947, Hooks filed patent application Serial No. 766,407 for improvement in heating burner for curing tobacco. This application, consisting of six claims, was rejected in full by the patent examiner in a communication bearing date May 5, 1948. On September 22, 1948, Hooks, through his attorneys, filed an application amendment cancelling the initial six claims and adding five new claims. The amended application was rejected in full by a communication bearing date May 19, 1949. The five additional claims were rejected as fully met in Dowless patent 2,444,814 and another. The Hooks application was directed to a two-piece heating chamber, a one-piece burner and a downdraft tube equipped with a spacer bar.

4. From the certified copy of the records of the U. S. Patent Office regarding the File Wrapper and Contents of the application by Hooks, it appears that no further amendment was offered subsequent to the rejection of May 19, 1949; and the application was considered abandoned.

5. Dowless and others, as plaintiffs, seek to enjoin Hooks from further infringement on the Dowless patents; and Hooks by way of defense denies infringement and contends: 1. That the Dow-less structures had been in public use in this country for more than a year before the Dowless application was filed; 2. That the Dowless patents are void for that they disclose no patentable invention over the state of the art as known and practiced prior to the time the Dow-less applications were filed; 3. That the Dowless structures had .been patented or described in a printed publication prior to Dowless’ supposed invention thereof.

[98]*986. It is at once obvious that the Hooks burner is so entirely different from the disclosures of the Dowless patent 2,223,301 that the Dowless claim of infringement on that patent is here denied without further consideration.

7. There are three claims in the Dow-less patent 2,444,814; however, so far as defenses here pleaded are concerned, those claims are essentially the same and only claims 2 and 3 will be examined. They are as follows: “2. In a tobacco curing system, a burner comprising a substantially tubular housing closed at one end and open at the other, a fuel nozzle adjacent to the bottom of said housing and formed of a hollow body having a plurality of upwardly and outwardly directed jet openings, an air inlet tube extending into said housing through the top thereof and terminating above said nozzle, a diametrically disposed bar carried by the lower end of said tube, said bar having a central opening, and an upwardly convergent conical pin carried by said nozzle coaxially thereof engaging in said opening for supporting said tube with the lower end thereof spaced above said nozzle out of the path of the fuel ejected through said jet openings”; “3. In a device as described, a tubular conduit establishing a line of flow of hot flames, a fuel burner at one end of said conduit, said burner comprising a substantially tubular housing closed at one end and open at the other, a fuel nozzle adjacent to the bottoms of said housing and formed of a hollow body having a plurality of upwardly and outwardly directed jet openings, an air tube disposed downwardly in said housing and extending diametrically almost across said conduit with its air discharge and in close spaced proximity to said nozzle, a centrally apertured bar in the lower end of said tube, a conical pin on said nozzle engaging in the opening of said bar for supporting said tube there-above, and a baffle plate extending upwardly from the bottom of said housing at the open end thereof for angularly diverting into said conduit a flow of the hot flames generated at the confluence of the burner gases and the air stream discharged from said tube.”

8. The essential features of the invention claimed lie in the specific construction of the burner nozzle and its related parts, more particularly the cone shaped upper portion of the burner nozzle which acts not merely as a support for the drowndraft tube, but also as a deflector for the air coming down through the tube, whereby the tube is spaced a proper distance from the burner nozzle and the air comes unobstructedly down through the tube to impinge against the sides of the cone. The point of the cone acts as a central supporting point on which a crossbar fixed across the bottom of the tube rests to spacedly support the tube. The air coming down through the tube is deflected evenly by the sides of the cone and the holes in the nozzle being arranged at an angle around the edge of the burner nozzle, the combustion of the oil vapor from the nozzles takes place in the form of a ring of fire outside of the bottom edge of the tube, whereby the formation of soot or soft carbon deposit on the surface of the burner nozzle and around the oil vapor jet openings is entirely eliminated or to such substantial extent that any deposit is negligible and of insufficient amount to cause an explosion.

9. It is not questioned by this Court that Dowless has developed an operative, useful and marketable structure. And in that there were not introduced in evidence the claims and disclosures of patents cited as references for patent 2,-444,814, it is not questioned that that patent constituted invention in the art as manifested by prior patents issued. However, the Court does question whether the patent constitutes invention or mere mechanical skill in the improvement of structures not patented but in public use and revealing the state of the art.

Dowless presented in evidence an unpatented burner which he admittedly was selling in 1944. Specifically, those sales are found to have taken place prior to the curing season of 1944. This burner [99]*99is structurally and functionally different from that described in patent 2,444,814; though there is some similarity of the construction.

The 1944 burner is cylindrical in shape, hollow, and provided with a threaded opening through its base to the hollow chamber within for connection with a fuel supply line. It is used in connection with a downdraft tube for air intake.

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Bluebook (online)
125 F. Supp. 96, 102 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 386, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowless-v-hooks-nced-1954.