Edwards v. Johnston Formation Testing Corp.

44 F.2d 607, 7 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 165, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1434
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1930
DocketNo. 404
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 F.2d 607 (Edwards v. Johnston Formation Testing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Johnston Formation Testing Corp., 44 F.2d 607, 7 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 165, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1434 (S.D. Tex. 1930).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, District Judge.

In this suit plaintiff alleges an infringement of patent No. 1,514,585, issued to Charles R. Edwards November 4, 1924, on application filed by him January 17, 1921. Tho petition seeks an injunction and an accounting.

The defendant, the assignee of E. C. Johnston, filed its answer denying infringement, and setting up the usual statutory defenses to plaintiff’s patent, and by cross-action asserted the validity of patent No. 1,-709,940, and alleged infringement of that patent by the plaintiff.

On the trial of the case defendant abandoned its affirmative position and pitched its caso upon two propositions, first, that the patent to Edwards was void by reason of lack of invention; and, second, that, if it was not void, it was valid only within such narrow limits as that tho Johnston devices did not infringe.

In the Edwards patent the device described and claimed by plaintiff is described as a.n alleged “new and useful improvement in testing devices for oil wells,” and in the specifications it is declared: “This invention relates to new and useful improvements in a testing device for oil wells. One object of the invention is to provide a device of the character described which is especially adapted for testing the stratum being pierced in drilling oil, gas or other wells for the purpose of determining the presence or absence of oil, gas or other fluids. With the above and other objects in view, the invention has particular relation to certain novel features of construction, operation, and arrangement of parts, an example of which is given in this specification and illustrated in the accompanying drafts.”

There are six claims in the patent, on four of which, Nos. 1, 2, 5, and 6, this suit is brought.

A preliminary statement of the nature and history of the oil well drilling business in which tho devices in controversy are used will be helpful in understanding the claims and properly evaluating them.

[608]*608Broadly, it may be stated that these devices are used and useful in the drilling of oil wells by the rotary method of drilling. This method is described in plaintiff’s brief with substantial accuracy as follows:

“A bit attached to the end of a pipe is used to make the well hole or bore. This pipe is usually called a ‘drill stem.’ Rotation of the pipe and attached bit in the ground produces the well hole or bore. During the rotation of the bit and pipe ‘drilling fluid or mud’ is pumped down through the pipe and escapes outside the pipe at a point near where the bit is joined to the pipe. The drilling fluid escaping near the base of the pipe rises to the surface of the ground by passage through the space between the outside of 'the pipe or stem and the earth walls of the well or bore. This passage of the drilling fluid down the pipe or tube carrying the bit and up outside of the pipe is usually called ‘circulation’ in the oil well drilling art. . This ‘drilling fluid’ is sometimes called ‘mud’ or ‘drilling mud’ and is a suspension of clay or mud in water of such consistency that it will flow and m'ay be pumped. It is fluid in its nature. The reasons for circulating the drilling fluid down the pipe carrying the bit and releasing it at or near the bit for upward passage outside of the pipe are as follows: (1) The drilling fluid passing upwardly from the bit between the pipe and the bore picks up the cuttings of the bit and carries them to the surface of the ground, thus taking out of the bore what has been cut out of the ground by the bit. (2) The colloidal suspension of clay or mud of the drilling fluid permeates the formations penetrated by the bit, and plasters and seals them from the well bore. (3) The presence of the drilling fluid in the well prevents the loose parts of the walls of the bore from collapsing or falling into the bore and destroying the hole or bore made by the bit. As the bit descends in the ground through the rotation thereof, further joints of pipe are added from time to time as the hole or bore deepens and the pipe originally attached thereto descends in the bore. Thus in a hole or bore 3,000 feet deep there is a pipe 3,000 feet long extending from the surface of the ground to the bit 3,000 feet below the surface of the ground. This 3,000 feet of pipe is rotated from the surface of the ground by any suitable means. The ‘drilling fluid’ is pumped down through the inside of the pipe and is permitted to escape therefrom at the base near the bit 3,000 feet below the ground level, and thereupon the drilling fluid rises again to the surface of the ground by upward passage through the space between the pipe and the side wall of the hole or bore. Well holes or bores vary in depth and may exceed 5,000 feet or more in the Gulf Coast where the rotary system of drilling is employed. As indicated above, the presence of the drilling fluid is necessary to prevent the sides of the well bore from falling or collapsing into the bore produced by the bit, but it has this objection, that the hydrostatic pressure exerted by it prevents oil or gas from entering the well bore from formations or strata exposed in the bore or hole. A column of drilling fluid exerts laterally at. its base a pressure of about 15,000 pounds per square inch. Therefore, if . an oil or gas bearing stratum is penetrated at that depth, and in which the oil or gas is not under a pressure in excess of 15,000 pounds per square inch then, no oil or gas will enter the well hole or bore. As the depth of the well increases the hydrostatic pressure of the drilling fluid increases proportionately and therefore the oil or gas pressure in the formation must be more and more as the depth of the well increases if their presence is to be detected by simple flow from the formation into the well hole or bore.”

It is the claim of plaintiff that “the utility of the Edwards invention arises because of the presence of the mud-laden drilling fluid in the well.” Plaintiff makes the point as follows :

“Because of this action of the weight or hydrostatic pressure of the ‘drilling mud’ or ‘drilling fluid’ in preventing oil or gas from entering a well bore containing drilling fluid, oil or gas bearing strata may easily escape detection. The Edwards invention relieves the pressure of the drilling fluid on the formation or stratum suspected to contain oil or gas by motion of an empty pipe extending from the surface of the ground and communicating with the well bore below a seal in the well bore set above the suspected formation, the empty pipe serving as a sample chamber for oil, gas or other fluid. The seal in the well bore set above the formation suspected to contain oil or gas divides- the well into two compartments, an upper compartment above the seal and a lower compartment below the seal. The seal separates the hydrostatic pressure of the upper compartment from the lower compartment. The motion of the empty sample receiving pipe establishes communication between the interior of the empty pipe and the compartment below the seal. The empty pipe being in communication with the atmosphere, relieves the pressure in the lower [609]*609compartment as soon as the lower compartment is in communication with tlie interior of the pipe. When the lower compartment in the well boro bas been placed by the motion of the empty pipe in communication with the interior of the pipe, any oil, gas or water which may be in the suspected stratum will be able to flow into the lower compartment substantially under the atmospheric pressure and then into the empty pipe constituting a sample'chamber.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F.2d 607, 7 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 165, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-johnston-formation-testing-corp-txsd-1930.