El Dorado Foundry, Machine & Supply Co. v. Fluid Packed Pump Co.

81 F.2d 782, 28 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 436, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3547
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 24, 1936
DocketNo. 10407
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 F.2d 782 (El Dorado Foundry, Machine & Supply Co. v. Fluid Packed Pump Co.) 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
El Dorado Foundry, Machine & Supply Co. v. Fluid Packed Pump Co., 81 F.2d 782, 28 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 436, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3547 (8th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

THOMAS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree enjoining the appellant from infringing either directly or contributorily patent No. 1,549,175, and adjudging that appellees recover damages and profits. A 'special master was appointed to take and report an áccount of such damages and profits. ' .

The patent in question is for an “Improvement in Double-Acting Hollow-Plunger Pumps.” The patent was granted to appellee Joseph G. Richardson as assignee of the. joint inventors, Edward T. Adams and John B. Reilly. Richardson granted an exclusive license to his coappellee, Fluid Packed Pump Company.

While the decree enjoins- infringement of all the claims”of the patent, the testimony .at the trial and the briefs of counsel refer principally 'to claims 5, 6, and 9. [783]*783Claims 5 and 9 are sufficient to give a clear understanding of the questions involved, They are as follows:

“5. In a pump, two relatively reciprocal members, each member having two spaced concentric annular walls, each of the walls of one member being disposed in close proximity to a corresponding one of the walls of the other member whereby an isolated annular space is provided which increases and decreases with relative reciprocation of the members, the innermost of the walls providing a central fluid course, and spaced discharge valves within said fluid course, one of the walls being provided with a constantly open port leading from the said otherwise isolated space into the fluid course at a point intermediate of the two valves. * * *

, , , , 9- A pump plunger for pumps of the character described, embodying an outer tubular member and an inner tubular member; said plunger providing a central fluid_ course, a pair of spaced upwardly opening nonreturn valves for controlling flow of fluid_ m said fluid coiirse, and a port penetrating the inner tubular member at a point intermediate of the said two valves.

The pump is intended and used primarily for pumping oil from wells in the oil fields. The invention consists of the particular combination of the parts of the pump and not in any new part. All the parts are old and have long been in use in other pumps used for the same purpose, The particular virtue _ claimed for this pump is its superior^ utility over its competitors where sand is present in the fluid to be pumped.

The question of the validity of the patent is raised in argument, but its validity was stipulated at the trial, and evidence was not taken upon this issue. We, therefore, assume validity and consider only the issues submitted to the lower court.

For a clear understanding of thc alleged infringement, only a brief description of the parts involved and their operation is necessary. The pump is made in different sizes from 2 inches to 4 inches in diameter and from 11 feet 6 inches to 15 feet in length. When in use, it is lowered to the bottom of the well and is conuected with the surface of the ground by a pipe through which the fluid being pumped passes. The fluid is admitted at the bottom of the pump through a “standing valve,” consisting of a metal ball and seat, and is forced out through the top into the pipe leading to the surface of the ground. The^e are , thr?c valvesn ^eluding the standmS valvf just desenbed; the other tw° are nsimllar1 ancl arc called travelmg ^alves' 1 he valves co-operate m a com-bl“atfn of tbree ffi>nght pipes the first of whlch 3s rJld and 18 /“ed to the bot' tom °f tbe PnmP; rhe °*cf tw0 are traveling pipes and are attached to a cage at the top of the pump. Ihe cage and tbe tw0 traveling pipes constitute the • °ncrof the traveling pipes is insjde the standing pipe and the otner outslde’ lbere arc Ports m. the upper part of the inner pipe permitting the fluid to Pass throu£h at that point,

On the upward stroke of the plunger the standing valve and the valve at the bottom of the k and the fluid ^ int0 the «fluid course» in the ceu. ter of the and thr h the porls fim ^ space lcft vacant between thc twQ ¡ of the lu above the stand. { £ This is duc t0 the fact that ^ fluid oulside lhe is subjcct l0 ef ure than tllat on the irlsidc. Qn ^ downward strokü the lower travel. jng vaive remains open, the standing valve closes and the valve located in the cag.e at the top opens. The fluid which on the upward stroke had passed through the ports above the standing pipe is forced back through the ports into the fluid course and out at the top of the pump through the valve in the cage.

It is obvious that the utility of the pump depends upon the close-fitting condition of the pipes of the plunger with the standing pipe and of the perfection of the balls and seats comprising the valves. If there be a sufficient leak at any of these points, the apparatus will only churn the fluid in the well and will not force it upward and out.

xhe parts oí all pumps of the same size are interchangeable. In use the valves first wear out, when the pump may be repaired by purchasing new balls and seats and restoring them. Such parts are recogiiized articles of commerce, and the appellees make no objection to the owners of the pumps replacing them as often as need be. The next parts to wear out are the three pipes which slide upon one another. When sand is present in the fluid being pumped, they wear thin, thus enlarging the space between them and al[784]*784lowing the fluid to leak resulting in a corresponding loss of function. All other parts of the pump will last indefinitely. The life of the pump without repair depends upon the amount of sand in the fluid, and is from twenty-four hours to about one year. If the valves are replaced as they wear out and the parts of the pipes which are worn restored, the life of the whole pump will be prolonged accordingly.

The appellees, owners of the patent, manufacture the pumps and sell them without restriction to the oil companies for use. The appellant owns and operates a machine shop in the oil fields of southern Arkansas, and is engaged in repairing all kinds of machinery used in and about the oil wells. The work which it does to which the appellees object relates to the three pipe combination described above. When one or more of the pipes is worn so that the function of the combination is impaired, the owner sends it to the shop for repairs. When the pump arrives at the shop, it is taken apart, cleaned, and examined to determine its defects. When it is found that the tubes are so worn as to permit the oil to pass between them, the standing pipe, or tube, is cut off and an oversize pipe is welded on to replace it. If the outer or inner pipe is worn, it is replaced by the same means. Sometimes only a small part of a pipe is replaced. At times two of the three pipes are replaced; at other times only one or a part of one. Only in one instance has the appellant replaced the three pipes on the same pump. The piping used is all commercial piping bought in the open market and usable for any purpose to which it is adapted.

The appellant has never made an entire pump nor sold one. It is not, therefore, guilty of direct infringement. "The absence of a single material mechanical element of a patented combination from the machine or combination that is alleged to infringe it is fatal to the claim of infringement." Whitney v. New York Scaffolding Co., 243 F. 180, 186 (C.C.A.8).

The charge relied upon by appellees to support the decree is contributory infringement. "Contributory infringement," as defined in Walker on Patents (6th Ed.) p. 552, § 457, "is intentional aid or cooperation in transactions, which collectively constitute complete infringement."

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Bluebook (online)
81 F.2d 782, 28 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 436, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-dorado-foundry-machine-supply-co-v-fluid-packed-pump-co-ca8-1936.