Electric Smelting & Aluminum Co. v. Pittsburg Reduction Co.

125 F. 926, 60 C.C.A. 636, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4236
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 1903
DocketNo. 136
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 125 F. 926 (Electric Smelting & Aluminum Co. v. Pittsburg Reduction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electric Smelting & Aluminum Co. v. Pittsburg Reduction Co., 125 F. 926, 60 C.C.A. 636, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4236 (2d Cir. 1903).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge.

The patent in controversy was granted February 2, 1892, to Charles S. Bradley for an improvement in processes for separating, by the electric current, aluminium from its ores or compounds.

The specification states that the difficulty with the process theretofore in vogue was that it was carried on by subjecting the fused ore to the action of the electric current in a crucible placed in a heating-furnace. It is said that by this process the fused ore fluxes with the crucible and the fluorine gas liberated attacks the material of the crucible and destroys it. The main object of the invention is to prevent these disastrous results by dispensing with the external application of heat to the ore, which is accomplished by employing an electric current of greater intensity than is required to produce the electrolytic decomposition alone. In this way the ore is maintained in a state of fusion by the heat developed by the passage of the current through the melted mass. The current performs two distinct functions. [928]*928First, it keeps the ore melted by having a portion of its electrical’ •energy converted into heat, and second, it effects the desired electrolytical decomposition, by which means the heat, being produced in the ore itself, is concentrated at exactly the point where it is required to keep the ore in a state of fusion.

Bradley dispenses with the crucible and uses a heap of the ore itself to constitute the vessel in which the reduction takes place, which is not destroyed as was the crucible and admits of the process being continuous, nothing being required but the charging of fresh ore as fast as the reduction goes on either from without or from the sides or walls of the heap itself.

The patent contains six claims, the first three being intended to •cover the process as applied to the separation of metals from any highly refractory ores or compounds. Of this group claim one may be taken as an example. It is as follows:

“(1) The process of separating or dissociating metals from their highly refractory ores or compounds, nonconductors in an unfused state, of which the ores and compounds of aluminium are a type, which consists in fusing the refractory ore or compound progressively by a source of heat concentrated directly upon it rather than by an external furnace and as it becomes fused effecting electrolysis by passing an electric current therethrough between terminals which are maintained in circuit with the fused bath, whereby the process is rendered continuous, substantially as set forth.”

The last three claims are limited to the application of the process to separating aluminium from its ores or compounds. Of this group ■claim four may be taken as an example, as follows:

(4) The process of separating or dissociating aluminium from its ores or compounds, consisting in fusing and maintaining the fusion and electrolytically decomposing the ore or compound by the passage of the electric •current therethrough, substantially as set forth.”

The Circuit Court found that the claims were not infringed and dismissed the bill. The complainant assigns error, contending that the •court erred in placing a narrow construction upon the claims, and in holding that the defendant’s process did not infringe. The complainant also contends that the court erred in holding that the success -of defendant’s process was due to the invention of Hall and not to Bradley and insists that the court should not have followed the rulings and decision of the Circuit Court for the Northern District of Ohio in an action pending between the defendant and Cowles Electric Smelting & Aluminum Company, but should have followed the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in the suit of Dowry against the said Cowles Company.

The questions determined in the Ohio case are not involved in the present controversy. Lowry v. Cowles Co. (C. C.) 68 Fed. 354, reversed on appeal 79 Fed. 331, 24 C. C. A. 616. Although both parties •quote from these opinions in aid of their present contentions we think it advisable to be guided solely by the facts appearing in the present record. The question actually decided in that case was one of title and though the court made use, tentatively, of expressions which, considered apart from the context, may be regarded as applicable here, yet it is quite obvious that there was no intention to do more than de[929]*929cide the narrow question involved. Indeed, the Circuit Court of Appeals says so explicitly, at page 630, in these words:

“We are not required, to pass upon the validity of the patents involved in this suit, or any of them. There is no issue 'of that kind before us.”

These opinions, and others which have been delivered during the protracted litigations over the Bradley and Hall patents, are helpful upon many of the propositions now under discussion, but they cannot be regarded as controlling to such an extent as to justify the court in dispensing with an independent investigation of the issues arising in the present controversy.

The application for the patent in suit was filed February 23, 1883, which may be taken as the date of Bradley’s invention. Prior to this date it was known that metals contained in ores which are conductors could be separated therefrom by electricity, but the problem' of separating metals from nonconducting ores by this method hád not been solved. The compounds of aluminium at ordinary temperature are nonconductors. It had, therefore, been the custom to place these refractory ores in a crucible, apply external heat until the ore was melted and then pass an electric current through the melted mass. In this way a pure product was obtained in small quantities, but as the specification states, the intense heat soon destroyed the crucible and the process could not be worked upon a successful commercial basis. This controversy relates solely to the separation of aluminium from its ores; three of the claims are designed to cover the process when so limited and the remaining claims relate to highly refractory ores of which the compounds of aluminium are a type. The defendant is engaged in producing aluminium. The investigation may, therefore, be confined to this one metal, for if the patent, when so limited, be valid and if the claims cover the defendant’s process it matters not what else they cover or fail to cover.

We start, then, with the undisputed fact that prior to Bradley’s invention no one had ever succeeded in separating aluminium from its compounds solely by the use of electricity, or, in other words, no one had dispensed with external heat.

The reference principally relied on to anticipate or limit the claims is the description of an experiment made by Sir Humphrey Davy in 1807 and published the following year in “Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London.” Davy tried several experiments on the electrization of potash rendered fluid by heat and only attained his object by employing electricity as the common agent for fusion and decomposition. A small piece of potash, which had been exposed for a few seconds to the atmosphere for the purpose of producing moisture, was placed on an insulated disc of platina, connected with the negative side of the battery of the power of 250 of 6 and 4 in a state of intense activity; and a platina wire, communicating with the positive side, was brought in contact with the upper surface of the alkali. The potash soon began to fuse at both its points of electrization.

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Bluebook (online)
125 F. 926, 60 C.C.A. 636, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electric-smelting-aluminum-co-v-pittsburg-reduction-co-ca2-1903.