Electro Bleaching Gas Co. v. Miller

264 F. 429, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1199
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1920
DocketNo. 186
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 264 F. 429 (Electro Bleaching Gas Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electro Bleaching Gas Co. v. Miller, 264 F. 429, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1199 (W.D. Mo. 1920).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBURGH, District Judge.

On June 8, 1915, a process patent, No. 1,142,361, for antiseptieizing water was issued to complainant as assignee of Georg Ornstein, the inventor. The application for this patent was filed February 14, 1913. The invention [430]*430“comprises a method wherein chlorin in determined amounts is uniformly distributed through and absorbed by a minor body of water flowing as a continuous current and said minor body is then uniformly distributed through a major body of water, also flowing as a continuous current, all said operations being conducted without pause sufficient to allow disappearance of any substantial amount of said chlorin as free chlorin prior to exercising its antiseptic action.”

The apparatus by which the patented process is made operative is shown in Figure 1, accompanying the application and patent, and comprises an absorption tower, through which the minor flow of water passes downward to absorb an upwardly moving current of chlorin gas. The chlorin is supplied from a tank of compressed and liquefied chlorin gas from which a pipe leads into the lower part of the tower. The tank is provided with a shut-off valve, and the supply pipe with a pressure-reducing valve and a regulating valve. Water is supplied to the tower from any suitable source, giving a constant, or substantially constant, head through a pipe which leads into the top of the tower, and is provided with a shut-off valve and a regulating valve. The water supply pipe is also provided with means for measuring the wafer flowing through it to the tower. For this purpose a suitable meter for indicating the quantity of water which has passed through the meter may be used. The chlorinated water from the tower is discharged through a pipe to be united with the body of flowing water to be treated. The minor flow of water, after being chlorinated in the tower, is discharged directly into the water to be treated. The absorption tower is formed of a vertically set shell of earthenware or other suitable material, resistant to chlorin, filled, or substantially filled, with broken stone, coke, or other suitable distributing material, adapted to film out the wafer and cause it to present an extended area of surface for contact with the ascending current of gas. The chlorin admitted to the minor flow of water is measured in determined proportion to the amount of water to be treated, but not necessarily with exactness in proportion to the minor flow. By this method a better and more effective solution is obtained, and better diffusion and distribution in the water to be treated, resulting in more complete and satisfactory sterilization of the water to be treated, less waste and loss of chlorin, and less injury to the metallic part of the structure through the destructive action of the chlorin than can be accomplished by direct methods of introduction of the chlorin into the main body of the water to be treated; also excessive chlorination, with its attendant disagreeable features, is avoided.

Complainant does not directly sell or license the right to use its process. Originally it manufactured the apparatus and sold it with the implied right to employ the process as an incident to the use; since then it has entered into a license agreement with the Wallace-Tiernan Company, which now manufactures and sells the apparatus. Complainant depends for its return for the use of its patented process upon royalties from the Wallace-Tiernan Company under the terms of this license agreement.

[431]*431The two main features or elements of the invention are the minor continuous flow of water and the regulation of the current of chlorin gas introduced therein in an amount predetermined with reference to the volume of water to be treated. The first of these elements employs as its vehicle the absorption tower with its appurtenances; the second, the pressure-reducing and regulating valves, with their attendant mechanism, constituting what is commonly called a “regulator.”

The respondents manufacture what they term the “Miller chlorin gas pressure regulator,” which apparently is a mechanical equivalent performing the same office and producing the same result as the pressure reducing and regulating valves of complainant’s apparatus. The complainant, or its licensee, sold to the city of Chicago, for use in its municipal water plants, a number of complete sets of apparatus, carrying with them the usual incidental right to employ complainant’s process; later, the city purchased a Miller chlorin gas pressure regulator to replace the corresponding part in complainant’s apparatus. The purchase was made from the Municipal Supply Company of Chicago, which, through one Bradway, had been constituted the agent of respondents for the sale of their device. The respondent Miller was present in person, instructing the city’s operators how to place in service the chlorinator furnished by respondents to the Municipal Supply Company. The reason for making the change is thus stated by Mr. Henry W. Clausen, formerly assistant city engineer of the city of Chicago:

“In order to avoid excessively high maintenance costs and to obtain better regulation of gas flow than we were able to obtain with the Electro Bleaching Gas Company’s apparatus.
“Q. How did the use of the chlorinator purchased from the Municipal Supply Company enable the city of Chicago to avoid excessively high maintenance costs and obtain better regulation of gas flow in comparison with the chlorinator furnished with the Electro Bleaching Gas Company’s apparatus? A. Because the construction of the same was very much more rugged and adaptable to handling by the local labor in Chicago than the delicate apparatus furnished by the Electro Bleaching Gas Company. The reason for the better control was due to the fact that the apparatus of the Electro Bleaching Gas Company was out of adjustment and repair principally because of the rough handling above referred to.
“Q. The Electro Bleaching Gas Company’s chlorinator was not inherently defective and incapable of performing the mechanical function for which it was intended, on account of its delicate mechanism? A. No.
“Q. Do you attribute a part of the difficulty experienced by the city of Chicago in its use of the chlorinator just named to the methods employed in its readjustment and repair? A. Yes.
“Q. Who had charge of the repair and the readjustment of the Electro Bleaching Gas Company’s chlorinators during your connection with the city? A. The operation of these instruments was under the direction of the various chief operating engineers at the stations. The local labor unions decreed That the same should be maintained by the steam litters. The steam fitters, in the majority of cases, knew nothing about the apparatus and usually spoiled the same, when applying a Siillson wrench to something which should be handled by one with delicate fingers as a watch maker. This finally resulted in the machines, when in need of repair, being taken out of service and sent to the city’s municipal shops, where they were repaired by an expert machinist, who had been educated to the job. This, however, resulted in more or less contention among the labor unions, with the result that we always had difficulty in keeping the apparatus up to proper efficiency.
[432]*432“Q.

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47 F.2d 666 (D. New Jersey, 1930)
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Wallace & Tiernan Co. v. City of Syracuse
36 F.2d 497 (N.D. New York, 1929)
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17 F.2d 593 (W.D. New York, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
264 F. 429, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electro-bleaching-gas-co-v-miller-mowd-1920.