Electro-Bleaching Gas Co. v. Paradon Engineering Co.

8 F.2d 890, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1694
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedNovember 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 890 (Electro-Bleaching Gas Co. v. Paradon Engineering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York 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. Paradon Engineering Co., 8 F.2d 890, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1694 (E.D.N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity, brought by Electro-Bleaching Gas Company, the owner by assignment of patent No. 1,142,361, issued by the United States Patent Office to Georg Ornstein, assignor to Electro-Bleaching Gas Company, for process of antiseptieizing water, dated June 8, 1915, and Wallace & Tiernan Company, Inc., the holders of an exclusive license, as plaintiffs, against Paradon Engineering Company, Inc., as defendant. The defendant is alleged to be a contributory infringer, in that it has manufactured and installed apparatus designed to use, and which do make use of, the patented process.

The plaintiffs seek to restrain the alleged infringement by the defendant, and to recover damages. The defendant has intei’posed the twofold answer of invalidity of the patent and noninfringement.

This action is based on claims 4, 5, 6, 8, and 10 of the patent in suit, which read as follows:

“4. In the sterilization of flowing water, the process which comprises establishing a separate minor flow of water, causing such minor flow to spread out in one portion of its path to present an extended surface, contacting chlorin gas with such flow in such portion of its path, and thereafter uniting such minor flow of water with the main body of flowing water to be sterilized, and controlling the quantity of chlorin supplied to the main body of flowing water by controlling the rate of supply of chlorin gas to the minor flow of water.

“5. In the sterilization of flowing water, the process which comprises establishing a separate minor flow of water, causing such minor flow to spread out in one portion of its path to present an extended surface, contacting a measured flow of chlorin gas with such flow of water in such portion of its path, and thereafter uniting such minor flow of water with the main body of flowing water to be sterilized.

[891]*891“6. In the sterilization of flowing water, the process which comprises establishing a separate minor flow of water, causing such flow to spread out in one portion of its path to present an extended surface, contacting ehlorin gas with such flow in such portion Of its path, and thereafter uniting the solution thus produced with the main body of flowing water to be sterilized.”

“8. In the sterilization of flowing water, the process which comprises establishing a minor flow of water, causing such minor flow to spread out in one portion of its path to present an extended surface, expanding liquefied ehlorin to the gaseous state, contacting such ehlorin gas with such minor flow in said portion of its path, and thereafter uniting such minor flow of water with the main body of flowing water to be sterilized.”

“10. In the sterilization of flowing water, the process which comprises establishing a separate minor flow of water, introducing a controlled amount of ehlorin gas into such minor flow of water to produce a relatively strong solution of ehlorin, and thereafter uniting and mixing such minor flow of water with the main body of flowing water to be sterilized, the rapidity of admixture being such as to insure dissolved ehlorin reaching all portions of the main body of flowing water prior to substantial completion of the chemical changes in such dissolved ehlorin incident to the dilution by such flowing water.”

The application for the patent in suit was filed on February 4, 1913, and the invention was therein described by the applicant as follows:

“This invention relates to processes of antisepticizing waters, and it comprises a method wherein ehlorin 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 ehlorin as free ehlorin prior to exercising its antiseptic action; all as more fully hereinafter set forth and as claimed.”

■ The specifications then describe at length the advantages and action of ehlorin and the minute quantities required for the purposes described in the patent, the preference of the applicant for “compressed commercial gas” over other forms, with his reasons therefor, and the difficulties which are encountered in the “direct introduction of ehlorin into the body of water to be treated.”

The applicant then describes the process which in this caso has been generally described as the “minor flow” or “solution process,” and follows this with a description of several apparatus susceptible of use in his process, shown as Figs. 1, 2, 3, and 4 on the drawing accompanying them and forming part of the application a,nd the claims.

The patent in suit was involved in the action brought by the Electro-Bleaching Gas Company against William Miller, in the District Court of the Western District of Missouri, Western Division, which was tried before Judge Van Valkenburgh, in February, 1920, who in an opinion reported in 204 F. 429, held the patent to bo valid and infringed. Upon appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit it was found, without passing on the validity of the patent, that the defendant Miller had not been guilty of contributory infringement; the opinion of the court being reported in 276 F. 379.

In tbe case before Judge Van Valkenburgh the defendant set up as anticipation the following United States patents: Hyatt, No. 369,288; Blessing, No. 412,911; Weis & Anderson, No. 694,081; Gregory, Jackson & Connet, No. 868,776; and Darnall, Nos. I, 007,542 and 1,007,647. In the action at bar the defendant set np in its answer the following patents and publications as anticipations :

United States patent No. 362,657, to James J. Powers, for apparatus for disinfecting sewage, dated May 10, 1887. The object of the invention is stated by the patentee to be as follows: “The object of my invention is to prevent noxious vapors and odors from rising and contaminating the air at the mouths of sewers; and my invention consists in discharging into the sewage as it issues from the sewer a disinfectant or precipitant, or both, in the form of gas.”

The gas intended to be discharged into the sewage is ehlorin, but the patent does not provide for a control of the amount of gas to be discharged. In the ease of a water supply control, the amount of ehlorin gas introduced is of the utmost importance, because of the effect of the introduction of too large an amount upon the taste and smell of the water.

The term “disinfecting,” as used at that time, applied more to deodorizing and rendering innoxious the sewage sludge than to disinfecting it, as we now understand that term. The lack of control prevented bacteriological efficiency.

[892]*892No element of the patent in suit, other chan possibly the sterilization of flowing water, is referred to in the Powers patent.

United States patent No. 369,288, to John W. Hyatt, for process of purifying water, dated August 30, 1887. This patent discloses a method of precipitating impurities out of water, the invention being described in said patent as follows:

“The invention consists, first, in impregnating the water by injection into the moving current with either one of the elements of carbonate of lime (namely, carbonic acid or lime), diffusing such element in the water and then adding the other element to form a precipitate.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 890, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electro-bleaching-gas-co-v-paradon-engineering-co-nyed-1925.