Electrol, Inc., of Missouri v. Merrell & Co.

39 F.2d 873, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 497, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 19, 1930
Docket8542
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 F.2d 873 (Electrol, Inc., of Missouri v. Merrell & 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
Electrol, Inc., of Missouri v. Merrell & Co., 39 F.2d 873, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 497, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169 (8th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

*874 BOOTH, Circuit Judge.

This is a patent suit in conventional form brought by Eleetrol, Incorporated of Missouri, against Merrell & Co., Incorporated, defendant, and Williams Oil-O-Matie Heating Corporation, intervener. Infringement is alleged of claims 1 and 5 of patent No. 1,320,936, issued to L. L. Scott for a safety device for combustion systems, November 4, 1919, application filed May 9, 1919; also of claims 1, 2, and 6 of patent No. 1,602,175, issued to L. L. Scott for electrical control system for fuel oil burners, issued October 5,1926, application filed May 31,1924. Both of these patents relate to safety control systems for oil-burning apparatus, of the type which includes a fuel pump and an air pump or blower for projecting the mixture of air and fuel into the fire box to be there ignited. Safety devices are necessary, because, if the fuel should not be ignited when the burner motor starts, the continued pumping of fuel into the fire box might flood the furnace, or this fuel might be vaporized and accumulate, and, by being accidentally ignited, cause an explosion. The two Scott patents cover safety devices to guard against such dangers.

Claim 5 of the first patent, which may be taken as typical, reads as follows: “5. In a combustion system comprising a combustion chamber, means for feeding fuel thereto and means for igniting said fuel, means including an electrical circuit for operating the fuel feed means, and automatic cut-out mechanism comprising a device adapted to be brought into action when the circuit is closed to the fuel feed means and a cooperating device responsive to combustion conditions, said' devices being included in said circuit and operating under a condition of non-combustion to cooperate and effect the breaking of the circuit to the fuel feed means and thereby cut off the supply of fuel to the combustion chamber.”

The elements of’the claim are: In a combustion system comprising a combustion chamber, means for feeding fuel thereto and means for igniting said fuel, (1) means including an electrical circuit for operating the fuel feed means; and (2) automatic cut-out mechanism (a) comprising a device adapted to be brought into action when the circuit is closed to the fuel feed means, (b) and a co-operating device responsive to combustion conditions, (c) said devices being included in said circuit, (d) and operating under a condition of non-combustion to co-operate and effect the breaking of the circuit to the fuel feed means and thereby cut off the supply of fuel to the combustion chamber. “ (a)” is a slow-acting device; “(b)” is a quick-acting device.

The operation of the device is shown by the accompanying figure (figure 3 of the patent)

and the following statements taken substantially from the specifications:

“When the circuit to the motor is closed at the switch 35, if combustion occurs the expansion of the mercury in the tube 54 acts to depress the diaphragm 56 and raise the outer end of the cut-out lever 58. When the motor circuit is closed the core 70 of the solenoid will be raised and after a certain time

*875 the contact member 72 will engage and slide over and then off of the contact plate 74. During the time the member 72 is in engagement with the contact plate 74 the circuit to the spark plug 7 will be closed. * * * In the upward movement of the post 71 its upper end will not engage the contact 73 on the lever 58 as the latter will have been moved beyond the limit of upward movement of the post 71 by the diaphragm 56. Assuming, however, that combustion did not occur when the system was placed in operation, the diaphragm 56 would not be depressed and the contact member 73 would remain in the lowermost position. As soon, therefore, as the post 71 whs raised by the solenoid, its upper end would engage the contact member 73 and thereby place the magnet 68 into the motor circuit. The latch 44 would thereby be withdrawn by the magnet, allowing the trip lever 43 to fall and break the circuit to the motor.”

The foregoing shows the operation of the second form of device under the patent. The first form differs mainly in having a mechanical pressure device in place of the solenoid member. It is to be noted that both forms have a slow-acting device (the solenoid member or the-mechanical pressure member) and a quick-acting device responsive to combustion conditions.

The second Scott patent, No. 1,602,175, also includes a safety mechanism for oil burners. Claim 6 is typical. It reads: “6. In an electric control system for oil burners, in combination with electrically-operated means for initiating' and maintaining combustion, a safety device for controlling the operation of said electrically-operated means, comprising an electrie circuit including said electrically-operated means, an electrically-heated thermostatic device which is normally in position to permit the starting of the electrically-operated means, an automatic switch in the electric circuit and which is adapted to co-operate with said electrically-heated thermostatic device either to permit the burner to continue to operate if combustion takes place, or to shut off the burner if there is no combustion, said automatic switch being normally open and operating upon the establishment of combustion to close, whereby upon the failure of combustion, the failure of said switch to close will permit the electrically-heated thermostatic device to render said electrically-operated means inoperative.”

The operation is shown by the following figure and the accompanying statement:

“When the room temperature falls to the point at which the burner is to be started, the movable arm 33 of the room thermostat engages its fixed contact and, thereupon, a circuit is closed from the transformer secondary 34 through wire 45, room thermostat 33, wire 45, windings 43 of the'magnets 10 and 11, bracket 17a, wire 46, plate 47 contacts 37, 36 and 41, thermostatic strip 38, plate 39 and wire 38a to the opposite side of the secondary. Upon the closing of this circuit, -the magnets 10 and 11 will be energized, the armature 7 will be attracted and the mercury switch -2 will be tilted to close the motor circuit. The switch 2 will be held closed as long as magnets 10 and 11 are energized, but the circuit just traced will only remain closed for a pre-determined interval after the closing of *876 the motor circuit. This is due to the faet that the thermostatic strip 38 is a part of it. When the room thermostat closes the circuit just described, it also closes the circuit to the heat coil 42, and that begins to heat up the strip 38. At the end of a certain interval, it will have heated that strip sufficiently to cause contact 41 to move to the right, thus breaking the circuit described. However, when magnets 10 and 11 were energized to attract armature 7, this caused contacts 15 and 16 to engage, thus establishing a circuit from secondary 34 through wire 45, room thermostat 33, wire 45, windings 43, contact plate 17a, contacts 16 and 15, arm 13, plate 14, and wire 48 to the contact 50 of the burner thermostat. Immediately upon the establishment of combustion, the thermostat member 49 moves into engagement with contact 50, so that the circuit is closed between wire 48, contact 50. member 49, and wire 48 to the plate 39 and the opposite side of the transformer secondary 34.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.2d 873, 4 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 497, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electrol-inc-of-missouri-v-merrell-co-ca8-1930.