Fireball Gas Tank & Illuminating Co. v. Commercial Acetylene Co.

239 U.S. 156, 36 S. Ct. 86, 60 L. Ed. 191, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1476
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1915
Docket13
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 239 U.S. 156 (Fireball Gas Tank & Illuminating Co. v. Commercial Acetylene Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fireball Gas Tank & Illuminating Co. v. Commercial Acetylene Co., 239 U.S. 156, 36 S. Ct. 86, 60 L. Ed. 191, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1476 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this writ there is brought here for review a decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals affirming an order for an *157 interlocutory injunction against the infringement of certain letters patent.

The Circuit Court of Appeals considered the question in the case to be the narrow one whether the injunction was properly granted.

Petitioners, who were defendants in the District Court, attack not only that conclusion but contend for the larger relief of a dismissal of the bill.

The Acetylene Company is the owner of letters patent No. 664,383 granted December 25, 1900, for “apparatus for storing and distributing acetylene gas.” The Prest-OLite Company is the exclusive licensee as to the use of the invention on automobiles, carriages and other movable vehicles. Defendants manufacture and sell what is known as the “Fireball Gas Tank”; Soloman is the president of the defendant.

The bill was filed August 17, 1911, and á motion for a preliminary injunction was made. It was heard upon the bill, exhibits, answer, replication and affidavits. The Circuit Court granted the injunction and the order was affirmed, as we have said, by the Circuit Court of Appeals. The court considered that the question before it was whether the trial court had exercissd a sound judicial discretion in granting the injunction, and deciding that the trial court had done so, affirmed its action and refused to dismiss the bill, as it was urged to do. Opinion was reserved upon all of the questions which the record presented except the question of the abuse by the trial court of its discretion in the issue of the injunction, as the court said, “until the affidavit stage of this proceeding shall have been passed, until the rights ‘of the parties shall have been tested by the production, hearing and cross-examination of their witnesses according to the salutary and searching practice of the common law, and until the court below, at the final hearing, has investigated and decided the issues these parties raise in *158 the light of that testimony and of the argument of Counsel.”

Whether this prudence should be imitated or a broader scope of decision be made we will determine upon a consideration of the case.

The bill is in the usual form and set forth the respective rights in the patent of complainants, respondents here (we shall refer to them as complainants and to petitioners as defendants), and its infringement by defendants.

The defendants answered separately and each denied infringement and averred that by reason of the proceedings in the Patent Office the patent is limited in its scope to the subject-matter precisely as claimed and defined by the claims of the patent; that the prior art was such that the patent is devoid of novelty and patentable invention; that it is destitute of utility; that it does not .comply with the statutes in precise.difference from what preceded it, nor sufficiently describe the method of operating it and -the-process of making, constructing and using it; that complainants have a remedy at law and the court has no jurisdiction; and that the alleged inventors of the patent were not the first and true inventors of it. Certain .United States, British and German patents are alleged as ante-dating the invention and certain publications are represented as having disclosed it.

Public uses of the patent are also circumstantially alleged and,profits are denied. It is further alleged that the invention of the Claude & Hess United States patent No. 664,383, which is in suit, was patented to George Claude and Albert Hess by British patent No..29,750 and ■.that the latter had expired or ceased before the issue of patent No. 664,383; that the term of the latter expired not later than June 30, 1910; that a French patent to the same patentees expired June 30, 1911, and that therefore •patent No. 664,3.83 also expired not later than said date; and so with the German patent and other patents.

*159 The first consideration which presents itself is the identity of the United States patent with the foreign patents which by their expiration, if they have expired, have terminated the United States patent.

The letters patent in suit describe the invention as “An Improvement in Apparatus for the Storage and Distribution of Acetylene Gas.” Drawings illustrate the patent, and it is stated that it “is designed to carry out a process of storage and distribution involving the employment of a chamber charged with a solvent of the gas to be stored and into which the gas is. forced under suitable pressure,” and that the apparatus is to be charged at a central station and transported to the place of use as a complete article or package. The apparatus is described and illustrated and it is said that it,. embodying the invention, consists essentially in a closed receptacle containing acetylene gas in solution and having an outlet for the gas so positioned as to be normally above the level of the solution and adapted to be provided with a burner or connected with a pipe system for the final use or distribution of the gas which escapes from the solution owing to the-diminution, of pressure when the outlet is opened. It is constructed and arranged “for the charging process as well as for the discharging process.” Inlet and outlet passages are provided with suitable valves or cocks to close the same, and it is desirable, it is said, for the proper operar tion of the burners supplied in this way that the gas should be'delivered thereto under a substantially uniform pressure only slightly above the atmospheric pressure, and for this purpose means are provided. A reducing valve is shown as the means interposed between the interior of the receptacle which contains the dissolved gas and the outlet from which the gas is allowed to escape.

Claims 1, 2 and 5 are those with which we are concerned, and are as follows:

“1. A closed vessel containing a supersaturated solu *160 tion of acetylene produced by forcing acetylene into a solvent under pressure, said vessel having an outlet for the acetylene gas which escapes from the solvent when the pressure is released or reduced, and means for controlling said outlet whereby the gas may escape there-through at substantially uniform pressure, substantially as described.
“2. A prepared package consisting of a tight shell or vessel; a solvent of acetylene contained within said vessel; and acetylene dissolved in and held by said solvent under pressure and constituting therewith a supersaturated solution, the package being provided at a point above the solvent with a reducing valve, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.
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“5. As a new article of manufacture, a gas package comprising a holder or tight vessel; a contained charge of acetone; a volume or body of gas dissolved by and compressed and contained within the solvent; and a reducing valve applied to an opening extending to the interior of the holder above the level of the solvent, substantially as set forth.”

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Bluebook (online)
239 U.S. 156, 36 S. Ct. 86, 60 L. Ed. 191, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fireball-gas-tank-illuminating-co-v-commercial-acetylene-co-scotus-1915.