Fulton Co. v. Bishop & Babcock Co.

17 F.2d 999, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1538
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 13, 1925
DocketNo. 726
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 F.2d 999 (Fulton Co. v. Bishop & Babcock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton Co. v. Bishop & Babcock Co., 17 F.2d 999, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1538 (N.D. Ohio 1925).

Opinion

WESTENHAVER, District Judge.

This suit is based on United States letters patent 947,229, issued January 25, 1910, and 971,-838, issued October 4, 1910, both to Weston M. Fulton. All claims of both patents are in issue. The defenses are invalidity for various reasons and noninfringement.

Patent 971,838 is for a process; 947,-229 is for the product. The latter is narrowly limited and is of minor importance; hence the process patent will be first considered. The process as described by the patentee is one for the making of flexible corrugated metal walls for collapsible and expansible vessels. The product is known in industry by the trade-name of Sylphon. It is commonly referred to as a metal bellows. While the patent process is not limited as to the metal, it has, so far as the record shows, been used so far only in working brass, chiefly what is known as low brass; i. e., copper with a 20 per cent, zinc alloy. Thq process begins by forming a thin-walled tube, and is completed with the wall so deeply corrugated that the shoulders of the outer and inner bends-come in contact on compression. In its finished condition, the bellows is highly resilient and practically indestructible under any conditions of known use. It is highly sensitive to changes of temperature, and widely used in thermosensitive and pressure-sensitive devices. It is so widely used, has supplanted so many previous devices, and has had such commercial success, that all legitimate inferences flowing therefrom are to be weighed in favor of validity.'

The elements or steps of the process are: (1) Forming of a thin-walled tube; (2) forcing the metal outward to form broad corrugations, leaving intervening uncorrugated portions; (3) successively deepening and narrowing the corrugations; (4) subjecting the metal at the bends to rolling operation or pressure to toughen and temper the curved portions. The width of the outward corrugation is not definitely stated, but an uneorrugated intervening portion is called for in all the patent claims, and in some a narrow uneorrugated portion. The number of successive deepening and narrowing operations is not definitely stated, but it is clear that each successive one is to both increase the depth and shorten the radius of the cur[1000]*1000vature. The extent or degree of toughening and temper is not specifically stated, but it is clear that a high degree of flexibility or resiliency and toughness is and can be obtained by the bending and stretching of the curved portions during the successive rolling operations. This toughening and tempering results from what is known in the metal working art as cold working.

Defendant contends that this process, if not anticipated by the prior art, is so far disclosed therein that no invention is present or that the claims must be so limited thereby that infringement is not shown, and also that the patent disclosures are so vague and indefinite as not to disclose how the product may be produced by practicing the process.

The prior art consists exclusively of certain American and British patents, supplemented by the admitted fact that cold-working of metal will impart to it temper and toughness. The evidence shows without dispute that, when Pulton entered the field, highly flexible, collapsible, and expansible metal walls or bellows were not known in the industry. Any articles of that configuration, such as are disclosed in drawings of Graham & Creelman, 350,881, and considered in Fulton Co. v. Bishop & Babcock Co. (6 C. C. A.) 284 F. 774, were of the built-up variety; i. e., made by brazing together the inner and outer peripheries of circular curved metal strips. In the thermo and pressure control art, the only other forms of device in common use were a carbon post, rubber diaphragm, float traps, and similar makeshifts. Pulton realized the desirability of a metal bellows having the described qualities; in fact, such desirability was disclosed to him by some work in which he was then engaged. He made diligent search to find it in the market. He solicited numerous firms highly skilled in manufacturing articles from brass, to construct one for him, but without avail. He gives a convincing and vivid account of this search and of his'subsequent experiments by which his process was developed. His testimony is fully corroborated. It must be found that he was the first to produce an article having the characteristics and advantages described in his patent and admittedly present in the structures in controversy.

His original patent application was one for both product and process. The Patent Office insisted upon a division and that a divisional application be filed for the process. The five claims of the process patent were lifted bodily from the original application. The drawings and specifications are precisely those of the original application, some parts of which were required by the Patent Office to be eliminated from the original application as not applicable to the product patent. No difficulty was experienced in the prosecution of the original or the divisional application. The last clause only of claim 3 of the process patent was slightly amended. The remaining claims were amended only by the insertion of the word “swaging” at the suggestion of the Patent Examiner as a more exact definition of what takes place during the rolling operations required to deepen and narrow the corrugations. No art was cited and no rejections made and acquiesced in which impose any limitations upon the claims.

Of the printed art cited on this hearing, that mainly relied on was Webster, British patent 825 of 1856; Blair & Birrell, 17,356, of 1889; and American patents to Daelon, 266,976, and Zeh, 784,244. Since these are the only ones stressed in oral argument or in defendant’s brief, the others may be briefly disposed of. Morrison, 142,929, Bancroft, 179,761, and Brombaeher, 200,689, are merely beading machines for forming the joints on ends of stovepipes. Of these Brombaeher is the best illustration. Graham & Creel-man, 350,881, and MeCloskey, 398,325, show merely the uses to which a flexible metal bellows could be put in devices for recording pressure or temperature or to avoid packing in valves, if any such article had been in existence or could be produced by any known process. They teach nothing as to how such an article might be produced. All other art not specially mentioned is even more remote.

Webster, 825, of 1856 is perhaps the oldest and certainly the most interesting. He undoubtedly had Fulton’s concept as to the product. He describes it as “a tube made of brass, copper, or other metal or alloy, in which a series of corrugations is made in planes perpendicular to the axis of the tube.*’ He says he prefers to make the corrugations “as deep as is compatible with the nature of the metal or the alloy of which the tube is made and so narrow that the shoulders between the corrugations should touch each other on slight flexure of the tube.” He realized also the effect of cold-working metal. He says, “Tubes made according to my invention are elastic, both longitudinally and transversely; that is to say, they are capable of elongation and flexure within [1001]*1001certain limits without taking a set. ’ ’ However, the problem he was trying to solve was different from Fulton’s. Webster had in mind the corrugation, not of thin-walled, but of substantially thick-walled, tubes, and the evidence makes it clear that the problems are essentially different. His corrugated tubes were intended to be used as expansion joints, as in couplings of locomotives with their tenders, • hose for Are engines, and other like purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F.2d 999, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-co-v-bishop-babcock-co-ohnd-1925.