Fulton Iron Works Co. v. Farrel Foundry & Machine Co.

21 F.2d 831, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1782
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJune 2, 1926
DocketNo. 1788
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F.2d 831 (Fulton Iron Works Co. v. Farrel Foundry & Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton Iron Works Co. v. Farrel Foundry & Machine Co., 21 F.2d 831, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1782 (D. Conn. 1926).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

This is the usual bill in equity, based on an alleged infringement of claims 1 and 2 of patent No. 1,291,095, granted January 14, 1919, to John F. O’Neil, and later assigned to the plaintiff.

There is no controversy as to the corporate existence of the parties, nor as to the plaintiff’s title to the patent, nor as to the structure of defendant’s machine, as these matters have been covered by stipulation.

The invention relates to a cane mill for extracting or expressing the juice from sugar eane. The object of the invention, as stated in the specification, is “to provide preerushing means whereby the capacity, juice extraction, and percentage of sugar yield from the cane of a eane mill may be greatly increased relative to the capacity of such mills as have heretofore been in use.”

It app.ears from the record that at one time the equipment for acting on the eane consisted of only a single set of three rolls, which simultaneously crushed the cane and expressed the juice. Then, in order to increase the capacity of the plant, duplication began, and one or more sets of rolls were added, thus making an equipment with a plurality of sets of rolls or mills in series or tandem. This duplication not only increased the capacity of the plant, but secured a larger percentage of juice from the same quantity of cane. As far back as 1891 the plaintiff began to put annular grooves in the rolls in each three-roll mill, and in mills made by the plaintiff not later than 1912 there were four sets of three-roll mills in tandem, which had coarser annular grooves in the first sets than in succeeding sets, and the rolls of each succeeding set were mounted so as to be closer together than the rolls of each next preceding set, because, some of the juice having been expressed as the eane was crushed in .passing through one set of rolls, the volume of the mass gradually became diminished. Ever since 1911 it has been customary to nick the longitudinal grooves on the top roll of the first mill to provide something akin to teeth, in order to more easily and rapidly draw the cane into the rolls.

While the so-called “mills” performed both a crushing and juice-expressing action, the idea was early developed that the capacity of the plant would be increased if toothed rolls were added in front of the three-roll mill to subject the cane to a preparatory crushing and shredding. The Krajewski patent, No. 349,503, issued September 21, 1886, shows a pair of crushing rolls having teeth made in the roll by short zigzag grooves, mounted in front of and at a higher level than the three-roll mill. The edges of the teeth are, as stated in the specification, “more or less sharp, so as to cut or to break only, and not to primarily act as pressing devices.” It thus clearly appears that these rolls were employed for the sole purpose of breaking or cutting the cane, so as to prepare it for delivery to the mill in more uniform thickness throughout the length of the rolls in order to reduce the work of the latter in pressing the cane. This process allows the pressing rolls to be placed nearer together than ordinarily, and permits of greater pressure being exerted on the cane by the three-roll mill, resulting in the yield of a greater percentage of juice from the same quantity of eane. The facts are well stated by Krajewski in his specification as follows:

“Sugar eane is generally crushed by two or more smooth-faced rollers, which receive eane in the same condition as it is gathered in the field. It is impossible to space the cane so evenly throughout the length of the [832]*832rollers that a uniform thickness of it will enter between them; hence, generally, there will be a great quantity of cane at certain points and very little pr possibly none at all at other points. Thus some portions of the cane will receive less pressure than others, and consequently much available juice is left in the cane. Rollers as ordinarily constructed have to break the cane as well as to express the juice, and hence it requires great power to do the work: This waste of power can be saved by the employment of a separate mechanism appropriate fpr the work of breaking or cutting the cane. I employ a separate mechanism for breaking or cutting the cane, so that it can be delivered to the mill in more uniform thickness throughout the length of the rollers, so as to-reduce the work of the. latter to pressing the cane. The pressing rollers can then be placed nearer together than ordinarily, and greater pressure exerted on the cane, resulting in a yielding of a greater percentage of juice.”

The patent in suit describes a precrushing means, consisting of two or more sets of toothed precrushing rolls, arranged to receive the cane in advance of the juice-expressing rolls. The teeth of the precrushing rolls are smaller than the teeth of the next preceding precrushing rolls, and the preerushing rolls nearest the juice-expressing rolls are therefore more closely assembled or associated than the other sets of rolls. The several sets of preerushing rolls are separated from each other a suitable distance, and, as the mass of cane rides down an inclined runway, it passes through the second set of preerushing rolls, and a more complete crushing and shredding action takes place than that which is performed by the teeth of the primary precrushing rolls, and this action constantly tends to place the cane under strain while it is being shredded by the teeth of the several preerushing roils.

The claims of the patent in suit alleged to be infringed are as follows:

“I. The combination with juice-expressing rolls of a cane mill, of a plurality of sets of toothed preerushing rolls through which the cane is passed before delivery to the juice-expressing rolls, said sets of preerushing rolls being operable in a differentiating degree upon the cane to shred and open its cells before the cane reaches the juice-expressing rolls.
“2. The combination with juice-expressing rolls of a cane mill of two sets of toothed precrushing rolls arranged to receive the cane in advance of said juice-expressing rolls, the teeth of the preerushing rolls nearest said juice-expressing rolls being arranged to effect a twisting action upon the cane as it passes through said rolls.”

The main defenses are:

'(1) Invalidity of the claims in suit, because of (a) anticipation and lack of invention, in view of the prior practices and patents; (b) lack of originality, O’Neil having obtained his ideas from Rardis;

(2) Noninfringement, because the defendant’s machine does not embody those characteristics which were inserted in the specification and claims by amendment and by reason of yhieh the claims were allowed and issued.

1(a) Respecting anticipation and lack of invention, the record shows that it was an old and well-known practice, many years prior to the application date of the patent in suit, to mount a pair of precrushing rolls in front of the juice-expressing rolls; the said preerushing rolls being disposed at a higher level than the juice-expressing rolls, -and being provided with teeth. As already appears, a construction of this type of machine is described in the Krajewski patent, supra. It was also a common practice, many years prior to the application date of the patent in suit, to adjust the openings between the rolls of a cane mill so that the opening between the rolls of each mill was smaller than the opening between the rolls of each mill next preceding in the series.

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21 F.2d 831, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-iron-works-co-v-farrel-foundry-machine-co-ctd-1926.