General Refractories Co. v. AshLand Fire Brick Co.

15 F.2d 215, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1478
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 9, 1926
DocketNo. 1031
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 215 (General Refractories Co. v. AshLand Fire Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Refractories Co. v. AshLand Fire Brick Co., 15 F.2d 215, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1478 (E.D. Ky. 1926).

Opinion

ANDREW M. J. COCHRAN, District Judge.

This suit is before me upon final hearing. It is a suit for infringement. The patent involved is reissue No. 15,889 granted August 12, 1924, to plaintiff, as assignee of James R. Tackett, the inventor, on an application made July 2, 1924. The original, No. 1,460,455, was granted July 3, 1923, to Tackett on an application made September 16, 1922. The length of time between the granting of the original and the application for the reissue was one year, lacking a day.

The invention covered by the patent was a brick machine. Though it was not limited thereto, the patentee, in devising the machine, had in view the manufacture of fire brick. He was in the employ of plaintiff, whose business was that of a manufacturer and seller of fire brick. The result intended to be, and which was, successfully, accomplished thereby was the production of fire bricks of uniform size and accurate dimensions. No such bricks were then being produced. With them a better and cheaper wall could be made and they brought a 10 per cent, higher price in the market.

The reissue made no change in the original, except to add another claim. The original contained nine claims, and the added claim is numbered 10. It is an expansion of claim 3, which was in the original. Claim 3 is in these words:

“In a brick-treating machine, a brick press, a brick repress in spaced relation to each other, a brick support interposed between the presses on which bricks are transferred, pushing elements for engaging the bricks, and pushing them over the support, lifting and transferring elements coaeting with the pushers for moving the bricks certain steps in their progress from one press to the other, means for operating the brick-pushing elements and brick-transferring elements oppositely, and a brick trimmer in the path of the travel of the bricks while under the influence of one of the pushing elements.”

Claim 10 is in these words:

[216]*216“A brick-treating machine comprising a brick press, and a brick repress, in spaced relation to each other, a brick trimmer arranged between said presses and a conveyor interposed between said presses and extending from one to the other of them and spaced beneath and clear of the trimmer.”

Each of these two claims is a combination claim. Claim 3 contains seven elements and claim 10 four. Three of the elements in claim 3 are in claim 10, to wit, press, repress, and trimmer. The other four elements in claim 3, to wit, support, pushing elements, lifting and transferring elements, 'and means for operating these elements, oppositely, go to make up the other element in claim 10, to wit, conveyor. Together they constitute a particular kind of such eonvey- or.

The difference between the two claims, therefore, consists in this. The machine called for in claim 3 is made up of brick press, a brick repress, trimmer between the two presses, and a conveyor of the particular kind called for therein, whereas that called for in claim 10 is made up of a brick press, brick repress, trimmer between the two presses, and any conveyor between them and spaced beneath and clear of the trimmer that will do the work.

So it is that, as stated, claim 10 is an expansion of claim 3. Claim 3 is limited to the particular kind of conveyor called for therein. Claim 10 takes in any kind of conveyor that will do the work. The invention covered by claim 10 was clearly disclosed in the original patent. Claim 3 presupposed it and was built upon it. But it was not claimed therein. The sole object of the reissue was to claim it and thereby remedy the defect in the original.

The claim of infringement is limited by stipulation to claim 10, though it is argued on behalf of plaintiff that claim 3 is also infringed. This is on the idea that plaintiff is entitled to a broad range of equivalents and the conveyor in defendant’s machine is the equivalent of that called for in claim 3.

The defendant concedes the validity of claim 3. It is useful and novel and called for an inventor’s skill to conceive it. It denies infringement. Its machine contains a brick press, a brick repress, a conveyor, and a trimmer, the two latter being between the press and the repress. The denial of infringement is based on the claim that its eonveyor is different from and not the equivalent of the conveyor of claim 3. Its trimmer is different from that in use by plaintiff in that it is four bladed and revolves, whereas the latter is a single blade and is stationary. But claim 3 contains no limitation upon the trimmer as it does upon the eonveyor.

Inasmuch as the claim of infringement has been limited to claim 10, it is not necessary for me to determine the matter of equivalency between defendant’s eonveyor and that of claim 3, and hence as to whether claim 3 is infringed I pass that question up.

Defendant presents four defenses to claim 10, to wit, what it terms that of intervening rights, want of novelty, lack of invention, and noninfringement. It stresses the defense of intervening rights and says that the case is controlled by it, and hence that it is not necessary that I pass on the other defenses. I proceed at once to a consideration of that defense.

The facts out of which it has arisen are these: The plaintiff carries on its business of manufacturing and selling fire brick at Olive Hill, in Carter county, in this district. The defendant is engaged in the same business at Ashland, in Boyd county, which adjoins Carter. The fire clay used .by both comes in the main from Carter. The two, therefore, are competitors carrying on their respective businesses in close proximity to each other.

After the application for the original patent and before it was granted, Tackett sold to plaintiff the right to construct and operate a machine embodying his invention on a royalty basis. It was probably put in operation not earlier than May, 1923. The defendant did not hear of the machine and its product until after the patent was granted in the latter part of July, 1923.

Information thereof was given to it by plaintiff’s superintendent, who suggested. that it negotiate with Tackett for the right to use such a machine, and Tackett himself took the matter up with it. At the time, however, plaintiff had an option for the purchase of the patent which it shortly thereafter exercised, probably in the latter part of August, 1923.

The defendant was impressed with the value of the machine and eager to have one. It determined to construct and use a machine which would produce the same result, if it could do so without infringing the Tackett patent. Its assistant manager, who had been handling the negotiations with Tackett, when informed by him of the acceptance by plaintiff of its option, which shut off all further negotiations, said to T'aekett several times: “I must have this machine if we can get it, I need this machine.”

On September 6, 1923, defendant wrote [217]*217its general counsel for a copy of the patent and requested advice as to how to proceed to get a machine that would not infringe. It said: “We are very desirous of accomplishing the same results, but in such a manner as not to infringe on Mr. Tackett’s idea.” And further: “Our observation leads us to believe that if the General Refractories is to be the only one that can produce such a brick, we will suffer- considerably.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F.2d 215, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-refractories-co-v-ashland-fire-brick-co-kyed-1926.