German-American Filter Co. v. Loew Filter & Mfg. Co.

155 F. 124, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5228
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio
DecidedJuly 5, 1907
DocketNo. 6,029
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 F. 124 (German-American Filter Co. v. Loew Filter & Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
German-American Filter Co. v. Loew Filter & Mfg. Co., 155 F. 124, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5228 (circtndoh 1907).

Opinion

TAYEER, District Judge.

This case is before the court on final' hearing of the action brought by the complainant seeking an injunction and accounting for infringement of letters patent of the United States No. 378,379, granted February 21, 1888, to Uhlmann and others as assignees of one Stockheim and by them conveyed to the complainant. The defense to the action is a denial of the validity of the patent and of its infringement by the defendants. The bill was-filed over seven years ago, and a motion was made for a preliminary injunction, which was heard upon numerous affidavits and elaborate argument by Judge, now Justice, Day, who allowed the motion. The case on that hearing is reported in 103 Fed. 303. On appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals the decision of the Circuit Court was affirmed, but the order was modified so as to permit the injunction to be dissolved upon giving a bond conditioned for summary judgment thereon by the court below, and in this suit, for such damages as might thereafter be adjudged to have resulted to the complainant. The case on that hearing is reported in 107 Fed. 949,47 C. C. A. 94; the decision. [125]*125being rendered on March 5, 1901. Thereafter a large amount of testimony was taken in various parts of the country, bearing chiefly on the claim of alleged prior use and publication of the process covered by the patent in suit. In view of the published decisions respecting this patent, to which reference will be hereafter made, no fuller description of the process covered by the patent will be given than is necessary to make clear this opinion. Reference may be had to the decisions as reported for a fuller account than it is necessary to give here of the process of filtering beer and of this and related patents.

It is sufficient for our present purpose to give the following description :

Prior to the time when Stockheim patented his process for filtering beer great difficulty had been experienced by brewers all over the world in so cleansing and purifying beer as to remove from it all deleterious substances which were held in solution or otherwise, to make it bright and clear, and to preserve in it the carbonic acid gas, without which the beer would be flat and unmerchantable. Much labor and ingenuity and a large amount of money had been spent in the effort to perfectly clarify and purify beer. The result was that while, measured by present results, no practical success seems to have been attained, many, if not all, of the steps which were combined in the' Stockheim process and described in his patent were made use of. So it came about that in 1887 Stockheim, a citizen of Germany, filed his application for a patent for a process of filtering and refining beer, which resulted in the patent in suit, granted February 21, 1888. Confining ourselves to the processes of filtration only so far as they are involved in the present inquiry, we discover that it was necessary to conduct the beer from what we may call the storage cask through the filter into the cask or bottle which was to be sold so that the contained deleterious substances should be removed, the carbonic acid gas remain, and the beer be discharged into the selling vessel without foaming. Stockheim claims to have conceived the idea that this result could be successfully accomplished by keeping the filter full of solid beer by two operations: First, the maintenance in the filter of an adequate pressure above that of the atmosphere; and, second, the absence in the filter of all free surfaces of air, gas, or foam, by the removal of the same whenever necessary, and the maintenance of back pressure, pressure in the filter, and forward pressure, or pressure on the supply cask, so as to prevent the recurrence of such free surfaces. It is claimed by the complainant that until the Stockheim process there was no known method by which beer could be commercially filtered without the development in the filter of air or gas from free surfaces due to the different resistance offered by the filtering medium to air, to gas, and to the liquid beer. The substance of Stockheim’s process, whether novel or anticipated, was to prevent the foaming of the beer in the filter — the critical place in the system — where the gas is most likely to separate from the beer, and deliver therefrom foamless beer into the keg or bottle. This he sought to accomplish by maintaining on the beer in the storage cask a pressure which would keep the gas in the beer and force the beer through the system, by collecting and discharging, as an initial step, any air or gas that might enter, [126]*126or gas that might be freed in the filter, and carrying it off from the line of discharge by separate devices, by maintaining a back pressure, as well as a forward pressure, upon the beer in the filter so as to keep the filter full of solid beer, thereby preventing the formation of gas or air spaces, and when, nevertheless, these spaces have formed to carry off the collected gas or air before it has had an opportunity to work mischief, and thus restore the condition of the filter expressed by the words “to keep the filter full of beer,” as distinguished from beer and separated gas or foam. The definition of the phrase “to keep the filter full of beer” is important. As related to the most persuasive argument made against the validity of the patent, it is controlling. If we define the expression as meaning that condition of the contents of the filter which we describe as solid beer without any foam or air or disengaged or separated gas, we have a very different conception from that which we ordinarily have when we speak of a vessel being “full” of a liquid. As to some of the devices which are cited as anticipations of the Stockheim patent, it is claimed that in their operation the filter must have b'een full of beer, and, if so, there is nothing left to the patent in suit. Undoubtedly some of these prior devices so operated that the filter must have been, while in operation, full of beer; but they were not “full’of beer” in the sense in which that expression is used in the Stockheim patent. If they had been, they would probably have been successful. They did not take care of the gas and air which entered the filter with the beer nor of the gas liberated in the filter; and, since they did not do this, the beer foamed at the keg or the filter got out of order.

The patent contains four claims for a process, and they are all directed to the accomplishment of “the filtration of beer in its passage from the store cask to the keg into which it is drawn, without material loss of the gas contained in the beer and without materially foaming in the keg, into which the filtered beer is delivered.” Each of the claims describes the drawing of the beer from the storage cask under a pressure exceeding atmospheric pressure, and conducting the same to and through a filtering apparatus in which that pressure is maintained; but this alone would not keep the filter full of beer or suffice to prevent material loss of gas, or avpid foaming at the keg, so that we find the following additional means claimed in the first claim: “Collecting and carrying off any air entering the filter along with the beer, and gas separating from the. beer during the filtering operation”; and, in the second claim, “collecting and carrying off from the beer, during its passage from the store cask to the keg, air that may be mingled with the beer, and gas that may separate from the beer”; and, by the third claim, “creating and maintaining a back pressure in the filter, so as to keep the filter full of beer.” The fourth claim fairly embodies the other three.

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Related

Doelger v. German-American Filter Co. of New York
204 F. 274 (Second Circuit, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 F. 124, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-american-filter-co-v-loew-filter-mfg-co-circtndoh-1907.