Golden Gate Mfg. Co. v. Newark Faucet Co.

124 F. 531, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5007

This text of 124 F. 531 (Golden Gate Mfg. Co. v. Newark Faucet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Golden Gate Mfg. Co. v. Newark Faucet Co., 124 F. 531, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5007 (circtdnj 1903).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

The complainant in this suit charges the defendant with infringement of United States, patents Nos. 331,251 and 331,252, granted to Christoph Mussell November 24, 1885, and No. 333,081, granted December 22, 1885, and also patent No. 537,939, granted April 23, 1895, to W. C. Savage and Gran-ville E. Savage. All of these patents relate to racking, or the filling of kegs and other vessels with beer or other carbonated liquids. Patents Nos. 331,251 and 333,081, to Mussell, and No. 537,939, to Savage, are what are known as “device patents,” while patent No. 331,252 is a patent for a mechanical method. Proofs, of infringement are restricted to claim No. 5 of patent No. 331,251, to claim 1 of patent No. 333,081, to claim 1 of patent No. 331,252, and the four claims of patent No. 537,939.

It seems apparent, from an examination of the evidence, and study of the art of racking beer, that for a long time it had been considered to be a most desirable thing that a cask or the keg, when prepared for shipment, should be completely filled with the beer, so that in its handling for delivery to the market customer there should be the minimum amount of agitation of the beer in the cask or keg. It was found that if the cask were not completely filled, but contained a portion of froth or foam upon the surface of the liquid, the gas contained in the body of the beer would, by agitation, escape to that space, filled by foam, and thus destroy the quality of the beer,, and as a result the beer would become what is known to the trade as “stale” or “dead,” and therefore unsalable. Brewers and manufacturers had sought and tried various means to avoid this loss; and to permit beer to be shipped, handled, and kept without becoming stale, various processes and devices for filling the casks or kegs had been patented and adopted. Among those patents resulting from these attempts [532]*532were those granted to Mussell, upon which, in connection with that granted to Savage, the complainant in this case relies.

The Mussell patent, No. 331,251, claim 5, alleged to be infringed, reads as follows:

“A filling and supply head for beer, and a filling and supply head for air, both located to communicate at different points with the vessel to be filled, and both acting simultaneously to supply beer and air to a keg or other receptacle, substantially as and for the purpose specified.”

This seems, from the record, to be the first patent showing what Mussell conceived to be the device which would remedy the defects in the then known processes of racking beer. In view of the state of the art at the time of granting the patent 331,251 to Mussell, I am of the opinion that it cannot be considered a pioneer in the art to which it applies, and that its claims, and those of the subsequent patents in suit granted to Mussell, must be construed narrowly, and limited in their scope to such an extent as the prior art required. The English patent No. 4,083, granted to William Russell, and bearing date November 19, 1816, is in the same art and class, and for the same purposes and uses, as the Mussell and Savage patents. It covers' and contemplates substantially everything involved in the complainant’s device patents in suit. Without describing in detail the device set out in the Russell patent, but by construing it in comparison with claim 1 of the earliest Mussell patent in suit, we find there embodied all the elements set forth in the claim of the early Mussell patent, and find them adapted to and specified for the same uses as the like elements in the Mussell patent. To be sure, the mechanical structure in each, as shown in the drawings, respectively, is not identical; but, in view of the fact that the same elements are for the same uses in each patent, it follows that, whatever invention or novelty may be claimed for the Mussell patent, it must be limited strictly and narrowly to the difference that may be found in the detailed construction of the various parts that go to make up the Mus-sell and Savage devices. This is plain, for in the Russell patent conception is clearly shown of two filling and supply heads, both so located as to communicate at different points with the vessel to be filled, and both capable of normally “acting simultaneously to supply beer and air to a keg or other receptacle.” Further, we find set out in the Russell patent a conception of what seems to be the alleged novel idea set out in the Mussell patents, for Russell has provided for opposite openings in the receptacle to be filled, suitable connections therefor that may admit to or lead from said receptacle both beer and air. He has provided for and gives evidence in the patent of having conceived the uses which may be made of back pressure in the receptacle to be filled. He has further provided for a separate pipe leading to or from the similarly located openings in the receptacle. For these reasons, I consider the Russell patent a substantial anticipation of claim 1 of the Mussell patent No. 331,251.

The broadest permissible construction that can be put upon the claims of the Mussell patents in suit can relate only to the particular and specific construction of the various parts of the apparatus he has shown and described as being necessary to make use of the novel [533]*533ideas in this art of which, from the evidence, Russell must be considered the pioneer inventor.' Referring to the cask or keg to be filled, Russell says in his patent: “This vat may be filled through the liquor aperture or the cock, C, an application which is recommended to brewers in particular, who find great advantage from starting in near the bottom of these vats, or it may be filled at the top by an open aperture or by a hose and screw cap.” He also says that:

“The peculiar construction of my newly invented cock and its apparatus effectually shuts off all communication with the atmospheric air, except when the fluid is actually running into or out of the vessel; and in some cases the atmosphere may be entirely excluded, and only gas of the peculiar fluid or any other gas which may be desirable admitted.”

From these quotations, and' from the other provisions set forth in the specifications and claims of his patent, it is apparent that he had conceived the use to which back pressure could be put in filling casks with liquors, as well as means for producing and conveying to and from the cask the gas which should be used to create such back pressure, and means for conveying liquors to and from the cask. That these means used by Russell for the handling of the gas and liquors were not identical in their mechanical construction with those devised by Mussell and Savage is immaterial, as far as it may be considered in determining whether Mussell is entitled to have his patents construed broadly as pioneers in this art. The evolution of the principles involved in the Russell, Mussell, and Savage patents must be credited, from the evidence in the suit, to Russell. All that Mussell did was to make use of the principles and ideas shown in the Russell patent, and construct a device somewhat different in its detail from that used by Russell. The principle of operation of all these devices, therefore, was the same, Russell being the pioneer patentee in making use of these principles in this art, the Mussell and Savage patents must be construed narrowly in contemplation of the prior art.

Before we enter upon a consideration of the scope which shall be given to these device patents in suit, let us look for a moment to Matthews’ method patent, No. 260,766, of July, 1882, to ascertain its effect upon the Mussell method patent, No.

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124 F. 531, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-gate-mfg-co-v-newark-faucet-co-circtdnj-1903.