Gottfried v. Schoenhofen

10 F. Cas. 841, 5 Ban. & A. 4, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1967
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 1, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 841 (Gottfried v. Schoenhofen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gottfried v. Schoenhofen, 10 F. Cas. 841, 5 Ban. & A. 4, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1967 (circtedwi 1879).

Opinion

DYER, District Judge.

The Issues and History of Cases. — These are cases involving the validity of a patent issued to complainants, as the alleged inventors of an improvement in pitching barrels. The four first entitled cases were commenced and are pending in this court. The three other cases are pending in the circuit court of the United States for the Northern district of Illinois, and, as all involve the validity of the same patent, it was stipulated that all shomu be heard together and decided by the court in this district, and that the same decrees might be entered in the cases in Illinois that should be entered in the cases pending in this court. The bills in all the cases are similar, alleging that complainants Gottfried and Holbeck were the original and first inventors of a new and useful improvement in pitching barrels; that letters patent were issued to them, dated May 3, ls04 [No. 42,580], and that the defendants are infringers; and the prayers of the bills are for injunctions and accounts.

The answers of the defendants in the cases pending in this court deny that Gott-fried and Holbeck were the original inventors of the alleged improvement or device, and present issues as to the validity of complainants’ patent. As further defences, it is alleged that complainants’ invention is anticipated, first, by a mechanisrh used by one Samuel Pierce, at Greenfield, Massachusetts, in the soldering business; second, by what is known as the Beck machine; third, by the Davison and Symington patent, granted in England in 1S43; fourth, by a patent granted in England to Charles Pierre De Yaux in 1835; fifth, by the Neilson patent, granted in England in 1828; sixth, by a patent granted in England to George Hinton Boville in 18461 seventh, by the Cochrane and Galloway patent, granted in England in 1818. Further defences are interposed to the effect that the description of complainants’ invention, as set forth in the specifications annexed to the letters patent, is incomplete and ambiguous; that complainant Holbeck was not a joint inventor with complainant Gottfried; that complainants’ apparatus is an old invention applied to a new use and object, and that this new use and object are analogous to the use and object to effect which such invention had been previously notoriously used; and infringement by the defendants is denied.

The original answers in the Illinois cases, also deny that Gottfried and Holbeck are the original and first inventors of their device. They further set up the Neilson patent and the Davison and Symington patent as anticipating complainants’ invention, and infringement is denied. The cases in Illinois were brought to final hearing, and, in June, 1878, a decree was entered in favor of complainants. Afterwards, and at the December term, 1878, on motion, the decree was opened and the defendants allowed to make further defences. On the 4th day of March, 1879, the defendants in those cases filed amendments to their answers, in which it was averred that complainant Holbeck was not a joint inventor with Gottfried of the device which they alleged was their invention, and in which the defendants set up anew the Davison and Symington patent, and also the patent issued to De Vaux, as anticipating complainants’ patent. The defendant Schoenhofen, in his amended answer, also-alleged that about the 12th day of April, 1877, complainant Holbeck gave him full license to use and operate the pitching machine which was then in use in his brewery.

From the issues made by the bins and original answers in the Illinois cases, and from the opinion of Judge Blodgett. — Gottfried v. Bartholomae [Case No. 5,632], — it is-evident that the contest in those cases was upon the questions as to whether complainants’’ patent was anticipated by the Davison and Symington, and the’ Neilson patents, and as-to whether the devices employed by the defendants in those cases were infringements of complainants’ patent. The court held that complainants’ patent was not anticipated by the two patents mentioned, and that the devices used by the defendants in those cases, including what are known as the Vogt machine and the Shlaudeman machine, infringed complainants’ patent.

The application for a rehearing in the Illinois cases was based upon affidavits to the effect that complainant Holbeck was not a joint inventor with complainant Gottfried of the invention covered by their letters patent, and that complainants' patent was antiei-[843]*843pated by the patent to De Yaux, issued in 1835, all of which was claimed to be newly discovered evidence which came to • the knowledge of the defendants in those cases subsequent to the entering of the decree sustaining complainants’ patent. And, from the opinion of Judge Blodgett opening the decrees and granting a rehearing, it appears that such action was taken to enable the defendants in the Illinois cases to interpose, as new defences, the claims that Holbeck was not a joint inventor with Gottfried, and that their patent was anticipated by the De Yaux patent, and these, together with the claim by the defendant Shoenhofen, that he obtained from the complainant Holbeck a license to use and operate the pitching machine in use in his brewery, constitute the additional -de-fences set up by the defendants in the Illinois cases in their amendments to their original answers, which were filed after the decree was opened and the re-hearing granted.

Complainants’ Invention. — Complainants’ alleged invention consists of an improvement in pitching barrels, or, more;accurately speaking, in heating barrels preparatory to the operation of pitching them; the object of the invention being the preparation of casks or barrels for receiving pitch to render them impervious to the air, by subjecting them to blasts of highly heated air by means of an apparatus which is described as consisting of a furnace which has a vertical central opening through it. Near the base of the furnace is a grate, beneath which is an ash pit, and above which is a fire-chamber covered by a lid. An opening is made through the side of the furnace, which forms an external communication with the internal chamber, either below or above the grate. This opening communicates with a fan case, arranged outside the furnace, and which is furnished with a series of rotary fans which may be rotated by any convenient motive power. The movement of .the fans creates a blast of air which is carried into the furnace chamber through the opening which communicates with the chamber, and through the fire on the grate, and which is allowed to escape through a passage near the top of the furnace. Between this passage and the cask which it is desired to heat, a communication is formed by means of a detachable pipe.. This pipe enters a short tube which passes through and is affixed to a covering plate, which is employed to close or partially close the opening in the head of the cask by adjusting it on the inner side of the cask head. By this apparatus, the heated products of combustion are forced into the cask, and, when the interior of the cask is thus subjected to heat, it is claimed that, as melted resin or other substance is applied, it will thoroughly permeate the pores and interstices of the inner surface.

The patentees claim as new: First, the application of heated air under blast to the interior of casks by means substantially as described, and for the purposes set forth; second. the use of a removable conductor, in combination with a furnace and blowing apparatus, arranged and operating substantially as described; and third, the tube-holding plate in combination with the removable pipe and blast furnace, substantially as and for the purposes described.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 841, 5 Ban. & A. 4, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gottfried-v-schoenhofen-circtedwi-1879.