Gravel Products Corp. v. Buffalo Gravel Corp.

5 F. Supp. 533, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1069
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedDecember 22, 1933
DocketNo. 124
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Supp. 533 (Gravel Products Corp. v. Buffalo Gravel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gravel Products Corp. v. Buffalo Gravel Corp., 5 F. Supp. 533, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1069 (W.D.N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

ADLER, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of a, patent (No. 1,729,070) granted September 24, 1929, to Howard S. Gerken for improvements in apparatus for washing and separating or grading materials, as for instance, gravel from waterways, on an application filed February 27, 1926. The patent has thirty claims. Those in suit are claims 16 to 30, inclusive.

Corporate capacity and title to the patent axe admitted. Infringement and validity [534]*534of the claims are denied. With respect to infringement, it is the contention that each and all of the claims in issue are either invalid, or, when interpreted by the prior art, do not cover either of defendant’s constructions. To establish invalidity, defendant relies on patents of the prior art, on prior use, on prior knowledge, on abandonment, and on failure to disclaim, under circumstances which it is alleged made disclaimer obligatory.

The invention of the claims in suit is described in the specification as “a washing, separating and grading apparatus particularly adapted to be used on a boat or scow, so that it can be positioned lengthwise of the boat over the hold or hatches, whereby the washed, separated material can be discharged from the apparatus into separate compartments in the hold, or delivered to one or another part of the hold, as may be desired, (in order) to segregate the different grades of material or evenly load the boat.” The invention is described in broad terms in claim 30, as follows: (a) An inclined chute the length of which is many times its width; (b) means for delivering solid materials and a relatively large volume of water to the upper end of said chute and causing them to flow down the chute at a relatively rapid rate, said chute having screened openings in the bottom at intervals along its length, each screened opening being adapted to discharge a small portion of the water and such of the materials as are small enough to pass through the screen; (e) secondary screening means arranged to receive the water and material from said screened openings in the chute and to divert laterally the larger particles thereof, said secondary means being adapted to pass the water and other particles received from said screened openings; and (d) means for receiving all the water and finer particles passing through said screen means and conveying them away by the flow of the water content thereof. (The italicizing is not in the patent.)

It is the contention of defendant that claims 16, 18, 22, 26, 28, and 30 are “completely anticipated in terms and substance by the prior art”; that claims 28, 24, and 25 are “anticipated in substance by the prior art and substantially anticipated’ in terms”; that claims 27 and 29 are “completely anticipated in terms and substance,” provided “the express limitations are ignored”; and that the remaining claims are “void for want of invention.”

The object of employing means for collecting and conveying away the water and finer particles, the function of element (d) of claim 30, is explained thus in the specification: “In apparatus heretofore used, the sand and water were discharged directly into the hold or compartments of the boat, the water being gradually displaced by sand settling in the hold until the water finally overflowed the hatch combings and thence went overboard.”

The patents of the prior art relied oh as anticipations are patent to Roberts, No. 997,-854, patent to Thompson, No. 1,149,989, British patent to Wilkinson, No. 25,823 of 1913, and patent to Woolley, No. 349,675. Of these the Thompson patent and the British patent to Wilkinson were considered by the Patent Office as citations against Gerken’s application. The patents of the prior art relied upon as disclosing “various details of the Gerken construction” are patent to Keller, No. 126,968, patent to Schultz, No. 174,981, patent to Jewett, No. 475,568, patent to Diers et ah, No. 1,165,077, patent to Kavanaugh, No. 583,259, patent to Stetson, No. 714,755, patent to Evans, No. 1,032,746, patent to Hoyt, No. 1,064,223, patent to Mark, No. 1,-269,947, patent to Lamb, No. 1,368,267, French patent to Rey, No. 415,130 of 1910, and German patent No. 291,693 of 1915. Of these prior art patents the following were considered by the Patent Office, namely: The Keller patent, the Diers patent, the Kavanaugh patent, and the Marks patent. The patents relied on as anticipations, and which were not cited by the Patent Office, are the only ones that need be considered specially, viz.: The Woolley patent and the Roberts patent.

The Woolley patent is on a coal separator adapted for installation at the mine. The oversizes are scalped by a grid screen in the chute that receives the coal. The material passing through the screen falls upon a secondary screen of gablelike form, employed for grading purposes, each end of which discharges into a bin. On comparing the structure of the Woolley patent with that described in broad claim 30 of the Gerken patent in suit, it is seen that the structures are designed for different purposes; that the Woolley structure is not adapted (with any modifications that are obvious or that have been suggested) to be used on a boat for washing and separating gravel; and that the Woolle3r structure does not suggest the long, inclined chute of the patent in suit, with its screened openings,' adapted to receive water in volume at its upper end; nor does it employ means for receiving all the water and finer particles passing through the screens [535]*535•and conveying them away by the flow of the water. The Woolley patent does not anticipate claim 30.

The Roberts patent was not cited by the Patent Office. It shows and describes a washer designed for treating “pebble phosphate and the like.” It is constructed so that it can be set up on the deck of a dredge, where the material from the bottom of the waterway can be pumped into it. It has an inclined trough or raceway, with a grating in the bottom. From the surface of the grating (at its lower end) is discharged into a chute that projects from one side of the trough the materials that will not pass through the grating in the trough. During the travel of the materials over the grating in the trough, the finer stuff falls through onto an inclined screen from which it passes to other screens in chutes that lead to the sides of the barge, where the pebbles are delivered into scows, and the water and sand that flows below the screens is discharged overboard.

On comparing the structure of the Roberts patent with the elements of claim 30 of the patent in suit, it is seen that the structures are designed for different purposes; that the Roberts structure does not suggest the long, inclined chute of the patent in suit, with its plurality of gratings, each adapted to discharge sand and a portion of the water onto a secondary screen, or means (the lower parallel trough of the patent) adapted to receive the water and finer particles that pass through the secondary screen and convey them away by the flow of the water content. In the Roberts apparatus the transverse troughs that convey to the side of the vessel the water, sand, and pebbles that go through the screen located beneath the trough are not the equivalent of the lower parallel trough of the Gerkin apparatus, and, accordingly, Roberts is not an anticipation of claim 30.

The patent to Wilkinson, put forward as an anticipation, was considered by the Patent Office.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 533, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gravel-products-corp-v-buffalo-gravel-corp-nywd-1933.