H. Koppers Co. v. Otto Coking Co.

256 F. 534, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 890
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 18, 1919
DocketNo. 348
StatusPublished

This text of 256 F. 534 (H. Koppers Co. v. Otto Coking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. Koppers Co. v. Otto Coking Co., 256 F. 534, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 890 (D. Del. 1919).

Opinion

ORR, District Judge

(specially presiding). This suit in equity is before the court upon final hearing upon proofs taken out of court. The ’plaintiff charges the defendants with the infringement of claims 1 and 5 of United States patent No. 818,033, issued April 17, 1906, to Heinrich Koppers for a gas furnace or coke oven. The defenses interposed against the Koppers patent are lack of patentable invention, [535]*535anticipation, and noninfringement.- In addition to those defenses, the defendant Otto Coking Company has set up a counterclaim against the plaintiff, alleging infringement by the plaintiff of claim 1 of United States patent No. 673,928, issued May 14, 1901, to Frederick William Charles Schniewind for a regenerative coke oven. To the counterclaim aforesaid, the plaintiff has set up as defenses lack of patentable invention, anticipation, and noninfriugement.

[1] Both of the patents above mentioned relate to an art which has been developed in a marked degree in recent years. Furnaces for the manufacture of gas from coal have been used for many years; furnaces for the manufacture of coke from coal have been used also for many years. In the distillation “of the coal for the production of the ¿as, coke was necessarily left as a residuum, usually a soft and spongy product known as gashouse, and sometimes as domestic, coke. It was deemed the by-product resulting from the production of gas. In the distillation of coal for the production of coke, known as metallurgical coke (for there can be no such coke produced, except by distilling out from coal, its volatile constituents), the gases were deemed the by-products and were generally permitted to be wasted. To develop a furnace by means of which all volatile constituents of coal could he utilized, and at the same time metallurgical coke would be produced, became the hope of many who directed their studies to that end. Mr. Koppers must have attained that end, for it appears that over 80 per cent, of all the by-product coke ovens built within the last 10 years in the United States have been Koppers ovens and represent an investment of over $50,000,000. Whether the plaintiff, as owner of the Koppers patent, is entitled to any protection, against competitors who infringe the patent, is the main question in this case.

So far as the record shows, Koppers ovens are built in association with each other; 60 or more being often built side by side. To such group the name “battery” appears to have been given. A battery of oveus is constructed wholly of masonry of heat-resisting bricks, and is about 25 feci high, 40 feet wide, and perhaps several hundred feet long. The whole structure rests upon a cement floor or mat. The coking chambers are in the second story, as it were, of this large structure. Kach of these coking chambers is long, high, and narrow, about 40 feet long, or the width of the battery, about 10 feet high and about 20 inches wide. It is charged with about 13 tons of coal from the top. If has end doors, by means of which the coke may be pushed out. In the wall between the coking chambers is a series of heating chambers or vertical flame flues. Within what may be called the first story of the battery are the pillar walls necessary to support the coking chambers. Tike the coking chambers, these pillar walls are transverse of the battery. Between these pillar walls are located the regenerators, which directly communicate with the heating chambers or flame flues in the heating walls of the coking chamber. The function of regenerators is to preheat the air or gas before the combustion thereof takes place in the heating chambers. They are built in sets, and the operation is such that the burnt gases resulting from combustion are drawn off through one regenerator for a time, and then [536]*536for a like period are drawn off through the other regenerator, with a reversal of the operation at more or less regular intervals. The regen-erators are usually filled with fire brick so piled as to leave many interstices of such apparent uniform character as to give the name “checker brick” to the construction. The burnt gases, being drawn off through this checker brick, give it great heat, and when the operation is reversed, the air or gas, as the case may be, admitted to form the combustion in the heating chambers, has been very greatly preheated. In this way, a greater uniformity and intensity of heat is applied to the coal in the coking ovens. To form a pair of regenera-tors between the pillar walls supporting the coking chambers, a partition wall is provided for, which extends in the same direction as the battery; that is to say, at right angles to the direction of tire coking chambers and the supporting pillar walls. In the so-called first story are also pipes for the introduction of the gas, the channels for the introduction of the air, and the channels for withdrawing the waste gases.

The claims of the patent in suit are:

“1. In a coke oven, a series of heating chambers and coking chambers intermediate the heating chambers, combined with a series of regenerators below and parallel to the heating chambers and communicating directly therewith, substantially as specified.”
“5. A coke oven provided with coking chambers, two sets of heating chambers intermediate the coking chambers, two sets of regenerators communicating with the heating chambers and arranged below the coking chambers, and a partition between the regenerators, substantially as specified.”

This court is unable to find, from the evidence submitted, that the combination of either of said claims is found in the prior art. Heating chambers and coking chambers intermediate the heating chambers, combined with a series of regenerators, are found in the prior art separately and in combination; but regenerators directly communicating and parallel with the series of individual flame flues at the side of each coking chamber in the coke oven battery are not found. Regenera-tors below and transverse to the heating chambers are old in the coke oven art. The most important creation of Koppers was the “direct, individual flue regeneration,” to use a condensed expression of plaintiff’s brief.

The Koppers patent, therefore, cannot be held to have been anticipated, or to lack patentable invention. This court is inclined to adopt the language of the Supreme Court in Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consolidated Tire Co., 220 U. S. 428-435, 31 Sup. Ct. 444, 447, 55 L. Ed. 527:

“Knowledge after the event is always easy, and problems once solved present no difficulties, indeed, may be represented as never having had any, and expert witnesses niay be brought forward to show that the new thing which seemed to have eluded the search of the world was always ready at hand and easy to be seen by a merely skillful attention. But the law has other tests of the invention than subtle conjectures of what might have been seen, and yet was not. It regards a change as evidence of novelty, the acceptance and utility of change as a further evidence, even as demonstration.”

[537]*537The acceptance and utility of the Koppers oven seems to be almost a demonstration of its novelty. No other conclusion can be reached than that the Koppers patent is a valid patent.

The question as to whether or not the defendants are infringers needs little consideration.

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256 F. 534, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-koppers-co-v-otto-coking-co-ded-1919.