Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co. v. Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp.

130 F.2d 589, 55 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 5, 1942
DocketNo. 10063
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 130 F.2d 589 (Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co. v. Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co. v. Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp., 130 F.2d 589, 55 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3155 (5th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

Schlumberger Well Surveying Corporation, owner of Patents No. 1,819,923 and No. 1,913,293, which were issued to Conrad Schlumberger on Aug. 18, 1931, and June 6, 1933, on applications filed June 26, 1929, and Jan. 23, 1932, respectively, obtained a decree against Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Company sustaining Claims 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the former patent and Claim 1 of the latter, adjudging infringement, and awarding an accounting. On this appeal therefrom, the validity of each patent is challenged for want of sufficient disclosure, because the new and useful part of the patented processes is not clearly pointed out, because in view of anticipating patents and publications there was no invention; also infringement is denied; and unconscionable conduct disentitling the plaintiff to equitable relief is asserted.

Both patents relate to electrical investigation of strata traversed by fluid-filled drill holes, especially uncased oil wells. The earlier patent, referred to as the resistivity patent, deals with the resistivity of the strata to the passage of an artificially produced electric current. The later, referred to as the porosity patent, deals with the detection and measurement of electrical potentials spontaneously produced by fluids percolating in porous strata. The object of each is to obtain information about the nature of the strata reached or traversed by the mud-filled rotary drilled hole as it is bored and before it is cased with metal, by observing electrical phenomena, instead of by the old method of extracting mechanically cores from the strata for examination as to their texture [590]*590and contents, their chemical composition, the presence of fossils, and the like. It was also an old practice to keep “driller’s logs”, that is, a running record of the hardness and softness of the strata drilled, and the nature of the drilled material as it floated up out of the well as the boring continued at noted depths. The driller’s logs were not very definite or reliable, and the mechanical coring was laborious and expensive, and sometimes endangered the safety of the well; while the cores were more often than not lost in the effort to get them out.

By the methods now used by the appellant and appellee, quite similar in results, though differing in some details and in the apparatus used as independently developed and improved by each, an “electric log” is made of a deep mud-filled well in a comparatively short time and at much less expense, which has been found to give valuable and reliable information about the strata reached. The electric log is a. continuous graph photographically traced by the motions of electrical measuring apparatus as one or more electrodes are first lowered into the well, and then withdrawn from it, the “spontaneous potentials” being recorded at every depth on the down trip, and the “resistivity measurements” being recorded for every depth on the return trip. Three or more continuous curves are thus recorded alongside each other, the “kicks” or sudden changes in which indicate the passage at that depth from one stratum to another and give some information as to whether or not the stratum is porous; oil occurring only in the porous strata. Of course water also may occur, or saltwater, these fluids having an effect on the “resistivity” of the stratum in which they are, and also giving rise to “spontaneous potentials”. The appellee and its predecessor began in 1929 an effort to make these electrical investigations about “resistivity”, but without any commercial success, at least in the United States. In 1932, after the porosity patent was applied for, the measurement of the spontaneous potentials was added in combination. Alternating current was later substituted for the direct current indicated in the earlier patent, and many improvements in apparatus and method were made, so that better logs were produced and more quickly, and they came into favor. In 1936 Humble Oil Company, having a related patent, sought to pool interests with appellee and to obtain a reduced rate on the logging of its wells. This overture was rejected, and Humble turned to appellant, Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Company, and placed its patents and experts at the latter’s disposal, and after much experiment and research they became competitors of appellee in the electric logging business. Appellee also by experiment and research made improvements, coming to own twelve patents in addition to the two here involved, relating to this art. Electric logs are now made for almost all rotary drilled wells, and are much used for information about them in ways not necessary to be stated in detail. In “proven territory”, where hundreds of wells have been drilled and logs taken of them, so that the succession of strata, their depth and general thickness have been established, a comparison of the log of a new well with those of other wells indicates with fair certainty what particular stratum has been reached at a given depth. In “wild-cat territory”, the curves on the electric log indicate enough to make a good guess at the nature of a particular stratum, especially as to its porosity, so that mechanical cores are taken only there, to add their information, so that decisions can better be made about the well. In 1939 appellee did'a business of about $3,000,000 making logs in the United States. It was and still is doing through its own crews, or by its licensee, about 90% of the business, appellant doing the rest. Thirty-six experts employed by patrons testify as to the utility and present success of the logs, seeming to have no preference as to the logs made by one company over those of another. None of them know much about how the logs are made, or about the apparatus used. Appellee, it is proved, forbade its employees and engineers to disclose any details of its apparatus and methods, beyond what was shown in the patents and a few publications. The two competitors seem not to have known the details of each other’s operations until disclosed in answer to interrogatories in this case.

Without doubt electrical logging as now done both by appellant and appellee has made a great practical stride in the oil well art; as is reflected by the commercial success of the logs. But so many refinements of method and improvements in apparatus have been made over the simplicities of the patents in controversy, that little weight can be given this commercial success in considering the merit of these patents. Neither patent practiced by itseli would have had any success. The older patent was a commercial failure till combined with the second, and the combination made [591]*591little progress until both the processes and instruments were changed to eliminate inaccuracies in ways, some also patented, which greatly enhanced if they did not wholly produce the commercial success. Each patent must be examined on its separate merit. The question as to each is, Does it merit the monopolization of the present art of electric logging? But a validly patented method, however simple, may not be infringed, no matter what improvements have been added.

Resistivity Patent, No. 1,819,923.

Claim 2 of this patent is for an apparatus to determine the nature of geological formations traversed by drill holes filled with water, by means of electrodes in the water, with means of measuring an artificial current sent down, and the difference of potentials thus generated in the other electrodes, to deduce the resistivity of the earth at the depth of the electrodes. The claim by its general wording seems to embrace all possible means of so measuring the artificial current and the resulting potentials; but both had been measured for decades before.

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130 F.2d 589, 55 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halliburton-oil-well-cementing-co-v-schlumberger-well-surveying-corp-ca5-1942.