Henderson v. Welch Dry Kiln Co.

26 F.2d 810, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1269
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 6, 1928
DocketNo. 18840
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 810 (Henderson v. Welch Dry Kiln Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Welch Dry Kiln Co., 26 F.2d 810, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1269 (E.D. La. 1928).

Opinion

BURNS, District Judge.

Plaintiffs’ bill of complaint alleges infringement by defendant of their United States patent No. 1,422,202 for improvements in dry kilns designed for drying lumber. Their letters patent, dated July 11, 1922, called hereinafter the Henderson patent, comprise some 30 claims, but the plaintiffs elect to stand upon the alleged infringement of claim 4.

Defendants deny infringement, allege invalidity, and plead estoppel by conduct in bar of plaintiffs’ suit. Its kilns are built under United States patent No. 1,517,928, dated December 2, 1924, hereinafter called the Welch patent.

The specifications of the Henderson patent in suit sets forth their invention as follows :

“This invention relates to dry kilns of the class used for drying lumber and other wood products, coats of paint, varnish, etc., on articles as the so-called siccative coatings, enamel on leather, etc., and has for its object construction and means for effecting and controlling the circulation of the atmosphere of the kiln and the taking in and humidifying of outer air and also the recirculating of the atmosphere in the kiln, which kiln is partieu-’ larly simple in construction and especially economical to operate.

[811]*811“This Min comprises, generally, a drying room, and a heating chamber below the drying room in communication therewith, and a steam injector arranged to circulate the atmosphere in the Min and to maintain the humidity of the atmosphere, and also to draw in, humidify, and circulate outside air and to create a draft in the stacks.”

“Owing to the use of the injectors, a positive circulation is maintained in the Min and also in the stacks, and the medium used to maintain the circulation also supplies the moisture for effecting the drying of the lumber or coatings; hence the injector performs the functions of maintaining the circulation, humidifying the atmosphere, and creating the draft in the stacks. Hence this kiln is more economical in operation than when fans and other mechanical blowers for circulating the atmosphere are employed, or when the draft is maintained in the stacks by the use of additional coils or draft-producing devices in the stacks.”

Claim 4 of the patent reads:

“A dry kiln having a circulating passage having an inlet into the interior of the kiln, an air inlet communicating with the circulating passage and with the outside of the kiln, and an outlet into the kiln, and a steam blower arranged in the circulating passage between said inlets and said outlet in position to recirculate the atmosphere of the kiln and also draw in air through the air inlet and humidify the same, substantially as and for the purpose described.”

I find that the claim in suit reads equally as well upon the defendant’s device as it reads upon the plaintiffs’. TMs is because both inventions comprise the same five mechanical elements, all of which are old devices, in combination; the inventions consisting in slight improvements in structure, but with a different means or method of functioning, yet producing the same result.

The prior state of the art, upon which but slight advance was made by Henderson, appears by reference to the patents of Rubin, Emerson, and Cutler, and the documents of Brownlee.

The Rubin patent, No. 1,281,212, dated October 18, 1918, is almost identical with the Henderson patent, except for specific details in construction. Both are compartment Mins, with transverse circulation within.

The Cutler patent, No. 1,341,884, is also a compartment kiln with transverse circulation, operated in the same manner as Henderson. The principal difference is that Cutler employs fans for circulation; but both fans and steam injectors have long been recognized as equivalents in the art. (To this effect, vide British patent of Norton, No. 890 of 1863 ; British patent of Barff and Kidd, No. 971 of 1874; United States patent to Reyseher, No. 743,196 of 1903; British patent to Oxley, No. 28079 of 1907. The use of steam jete goes back to 1877. United States patent to Curran, No. 189,-432.)

The Emerson British patent, No. 24584-of 1894, is also almost identical with Henderson. It is a compartment Min with transverse circulation, to which Henderson seems only to «have added steam jets or injectors, set in the multiple transverse duets to draw in fresh air, humidify it, and circulate it.

The Brownlee kiln, though not patented, embodies every element of Henderson, being a compartment Min with transverse circulation reading on every detail of claim. This prior invention and prior knowledge of Brownlee is established by his drawings and description on file in the laboratory of the Eorest Products Bureau of the United States Department of Agriculture, which is open to public inspection.

In my view of the case it is unnecessary to consider the validity of the patent in suit with reference to these probable anticipations; nor is it necessary to consider the defense of estoppel, predicated on correspondence between these parties. The case of infringement may readily be disposed of on the merits, which should suffice.

In view of the prior state of the art, Henderson’s patent is entitled to a very narrow range of equivalents, because it is, as stated, a combination of well-known elements, wMch have been used almost continuously in the art, which dates back some 50 or more years. The Henderson patent was applied for May 14,1921, and granted July 14,1922. The Welch patent was applied for July 19, 1922, and granted Deeember 2, 1924.

The Patent Office, in considering Welch, cited Henderson against two of Welch’s claims; but the reference was withdrawn when the Patent Office concluded that Henderson’s patent was for a compartment Min, whereas the Welch patent was for a progressive Min. The case turns upon this point for decision.

The evidence is that the Henderson dry Min business is more or less local to New York and the adjoining states, and is and has been confined to the drying of hardwoods by the compartment kiln method; whereas the Welch Company’s dry Min business is more or less local to Louisiana and adjoin-[812]*812Mg Southern states, and has been confined to the drying of pine and soft woods by the progressive kiln method.

A significant letter, written by Henderson to the Welch Company November 21, 1925, reads in part: “Although we have not entered the Southern drying field where the progressive kiln for yellow pine is in common use, we may do so in the near future. Up to date we have been mainly concerned in manufacturing compartment kilns for drying of hardwoods.”

The Hendersons had otherwise recognized the difference between the compartment, or single charge, or box kiln, as the type is variously called, and the progressive kiln; that in the compartment kiln, during process, the temperature throughout the entire kiln is periodically raised, and the humidity throughout the entire kiln is periodically lowered, until at the end of the drying period the conditions throughout the Min as to both humidity and temperature correspond, whereas in the progressive Min, during process, the temperature and humidity is variable throughout its length. In the compartment kiln the air circulation is transverse of the Min, whilst in the progressive Min the air circulation is longitudinal thereof.

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26 F.2d 810, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-welch-dry-kiln-co-laed-1928.