Hinde v. Hot Sulphur Springs, Colorado

359 F. Supp. 987, 178 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 597, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11798
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedSeptember 28, 1972
DocketCiv. A. C-1936
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 359 F. Supp. 987 (Hinde v. Hot Sulphur Springs, Colorado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinde v. Hot Sulphur Springs, Colorado, 359 F. Supp. 987, 178 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 597, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11798 (D. Colo. 1972).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BRA'TTON, District Judge.

The factual background out of which the present infringement action arose began in 1958 when plaintiff James Hinde began experimenting with concepts of water aeration to prevent winter fish kill as a favor to a friend. He first punched tiny holes in copper tubing and, with the aid of a small air compressor, pumped air through the rows of tubing he submerged in his friend’s small trout pond so that tiny bubbles of oxygen were placed in the water and the fish stopped dying. Many of the holes in the tubing, however, clogged rapidly, and the bubbles produced through the open holes were very large.

After this incident he began to investigate materials other than copper tubing which might release air into water in a more controlled manner. He experimented both with new materials, including garden hose, and with various methods of perforation.

In that same year he had an opportunity to try out perforated polyethylene tubing at the Kenosha Trout Club in Colorado. The tubing he sent to be installed was perforated every five feet with little round needle holes, and, once the club members got it submerged and weighted down it was effective not only in preventing fish kill but also in melting large strips of ice. Mr. Hinde never saw this installation, but its success as reported to him encouraged him to form his own company.

In the summer of 1959 he also sent tubing to the Montague Fish Hatchery in Massachusetts. It was installed in one of the ponds for which he had made a lay-out, but he immediately began getting complaints about its effectiveness. This tubing had round valves punched with a needle and was weighted with taped-on lead. He was now discovering that clogging was a major problem, so he set about finding a solution. He developed a chisel-shaped needle that would punch slotted self-closing valves and sent the tubing so punched to the hatchery at no charge. Because of the mineral content, this tubing also failed, but the time consumed in taping the lead on it preparatory to its shipment convinced him that he should pursue the *990 idea of having the tubing manufactured in such a way that the lead along its underside would be encapsulated and become a part of the tubing.

In January of 1960, he installed at Bauduin Yacht Club aeration tubing to melt ice around the pier. He taped lead wire on this tubing so that it would be weighty enough to sink and used a bigger needle to punch holes in the tubing and spaced the holes at two feet intervals. The tubing criss-crossed around the pilings. After discovering that slit holes produced small bubbles and did not clog as rapidly as round holes, he subsequently sent the Bauduin people a minute knife blade with which to go over the holes and convert them into slits.

In the summer of 1960 he began work on a die that would put self-closing slit valves in the tubing without widening it as much as his chisel-shaped needle had.

By November of 1960, the company manufacturing the tubing for him was able to produce a tubing with an encapsulated lead keel. About this time, he had perfected a die to make slit valves, but he had to revise it in order to use it on tubing with a lead keel.

It was after this that he began to consider the tubing’s -potential use for the treatment of domestic and industrial waste. Thinking that it was an economical means of putting oxygen into water and achieved good control without much turbulence, he concluded that he had developed something that he could sell for sewage treatment.

In the early summer of 1961 he sold and shipped tubing to Butterfield Estates, Illinois, to be installed to treat the waste from the housing development. The basis upon which he got this job was to offer to put it in and, if it worked, to be paid for it. In November another such installation was made at Tinley Heights, Illinois. In both installations, the tubing had slit valves and was weighted with an encapsulated lead keel.

The lagoon in which he made his installation at Tinley Heights was a rectangle with the inlet into it at its center. He arranged lengths of tubing on the bottom of the pond at right angles to the flow of the sewage, spacing them close together near the inlet and spreading them out as the end of the pond was approached. Above the inlet, where the sewage wás not actually flowing, the tubing was spaced farther apart. Air was pumped into the tubes and, as it was released from the valves in the tubing in bubble form, it rose upward, forming curtains of aerated liquid which had downward recirculation at the surface of the liquid. In between such curtains were formed treatment cells in which the liquid underwent recirculation and in which controlled aerobic treatment was carried out. The Tinley installation operated successfully for several years until sewer lines were installed. The Butterfield installation was almost identical, and it, too, operated successfully.

A similar installation was made for the United States Industrial Chemicals Company at Tuscola, Illinois in the summer of 1961, and, to date, over 300 such installations have been made in various parts of the country.

Mr. Hinde began employing the trade-mark “Air-Aqua” in connection with his systems and, by making two successive patent applications, tried to effectively protect his inventions.

On November 13, 1961, he applied for a patent on his method of distributing fluids into bodies of liquid and the apparatus therefor. This application matured into United States Patent No. 3,-293,861 (hereinafter referred to as -patent ’861). The ’861 patent in brief covers the tubing described above, i. e., flexible weighted tubing having a plurality of outlet valves in the upper path thereof, such valves in the form of self-closing slits, and the treatment of bodies of liquid, particularly the melting of ice, by submerging such tubing and introducing air into it so that upward laminar flow is produced by the production of tiny air bubbles, the majority of which do not *991 exceed one-eighth inch, from the discharge of the air through the slit-valves.

On December 26, 1962, Mr. Hinde filed an application for a patent on a method and means for treating bodies of water. This application matured into United States Patent No. 3,234,123 (hereinafter referred to as the ’123 patent). The patent lists the complete treatment of domestic and/or industrial sewage as one of the purposes of the method.

The ’123 patent sets out that it is a continuation-in-part of the prior co-pending application (patent ’861) and that the disclosure of the prior co-pending application is incorporated by reference into the ’123 patent.

Briefly, the patent claims as a method of treatment the release of oxygen-containing gas into the liquid from a plurality of submerged flexible conduits having a narrow row of self-closing slit valves in the upper portions of the conduits for the full length of each conduit. The conduits are arranged in parallel rows sufficiently .close together so that gas bubbles, the majority of which do not exceed one-eighth inch, produce upward laminar flow, and form curtains of aerated liquid above each conduit which rise to the top and form downward recirculation of the liquid between each curtain, creating in the body of liquid a series of hydraulically defined cells.

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359 F. Supp. 987, 178 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 597, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinde-v-hot-sulphur-springs-colorado-cod-1972.