Honolulu Oil Corp. v. Halliburton

306 U.S. 550, 59 S. Ct. 662, 83 L. Ed. 980, 1939 U.S. LEXIS 1163, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 177
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 17, 1939
DocketNos. 466, 479
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 306 U.S. 550 (Honolulu Oil Corp. v. Halliburton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honolulu Oil Corp. v. Halliburton, 306 U.S. 550, 59 S. Ct. 662, 83 L. Ed. 980, 1939 U.S. LEXIS 1163, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 177 (1939).

Opinion

Me. Justice Rütler

delivered the opinion of the Court.

, This suit presents questions of validity and infringement of Patent No. 1,930,987 applied for February 10> 1926 by Simmons and, after assignment, issued October 17, 1933, to Halliburton. It is for a method and apparar. tus for testing productivity of formations encountered in oil and other deep wells drilled by the rotary method.

The writs were granted, on petition of defendants Honolulu Oil Corporation, Ltd. et al. and cross-petition of plaintiffs Halliburton, et al., to review a decree 1 of the circuit court of appeals for the ninth circuit holding that the method claims are valid and infringed and to that extent reversing a decree 2 of the district court of. southern California holding that the method and apparatus claims are invalid.

There was an earlier suit for infringement of the same patent brought by these plaintiffs in the federal court for the eastern district of Texas against other defendants. That court sustained the patent and found it infringed. The circuit court of appeals for the fifth circuit reversed. 3 It held the method claims invalid for lack of invention and that, while the apparatus claims may define a simplifying improvement upon which a combination patent might rest,, the apparatus was not of such character as to be infringed by the accused tool of defendants.

*552 In recent years rotary drilling has been widely used in sinking deep oil wells. Boring is done by rotation of a bit attached to a steel pipe which when so used is called a “drill stem.” A smaller bore, called “rat-hole,” sometimes precedes, and is reamed out to obtain, the full size hole. To aid operation, drilling fluid (mud-laden water)' is pumped into the upper end of the drill stem and escapes into the well at high velocity through holes in the bit. It rises through the space between the pipe and the earth walls of the well and carries to the surface cuttings made by the bit. It holds back and seals the penetrated formations. Hydrostatic pressure of the drilling fluid is very great and the fluid in a penetrated formation will not flow into the well unless it is under greater pressure. It is often desirable to secure' a sample of the fluid wtithin a stratum in the bottom of the well without removing the drilling fluid. The patent in suit is for a method and apparatus intended to accomplish that purpose.

The method claims are 8 and 18. Claim 8 is as follows: “A method of testing the productivity of a formation encountered in a well containing drilling fluid, which includes lowering an empty string of pipe into the well through the drilling fluid, to adjacent the formation, the pipe carrying a packer 4 and having a valved inlet at its lower end which is closed while the pipe is being lowered, setting the ■ packer above the formation to seal off the drilling fluid from the formation, opening the valved inlet after the packer is set to permit cognate fluid 5 from the formation to enter the pipe, closing the valved inlet against the entrance of fluid from the well by movement of the pipe, raising the pipe so closed to remove an en *553 trapped sample and the packer from the well.” Claim 18 is printed in the margin. 6

The apparatus claims in suit are 9 to 17 inclusive and 19. Claim 15 is typical: “Apparatus for testing the productivity of a formation encountered in a well containing drilling fluid, comprising a single empty string of pipe to be lowered into the well through the drilling fluid to adjacent the formation to be tested, a packer lowered into the well by said string of pipe for sealing off the drilling fluid from the formation to be tested, said packer adapted to be positively pressed against the walls of the formation to seal off the same, means at the lower end of said string of pipe to receive fluid from, said formation including an inlet opening into said pipe below said packer and a valve structure for controlling the inlet, said valve structure having a relatively. stationary .part connected to the packer and a relatively movable part connected to the pipe.”

Sustaining the claims in suit, the district court for eastern Texas found: Plaintiffs have a large business under the patent in suit. Prior to the discovery there was no apparatus or method' in use for testing^ productivity of formations in wells containing drilling fluid except by putting in a casing and removing the fluid. This patent *554 first disclosed testing apparatus and method requiring only a single string of pipe.

In this suit the trial court found: The Franklin Patent No. 263,330, dated August 29, 1882, anticipates both the method and apparatus covered by the patent in suit. The use of a packer is necessarily implied from the language of the Franklin patent. Without one, that device could not perform the functions attributed to it. - Plainly, it may be used as a tester; for by its use the contents of the producing stratum, sealed off from the -rest of the well and unimpeded in its entry -into the rat-hole by pressure of the rotajy mud, can be brought undiluted to the surface by a mechanism almost duplicating that shown by the patent' in suit. A packer to separate one stratum of the oil well from another is old in the art.

And it also found: The Cox Patent No. 1,347,534, dated July 27, 1920, and the Edwards Patent No. 1,514,-585, dated November 4, 1924, substantially disclose the method and device claimed in the patent in suit. The object of these patents, like that of the one in suit, was to ascertain. productivity ;of the stratum being drilled. There was no actual commercial use of the device disclosed and claimed in the patent in suit. It was impractical, due to difficulty in operating at .increased length. The inventor himself was employed to devise improvements in the valve structure. If valid at all, the patent must be restricted to its precise form. The method claims are invalid for want of invention. In important respects, defendants’ devices differ in operation from the device disclosed and claimed by the patent in suit; they are not infringements of it.

And that court decreed that as to all claims in suit, the patent is invalid.

The opinion of the circuit court of appeals for the fifth circuit considers the questions of invention here involved. In substance, it says:

*555 Method claim 18, taken as typical, assumes familiar apparatus and claims a monopoly on a new use of the old apparatus to achieve a result in a better way. That apparatus includes a single string of pipe lowered into the well, a packer on the string, and a valve at the lower end.

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Bluebook (online)
306 U.S. 550, 59 S. Ct. 662, 83 L. Ed. 980, 1939 U.S. LEXIS 1163, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honolulu-oil-corp-v-halliburton-scotus-1939.