Jackson v. Dunham-Bush, Inc.

220 F. Supp. 377, 139 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 119, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9999
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 17, 1963
DocketCiv. No. 10867
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 220 F. Supp. 377 (Jackson v. Dunham-Bush, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Dunham-Bush, Inc., 220 F. Supp. 377, 139 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 119, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9999 (D. Md. 1963).

Opinion

WINTER, District Judge.

Plaintiff has sued for infringement of his Patent No. 2,755,371, issued July 17, 1956, for a defroster for freezing coils. Joined as defendants are the manufacturer of the alleged infringing device, Dunham-Bush, Inc. (hereafter called “Dunham-Bush”), an assignee, through a subsidiary, of Patent No. 2,611,587, issued to Cecil Boling on September 23,. 1952, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea. Co., a user of the alleged infringing device, and Roche and Hull, Inc., a distributor of the alleged infringing device. Dunham-Bush assumed the defense for all defendants, and has defended by the-assertion that plaintiff’s Patent No. 2,755,371 is invalid but, if valid, not infringed. The alleged infringing device-also is a defrosting device for refrigerators, deep freezers and cooling systems.

One of the results of efficient artificial' refrigeration is to cause the condensation and freezing of moisture on the cooling-coils, and this has the effect of impairing the heat withdrawal properties of the-cooling coils. It is necessary, therefore,, that from time to time this frozen moisture be removed. Needless to say,, a prime objective of this result is to do-it quickly and with as little heating of the area being refrigerated as possible. The process of defrosting may be accomplished in at least two ways, either by the application of heat to the exterior of the cooling coils or the application of heat to the interior of the cooling coils. Jackson’s patent, the accused device and the prior art cited in the case all employ the latter approach because it accomplishes the desired defrosting in less time. Interior application of heat has this effect because the ice and frost next to the cooling coil melts first so that the remaining ice and frost break off of their own weight.

Plaintiff’s patent described a freezing unit “formed of tubing * * * provided with holes at predetermined bends to receive heat unit closures to enclose the heating units and prevent the heaters from coming into direct contact with the freezing medium,” Jackson Patent, p. 1, col. 2, lines 4-8. “Each closure is closed at one end, and open at the other end to receive the heater, and is welded * * * [379]*379to provide a leakproof joint between the ■closure and the bends. The heating units are connected into an electrical circuit and are automatically turned off and on at predetermined intervals by the use of any of the conventional time or temperature control electric switches that can be used to stop the circulation of the refrigerant and turn on the heaters to raise the temperature of the freezing medium in the freezing unit or coils at predetermined intervals without appreciably raising the temperature of the freezing medium in the rest of the system * * *,” Jackson Patent, supra, lines 10-22. This device is said to allow the heaters to be replaced when necessary without draining the freezing medium from the system, and also to enable the system to be defrosted more quickly when using this “invention”. Specifically, in the patent it was claimed:

“In a refrigeration system of the dry expansion type, an evaporator comprising a plurality of parallel straight sections, a plurality of U-shaped sections each associated with two straight sections of one of said pairs for connecting said sections to each other, an enclosing element projecting from the exterior of certain of said U-shaped sections into one [380]*380of the straight sections associated therewith, an electric heating element removably positioned in each of said enclosing elements and means forming with said heating elements an electric circuit whereby refrigerant in all of the portions of said evaporator may be subjected to a heating influence to melt from the evaporator frost and ice formed thereon.”

Although plaintiff testified, without corroboration, that he conceived of his claimed invention in the latter part of 1951, he stipulated that he first disclosed it to another about February, 1953.2

Plaintiff made application for a patent March 20, 1953 and, after some amendment to the application, Patent No. 2,755,371 was granted July 17, 1956. It appears that in granting the patent, the Patent Office considered the following previously issued patents: Bayer, No. 1,676,068, issued July 3, 1928; Pierson, No. 1,731,058, issued October 8, 1929; Alex, No. 1,764,139, issued June 17,1930; and Dick, No. 2,001,323, issued May 14, 1935. Of these the Patent Office considered the Dick patent, No. 2,001,323, as the principal objection to the granting of a patent to plaintiff and, in the course of the processing of plaintiff’s application, his claims and specifications were amended to overcome the effect of the Dick patent.

Plaintiff’s is a paper patent. The device has never been manufactured nor, indeed, has any model ever been constructed. Plaintiff, over a period of years, has sought to interest seventeen manufacturers in a license to manufacture his device; but to no avail.

The alleged infringing device is manufactured by Dunham-Bush, utilizing some aspects of the Boling patent, No. 2,611,587. The Boling patent teaches a cooling or freezing coil of a refrigeration system constructed from two tubes, one of small diameter and one of larger diameter, with a special fin assembly separating the tubes. The fin assembly is first placed in the larger tube, then the smaller tube is slipped into the larger tube and also passed through the fin assembly. By means of a mandrel or wedge pushed through the center of the smaller tube, the smaller tube is expanded and its diameter enlarged, so that it squeezes, the fin assembly against the larger outer tube and results in a tight-fitting construction with metal to metal contact between the inner tube, the fin assembly and the outer tube.

When the refrigeration system is in operation the refrigerant is pumped through the area between the outer tube and the inner tube. In this area is also found the fin assembly. The pumping of the refrigerant results in rapid cooling of the outside surface of the outer tube and cooling action in the area outside the outer tube. When ice or frost forms on the outside surface of the outer tube, the flow of refrigerant is stopped and drained from the tube. Heat is then introduced into the inner tube. In the Boling patent the source of heat is heated gas or heated liquid which flows through the inner tube and then into header troughs which connect the individual inner tubes to form a complete system. Although the precise device described in the Boling patent continues to be manufactured by Dunham-Bush, Dunham-Bush now manufactures in quantity devices of the type described in the Boling patent, but in which an electrical heating element has been substituted for the heated gas. When the defrosting process is in operation heat is transferred from the inner tube to the outer tube, principally by means of conduction through the metal fin assembly and not principally by radiation, as required by the Jackson patent.

Validity of the Jackson Patent.

The defense of invalidity of the Jackson patent rests upon the claim that it was anticipated by the prior art and, [381]*381hence, is invalid, 35 U.S.C.A. § 102(e), codifying the rule of Milburn Co. v. Davis etc. Co., 270 U.S. 390, 46 S.Ct. 324, 70 L.Ed. 651 (1926). See also Sperry Rand Corporation v.

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Bluebook (online)
220 F. Supp. 377, 139 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 119, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-dunham-bush-inc-mdd-1963.