Ladd v. W. & H. Walker, Inc.

7 F.2d 72, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1925
DocketNo. 3099
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 72 (Ladd v. W. & H. Walker, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ladd v. W. & H. Walker, Inc., 7 F.2d 72, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491 (3d Cir. 1925).

Opinion

RELLSTAB, District Judge.

The patent in suit is for a furnace for steam boilers.

George T. Ladd, owner of Ritts patent, No. 1,258,248, granted March 5,1918, charges the defendants jointly and individually with infringing this patent. The issues are invalidity and infringement.

The District Court dismissed the bill. It held the patent invalid because the subject-matter thereof was neither disclosed in the original application as filed nor supported by the inventor’s oath, and for lack of-novelty. It- also held that, even if the patent were valid, it was not infringed by the defendants’ furnace.

Ritts’ general purpose in the alleged invention, as gathered from his patent, was to secure substantially complete combustion of the fuel before the gases were brought into contact with the .boiler surfaces when the boiler was operated at maximum capacity. His patent is concerned entirely with the combustion chamber.

Of the three claims allowed by the Patent [73]*73Office, only two (1 and 3) arc in issue before us. These, as they emerged after three submitted sets of claims were rejected, read as follows:

Claim 1: “The combination with a boiler consisting of an upper and a lower drum, and a plurality of sets or banks of tubes connecting said drums, baffles so arranged substantially parallel with the sets of tubes as to form a plurality of vertical and connected passes for the hot gases, a combustion chamber formed in part by the fire box and having its rear wall formed by one of the baffles and inclosing’ tubes of the first set or bank, means for introducing fuel into the Are box at a point remote from the first set or bank of tubes, and means for introducing air to promote combustion, said combined fire box and combustion chamber being of substantially uniform transverse dimensions for the entire height and having such a height as will permit a practically complete combustion of the gases, etc., before the gases pass from the combustion chamber.”

Claim 3: “The combination with a boiler consisting of an upper and a lower drum, and a plurality of sets or banks of tubes connecting said drums, baffles extending tho entire width of the boiler and projecting vertically from the respective drums for such a distance toward the opposite drums as to provide connecting throats between tho adjacent passes formed by the baffles; a combustion chamber formed in part by the fire box and having its rear wall formed by one of the baffles and inclosing tubes forming the first set of banks, a stoking mechanism for feeding fuel into the fire box at a point remote from tho first set or bank of tubes, and means for introducing air to promote combustion, said combined fire box and combustion chamber being of substantially uniform transverse dimensions for the entire height and having a height approximately equal to the distance between said drums.”

None of tho rejected claims contained the following elements: A combustion chamber “formed in part by tho tire box,” now in claims 1 and 3; “means for introducing fuel into the fire box at a point remoto from the first set or bank of tubes,” now in claim 1; a stoking mechanism for feeding fuel into the fire box “at a point remote from the first set or bank of tubes,” now in claim 3.

The patent was issued on a substituted application. In the original application Ritts stated that the described invention related to “improvements in the construction of combustion chambers for vertical water tube boilers, employing a forced draft, as is generally necessary with underfeed stokers”; tiiat, “when employing a forced draft, gases are generated more rapidly than under natural draft conditions, and, being under the influence of the air pressure under the grate and to the pull of the stack, the products of combustion are caused to move rapidly, and in tho construction above described are brought into contact with the relatively cold tubes before complete combustion can occur”; that these combustion chambers were too confined “to permit of such an expansion of the gases, as is necessary for the complete combustion prior to the gases being cooled by contact with the cool tubes”; that “heretofore tho upper portion of the front wall of the setting has been separated only a short distance from the first set of tubes, and the fire box or eombustioa chamber was wholly outside of this front wall, which was supported on the inner end of the top of the fire box, and all tho products of combustion, on leaving the fire box, flowed through the narrow fluelike chamber, formed by the front wall of the setting and the baffling at the rear of the first set of tubes. The width of this chamber is substantially the same as that of the fire box, but its horizontal depth is less than half of that of the fire box, and, in addition to having an area greatly less than that of the fire box, the carrying capacity of this chamber is greatly reduced by the tubes of the first set or bank.”

Ritts stated: That his invention “has for its object a construction of fire box permitting of a free expansion of tho gases out of contact with the tubes, whereby a substantially complete combustion of the gas can be effected,” and that, in lien of the then existing “restricted fire box and chamber leading therefrom, this (Ritts) improved fire box and chamber are so constructed and arranged relative to the tubes that opportunity will be afforded for such an expansion of the gases generated as is essential to a complete combustion of the gases produced by the combustion of the fuel on the grate.” That his “combined fire box and combustion chamber permits of the natural vertical movement of the gases from the bed of fuel on tho grate, so that only tho comparatively small quantity of gases generated from the fuel on the inner portion of the grate, in line vertically with tho tube 3 (the set nearest the front wall, of his chamber) will come immediately into contact therewith, and that the gases for (from) all other portions of the bed of fuel are free to flow up and expand as they are completely burned.”'

[74]*74In answer to the Patent Office’s second re- • jeetion of Ritts’ claims, he filed substituted, specifications and an amended set of claims'! These specifications, after the rejection of the third set of claims, and after appeal to the board of examiners-in-ehief,' were amended by the insertion of the clauses relating to the combined fire box and combustion chamber and the feeding of fuel at a point remote from the heating surfaces of the boiler. Thus amended, these specifications, after eliminating therefrom matters not essential to the issues discussed herein, are as set forth in the Ritts patent.- The amendments referred to were considered by the board as excluding the citations relied upon by the examiner in rejecting the claims, and on its recommendation the amendments were admitted and the claims allowed! The dismissal of the appeal and the granting of the patent followed' without any further examination by the primary examiner, to ascertain whether the claims as amended fell within the seope of other patents or pending applications for patents. The substituted specifications, as well as the amendments made after the appeal was taken, in several respects, greatly differ from the specifications-as originally filed. Some of these differences presently will be mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 72, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-v-w-h-walker-inc-ca3-1925.