Merrill v. Yeomans

17 F. Cas. 113, 1 Holmes 331, 1 Ban. & A. 47, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1859
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 13, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 113 (Merrill v. Yeomans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrill v. Yeomans, 17 F. Cas. 113, 1 Holmes 331, 1 Ban. & A. 47, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1859 (circtdma 1874).

Opinion

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge.

The invention of the complainant relates to the manufacture, from heavy hydrocarbon oils possessing the characteristic odors of such oils, by a process of treatment described in the specification in his patent, of deodorized heavy hydrocarbon oils, free from such characteristic odors, and having only a slight smell like fatty oil, and suitable for lubricating and other purposes.

The most important and intricate questions presented at the hearing of the ease relate to the construction of the first claim in the patent. Considered in the broader view which courts take of the construction of claims, by considering them in connection with the specification, and the discovery and invention therein described, the question presented is: What is really the subject of the complainant’s patent? Is it for a new article of manufacture, or for a new process of manufacturing? Is it, in the words of the statute, “for a new and useful art,” or for “a new and-useful manufacture?” It is contended on the part of the complainant that the patent secures to Merrill his product, and products substantially the equivalent of his, by whatever process produced. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the patent is only for a process. Another construction, which we shall have occasion to consider hereafter, may be adverted to here, that the patent is for the described product of a specially described process. The questions of construction of the claims are attended with more difficulty, from the fact that the pat-entee, in stating his invention and specifying his process and making his formal claim, uses the word “manufacture” in its two different meanings, signifying, respectively, the operation of making, and the thing made.

To arrive at the true construction of the claim, we must first understand the nature and properties of “the heavy hydrocarbon. [114]*114oils,” which are the subject of the described treatment, next the described treatment, process, or art, and finally, “the deodorized heavy hydrocarbon oils,” the described product of the treatment. This renders necessary a hasty glance at the history and state of the art prior to the invention of the complainant.

These oils are called “hydrocarbons” because they are composed of hydrogen and carbon, and do not, like most animal and vegetable oils, contain oxygen. They are the product of distillation of bituminous coals and shales, and of natural asphaltum or bitumen. The principal source of supply at the present time, however, is from the petroleum-wells, the product of whichis used either in its natural state or as converted into a variety of articles by the process of distillation. By distillation a great variety of products can be obtained by the same process from ocal, ccal-tar, asphaltum, and petroleum. The distillation of petroleum was at first practised only for the purposeof refining it by separating it from foreign matters, and separating from it some of the combined carbon, too large a proportion of carbon causing it to generate too much smoke, and rendering it unfit for use in lamps as an illuminating-oil. It soon became known that, in distillation, petroleum separated into hydrocarbons of different gravities. Ordinary distillation separated the substance from fixed bodies held in solution or suspension in it, and separated the more volatile bodies from those of less volatility. By destructive distillation of petroleum, the character of the substances was changed in like manner as gas is produced by the destructive distillation of coal.

In the process of distillation, petroleum separates into hydrocarbon fluids of different gravities. The lightest fluids come over and are condensed first, and they increase in gravity as the distillation proceeds. The lighter oils come over more readily and with less heat. The heavier oils require a higher degree of heat to vaporize them. During the process of distillation, by changing from time to time the receiving-vessel into which the distillate runs from the condenser, the distillate is separated into the various products having different gravities. This is termed “fractional distillation.” By continually changing the receiver from time to time, fluids of any desired gravity may be obtained, from the highest to the lowest which petroleum will yield under treatment An arbitrary division of the products is made in practice, according to the commercial uses of the products. All the fluid which first runs from the still, until it falls to a gravity of about 60° Baumé, is classed as benzole or naphtha. All in the next grade, between 60° and about 3S° or 40° Baumé, is known as “burning-oil,” or “refined oil,” and more popularly known as “kerosene-oil,” and is used principally for illuminating purposes. All the distillate below 3S° or 40° Baumé is known as paraffine-oil, or lubrica ting-oil; and this is the product of distillation which Merrill refers to in his specification as “heavy hydrocarbon oil.” The language of the specification is: “My invention relates to the heavy hydrocarbon oils, which have heretofore been produced by distilling crude petroleum, or the crude oils obtained from the distillation of bituminous coals, bituminous shales, bituminous schists, asphaltum, and other substances producing hydrocarbon oils, by distillation. * * * These oils are well known to the trade, and distinguished from the lighter burning-oils and naphthas by the term ‘heavy oils,’ their specific gravity varying greatly between the asphaltum oils and paraffine oils.”

These heavy hydrocarbon oils thus produced had a persistent disagreeable smell, which made them offensive and undesirable for use in close, warm rooms, as in woollen manufactories. “Attempts had been made to remove the smell by filtration, but with partial success.” It had been the practice to treat such oils with acids and alkalies for the purpose of removing the peculiar offensive odor. This resulted in improving the character of the odor, but without wholly removing the persistent disagreeable smell. For several years before the date of Merrill’s invention the progress of improved modes of treatment of paraffine oils had been so great that heavy hydrocarbon oils for lubricating uses had been produced and sold in large quantities, substantially, although not entirely, free from the peculiar odor of petroleum distillates.

William Atwood, a witness on the part of the complainant, who has been connected with this manufacture from its inception to this day, and who is probably as familiar with the history of the art and the properties of the different hydrocarbons as any manufacturing chemist in this country, testifies in relation to the lubrieating-oils manufactured prior to'the date of the Merrill invention by the Portland Kerosene-Oil Company, and known, in the evidence in this record, as the “Portland Oils.” His testimony is, in substance, that the Portland oil compared with the oil manufactured by the Downer Company under Merrill’s patent, is “asgoodasa lubricating-oil, but not for mixing with other oils, where it is desired that its own peculiar smell shall not appear. * * * There still remained the odor of the volatile oils, which were always present. It was certainly desirable to remove any odor arising from any source.” He also describes the odor of the Merrill oil as “a different odor” from the odor of the Portland oil, “being less tenacious: or, in other words, one can be completely covered up with a smaller amount of any other odor than the other.”

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 113, 1 Holmes 331, 1 Ban. & A. 47, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-v-yeomans-circtdma-1874.