Minerals Separation, Ltd. v. Hyde

242 U.S. 261, 37 S. Ct. 82, 61 L. Ed. 286, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1517
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1916
Docket46
StatusPublished
Cited by176 cases

This text of 242 U.S. 261 (Minerals Separation, Ltd. v. Hyde) 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
Minerals Separation, Ltd. v. Hyde, 242 U.S. 261, 37 S. Ct. 82, 61 L. Ed. 286, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1517 (1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clarke

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this suit the complainants, the first named as the ■ owner and, the other as general licensee, claim an infringe *263 ment of United States letters patent No. 835120, issued on the sixth day of November, 1906, to Henry Livingstone Sulman, Hugh Fitzalis Kirkpatrick-Picard and John Ballot. The usual injunction, accounting and damages are prayed for. The District Court sustained the patent as to claims numbered 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11 and 12; found that the defendant had infringed each of' these claims, and granted the prayer of the petition. .The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed the decree of the District Court and remanded the case with instructions to dismiss the bill. The case is here on writ of certiorari to review that decision.

As stated in the specification, the claimed discovery of the patent in the suit relates “to improvements in the concentration of ores, the object being to separate metalliferous. matter, graphite, and the like from gangue by means of oils, fatty acids, or other substances which have a preferential affinity for metalliferous matter over gangue.”

The answer denies all of the allegations of the bill and avers that in twenty-five designated United States and five British patents the process described in suit was “fully and clearly described or claimed,” and it also avers that the claimed discovery was invented, known and used by many persons long prior to the time when the application was made for the patent, in suit. Notwithstanding this elaboration of denial counsel for the defendant in the summarized conclusion to their brief- rely upon only five of the many patents referred to as showing that the patent in suit was anticipated and is therefore invalid for want of novelty and invention, viz: Everson (1886), Froment (Italy, 1902; Great Britain, .1903),. Glogner (1903), Schwarz (applied for April 19, .1905, issued December 19, 1905), and Kirby (applied for December 17, 1903, issued December 18,1906). And the defendant, a man obviously. experienced in the subject, says that, in his opinion, the *264 whole basis of flotation concentration was disclosed in the Everson United States patent No. 348157 and in the Froment British patent.

It is clear that in the prior art, as it is developed in this record, it was well known that oil and oily substances had a selective affinity or attraction for, and would unite mechanically with, the minute particles of metal and metallic compounds found in crushed or powdered ores, but would not so unite with the quartz, oí rocky nonmetallic material, called “gangue.” Haynes British patent (1860), and United States patents, Everson (1886), Robson (1897) and Elmore (1901). It was also well known this selective property of oils and oily substances was increased when applied to some ores -by the addition of a small amount of acid to the ore and water used in process of concentration. United States patents, Everson (1886), Elmore (1901), and Cattermole (1904).

Prior to the date of the patent in suit a number of patents had been granted in this and other countries for processes aiming to make practical use of this prpperty of oil and of oil mixed with acid in thé treatment of ores, all of which, speaking broadly, consisted in mixing finely crushed or powdered ore with water and oil, sometimes with acid added, and then in variously treating the mass— “the pulp”- — thus formed so as to separate the oil, when it became impregnated or loaded with the metal and metal-bearing particles, from the valueless gangue. From the resulting concentrate the metals were recovered in various ways.

The processes, of this general character, described in the prior patents-may be roughly divided into two classes. The process in the patents of the first class is called in the record the “Surface Flotation Process” and it depends for its usefulness on the oil used being sufficient to collect and hold in mechanical suspension the small particles of metal and metalliferous compounds and by its buoyancy *265 to carry them to the surface of the mixture of ore, water and oil, thus making it possible, by methods familiar to persons skilled in the art, to float off the concentrate thus obtained into any desired receptacle. The waste material, or gangue, not being affected by the oil and being heavier than water sinks to. the bottom of the containing vessel and may be disposed of as desired.

The process of the other class, called in the record the “Metal Sinking Process,” reverses the action of the Surface Flotation Process and is illustrated by the Cattermole U. S. patent, No. 777273, in which oil is used to the extent of 4% to 6% to 10% of the weight of the metalliferous mineral matter, depending on the character of the ore, for the purpose of agglomerating the oil-coated concentrate into granules heavier than water, so that they will sink to the bottom of the containing vessel, permitting the gangue to be carried away by an upward flowing stream of water.

The process of the patent in suit, as described and practiced, consists in the use of an amount of oil which is “critical,” and minute as compared with the amount used in prior processes “amounting to a fraction of one per cent, on the ore,” and in so impregnating with air the mass of ore and water used, by agitation — “by beating the air into the mass” — as to'cause to rise to the surface of the mass, or pulp, a froth, peculiarly coherent and persistent in character, which is composed of air bubbles with only a trace of oil in them, which carry in mechanical suspension a very high percentage of the metal and metalliferous particles of ore which were contained in the mass of crushed ore subjected to treatment. This froth can be removed and the metal recovered by processes with which the patent is not concerned.

It is obvious that the process of the patent in suit, as we have described it, is not of the Metal Sinking class, and while it' may, in terms, be described as a Surface *266 Flotation Process, yet it differs so essentially from all prior processes in its character, in its simplicity of operation and in the resulting concentrate, that we are persuaded that it constitutes a new and patentable discovery.

The prior processes which we have described required the use of so much oil that they were too expensive to be used on lean ores, to which they were intended to have their chief application, and the efforts of investigators for several years prior to the discovery of the process in suit had been directed to the search for a means or method of reducing- the amount of oil used, and it is clear from the record that approach was being made, slowly, but more and more nearly to the result which was reached by the patentees of the. process in suit in March, 1905.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 U.S. 261, 37 S. Ct. 82, 61 L. Ed. 286, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minerals-separation-ltd-v-hyde-scotus-1916.