Morgan Const. Co. v. Forter-Miller Engineering Co.

213 F. 451, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1906
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 10, 1914
DocketNo. 1775
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 213 F. 451 (Morgan Const. Co. v. Forter-Miller Engineering Co.) 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
Morgan Const. Co. v. Forter-Miller Engineering Co., 213 F. 451, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1906 (3d Cir. 1914).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

In the court below the Morgan Construction Company and Alexander Laughlin, the plaintiffs, by a bill in equity charged the Forter-Miller Engineering Company and Lfilworth, Porter & Company, Limited, with infringing claims 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 of a patent of which plaintiffs were respectively owner and licensee, viz., patent No. 632,020, applied for August 3, 1896, and granted August 29, 1896, to Charles H. Morgan for a furnace for heating ingots. On final hearing that court held the patent not infringed. From a decree in accord therewith, the plaintiffs took this appeal.

The art here involved is that of a furnace for heating steel ingots or billets preparatory to rolling. To bring such billets to the semi-plastic state necessary, the furnace is raised to a heat of about 2,000°' Fahrenheit. This must be done at a minimum cost of labor, fuel, and loss of metal by oxidation. The demand of the rolls on the furnace for such hot billets necessitates rapidity and continuity of supply. The extent, rapidity, and continuity of such billet supply can be measurably appreciated from the proofs which show that, in common practice mills turning out the usual output per turn of 200 tons of rods from 165-pound billets, the furnace must furnish at a bright red heat over four of such billets every minute during the 10% hours of the turn. In view of the rapidity and unceasing character of the work thus necessary to be done under such high heat conditions, it requires no citation of the abundant proof in the record to show we are here dealing not alone with conditions of most exacting mechanical requirements in the way of rapid and continuous transfer, but such transfer must be made under fierce heat surroundings. It will be obvious therefore that, as said by this court in Mott v. Standard, 159 Fed 135, 86 C. C. A. 325, an invention which gives to an important industry a device, labor-saving, effective, and which obviates labor under such fierce heat conditions, is not only a mechanical contribution but one which rises to the plane of the humane. In that regard the plaintiffs contend, as stated in their brief, that:

“Tlie furnace of tlie Morgan patent in suit was absolutely tlie first to provide for the discharge from the furnace automatically of a continuous and uniform rapid succession of uniformly heated billets.”

That the Morgan furnace accomplishes these results, that it has gone into rapid and general use, is shown by the proofs. Was the machine the first to do such work ? If it was, then the foregoing contention is established, and, if so, this patent should be sustained. To this question of priority we now address ourselves.

[453]*453Prior to Morgan’s furnace there were two types of billet-heating furnaces in use. One was the furnace with an ordinary, flat hearth and with doors at one side through which the billets were hand-charged and hand-drawn. Heaters who worked at such standard mills as the Oliver Wire Mills, the American Steel & Wire Company, and the Carnegie Steel Company testified to the use of such furnaces at these works. L,aughlin, one of the plaintiffs, gives a clear account of the working of these furnaces. He says:

“A. With the old Siemens furnaces it was usually customary to work billets about 3 feet long, and two rows of these billets were charged in the front doors of the furnaces. The first row of billets was pushed towards the back wall far enough to leave room for a second row of billets between the front wall of the furnace and the ends of the first row of billets. It was customary to have about four doors in one of these Siemens furnaces, and the total number of billets put in a furnace at one time was generally about 90 or 100. The usual practice, however, was not to charge all these billets at once, but to charge two doors, or 45 to 50 billets, at one time. All the charging of these furnaces was done by manual. labor. That is, a man picked up a billet, laid it on a flat bar known as a ‘peel,’ and then the heater or his helper took the handle of this, peel, the peel being about 10 feet long, and shoved this peel into the furnace, then slipped the peel 'out from under the billet, and drew the peel back ready for another billet. The drawing of the billets from this furnace was accomplished in the same way; that is, it was done by manual labor entirely. The heater or his helper would reach into the furnace with a hook and. would pull out the front row of billets one at a- time; that is, he would pull a billet up to the door, where the telegraph man would take hold of it with a pair of tongs, and would then run with it to the mill. This program was continued until the front row of billets had been pulled out, then the heater would have to reach clear back into the furnace to the second row of billets, and would use his hook to pull this second row of billets up to the door one at a time, and the telegraph man would take hold of each billet with his tongs, and run with it to the mill. As a rod-mill would roll about 2,000 billets in 11 hours, this meant that about 3 billets per minute must be delivered to the mill, and it was .therefore the practice to draw two furnaces, or rather have the contents of two furnaces simultaneously drawn, so that there would always be a telegraph man on his way to the rolls. This labor was of course very exhausting, and in hot weather particularly it was almost impossible to deliver billets to the mill fast enough to keep the mill going to its maximum capacity. And it was customary and necessary to have spell hands to assist the telegraph man to get the billets to the mill fast enough to keep the mill going to its capacity.”

Swinbank, who worked in the Oliver Mills from 1884 to 1902, and for much o'f the time was boss heater, testified that the labor cost of four furnaces thus operated was 40 cents a ton with a product of 150 tons in a 10%-hour turn. Gorsuch, also an experienced heater, who had worked in the mills of the other two companies, made the labór cost 51 cents per ton with a product of 165 tons per turn. These furnaces were all retained and operated by these up-to-date companies until the Morgan device came into the art. The second type of furnace in use prior to Morgan was used by the Pittsburgh. Wire Company. This type originated in the Allen patent of 1880, No. 234,162, and was built by the Morgan Construction Company, one of the plaintiffs. Thé Allen was rectangular and relatively long. It had a fuel grate at one end and a stack at the other; the flames thus passing the furnace length. Just back of the grate was a flat hearth, and from this the heated billets were hand-drawn through a side wall door just as in the [454]*454furnaces of the Oliver, American, and Carnegie Companies. Where it differed from them was that the billets were machine-charged. At the stack end wall of the furnace was a door through which the billets were charged or pushed in broadside by means of a hydraulic cylinder. As the billets successively entered, they moved forward side by side, on a track consisting of a pair of inclined water-cooled pipes, elevated on longitudinal piers, until they reached the end of the track, whence they were pushed off, one by one, onto the hearth first described. The billet, after being thus mechanically fed and dumped on this heárth was hand-shifted to make room for the succeeding billets, and when finally heated was hand-drawn, endwise as above described, and taken to the rolls.

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213 F. 451, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-const-co-v-forter-miller-engineering-co-ca3-1914.