Orton v. ROBICON CORPORATION

378 F. Supp. 930
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 15, 1974
DocketCiv. A. 71-1148
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 378 F. Supp. 930 (Orton v. ROBICON CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orton v. ROBICON CORPORATION, 378 F. Supp. 930 (W.D. Pa. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

WEBER, District Judge.

This is an action under the patent laws of the United States. The court has jurisdiction and venue is properly laid in this court.

Plaintiff, Harold S. Orton, is an individual residing in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, in this district. He is the inventor of an Electric Resistance Furnace on which he applied for a patent on May 3, 1967 and upon which patent No. 3,-395,273 was issued by the United States Patent Office on July 30,1968.

Plaintiff has brought this action for infringement against the Jeannette Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation, having its place of business in Jeannette, Pennsylvania, in this district, and against Robicon Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation, having its place of business in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.

The complaint charges that defendant Jeannette Corporation has installed an electrically heated glass furnace in its plant which infringes certain claims of Orton’s patent and that Robicon Corporation supplied the electrical circuitry for the tank. In the contract for the supply of the electrical circuitry Robicon gave Jeannette a “hold harmless” agreement specifically addressed to the patent in suit.

The Orton patent relates to an electrical resistance furnace used for the melting of glass. Glass is produced by the melting of a mixture of sand, lime, soda ash, and borax, to which, in commercial production, scrap glass (cullet) is added. It is then heated in a tank to a temperature in excess of 2000° F. to form a viscous melt, which is then drawn off to form the various products desired. On cooling it does not crystallize but remains in its amorphous state. Most commercial tanks are continuous flow tanks in which the mixture is fed into the melting section, where it is first heated by fossil fuels (fuel oil or gas) to a molten state and then passed to a refining tank or section, and finally the melt is drawn off for the forming process.

The use of electrical energy for glass melting and refining has been extant since the end of the 19th century. 1 It *932 is done by introducing an electrical current into the glass melt. Glass or its components are not electrical conductors at ordinary temperatures, but become highly conductive at molten temperatures. This quality is known as a “negative coefficient of resistance” or “negative resistance” and means that the hotter the molten glass the greater the conductivity. In thus conducting current heat is generated and this heat melts the glass and the higher the temperature of the melt the greater the resulting current. This quality causes the furnace to run out of control, produce hot spots, blister, or damage the structure of the furnace.

Initially electrical melting of glass was limited to “boosting” of tanks where the principal heat source was fossil fuels. Interest in greater use of electrical energy for this purpose developed, particularly in European countries. Orton viewed these developments and in 1963 he assisted in the design and installation of a new electrical furnace for glass melting at the plant of Jeannette Corporation, known as Tank No. 6, which was in operation for a period but which was confronted by problems of hot spots, and unbalanced heat. It is no longer in operation. Other attempts at utilizing electrical energy for melting produced similar problems.

Orton had worked on these problems for several years and in 1965 he designed a new type of electrical furnace which he believed would overcome these obstacles. This is the subject matter of the application for patent filed by him May 3, 1967 resulting in the issuance to him of Patent No. 3,395,237 on July 30, 1968.

Late in 1970 or early in 1971, Jeannette Corporation considered construction of a new all electric glass melting furnace. It sought bids on the electrical system for the new tank, and on May 28, 1971, Orton submitted a proposal together with a drawing of the configuration and electrode placement. Jeannette constructed the tank, known as Tank No. 8, but it awarded the electrical construction contract to defendant Robicon Corporation on November 2, 1971 upon a later proposal submitted by that company, with a “hold harmless clause” in which Robicon agreed to indemnify Jeannette against claims of infringement of the Orton patent. The new furnace was placed in operation late in 1972.

Orton claims that Jeannette Tank No. 8 infringes on claims 1-3, 5-8, 14-16 and 19-21 of his patent. The defendants have not contested the issues of infringement at trial except for one limited issue, and have defended on the grounds of invalidity of the Orton patent.

The one contested issue of infringement was the meaning of the term “independent electrical circuit” as used in the patent claims, and plaintiff’s evidence was sufficient to establish that the Jeannette Tank No. 8 embodied an independent electrical circuit for each pair of electrodes in the tank. We, therefore, find that the Tank 8 infringes upon the claims asserted in the patent in suit.

THE CLAIMS OF THE PATENT

The inventor asserts that no prior electric melting furnace achieved the desired results because uneven heat developed throughout the tank and the uneven heat accelerated the imbalance because the hotter areas were more highly conductive of the electric current. The inventor claims that no prior electrical furnace for glass melting was successful because this problem always appeared and no system of effectively keeping uniform heat in the molten mass had been devised up to this time.

The invention is described as follows in the patent. [Col. 1, 11s. 20-26]:

“This invention relates to an electric resistance furnace having an even number of vertical electrodes and, for each pair of electrodes, an independent circuit containing a current-control means and a constant voltage source. More specifically, it relates to the use of solid state gated switch controls, particularly silicon controlled rectifiers, as control devices in such furnaces.”

*933 The electrical control system is more fully described as follows: [Col. 1, line 64 to Col. 2, line 6]:

“In my invention the electrodes are paired and each pair of electrodes is part of an independent electrode circuit; the current in each circuit is individually controlled. Each circuit is independent in that current cannot flow from one circuit to another circuit except by flowing through the glass, and since the current in each circuit is controlled individually, very little current can flow between circuits by flowing through the glass. Thus, in a three-phase system most of the interphasal current is eliminated. ‘Hot spots’ do not develop since an increased current flow in any circuit is immediately controlled, where ‘control’ means the ability to maintain the average value of the square of the current at a desired level' in spite of variations in the resistance of the melt.”

The Orton patent concludes with twenty-six claims. Infringement of Claims 1 to 3, 5 to 8, 14 to 16, and 19 to 21 are involved in this action.

Claims 1, 6, 14 and 19 are independent claims, the remainder or dependent, that is they incorporate every limitation of the claims from which they depend.

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Related

Orton v. Robicon Corporation
515 F.2d 507 (Third Circuit, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
378 F. Supp. 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orton-v-robicon-corporation-pawd-1974.