Pittsburgh Iron & Steel Foundries Co. v. Seaman-Sleeth Co.

236 F. 756, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1318
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1916
DocketNo. 55
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 236 F. 756 (Pittsburgh Iron & Steel Foundries Co. v. Seaman-Sleeth Co.) 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
Pittsburgh Iron & Steel Foundries Co. v. Seaman-Sleeth Co., 236 F. 756, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1318 (W.D. Pa. 1916).

Opinion

ORR, District Judge.

This is a patent case. The plaintiff and the defendant are both corporations of the state of Pennsylvania, have their principal offices and foundries in this district, and are competitors with respect to their respective products of various kinds, but especially with respect to rolls which are used in forming and finishing rails, beams, and other forms of steel, and perhaps of other metals.

• The patent in suit is United States patent No. 1,071,364, issued August 26, 1913, to'James Ramsey Speer and William L. Forster, assignors of the plaintiff, for “alloy of iron.” The plaintiff charges the [757]*757defendant with infringing its rights under said patent by the use of the alloy therein disclosed.

The defenses are that the patent is invalid and void, because the alloy of iron covered by the patent had been in public use and on sale in the United Stales for more than two years prior to the application of the patent, because the same had been patented and described in printed publications prior to the same period, and because the subject-matter of the letters patent does not involve invention; and further it is insisted that there is no infringement on the part of the defendant.

[3] As an alloy is a mixture or combination of metals while they are in the state of fusion, it was to be expected that many analyses would be the subject of consideration in the disposition of this case. The patent in suit itself contains five separate analyses. The analyses offered by the plaintiff as tending to show infringement are reasonably few in number, but the analyses offered on the part of the defendant as tending to show the state of the prior art are very numerous.

Of the two claims of the patent in suit, one only is in issue which reads as follows:

1. “As a new article of manufacture, an alloy comprising essentially silicon, .10% to 2.00%; chromium, .5%' to 1.50% ; nickel, .25% to 1.00% ; sulphur, not exceeding -05% ; phosphorus, not exceeding .12% ; manganese, not exceeding .45%; total carbon, 1.25% to 3.50%<; and iron approximately sufficient to complete the 100%.”

[1, 4, 5] We notice in the claim, after the word “alloy,” the words “comprising essentially.” The use of those words in their ordinary meaning tends to convey the idea that any alloy which did not contain the several metals named in the claim and within the limits of the percentages therein stated would not be the alloy of the patent. “Essentially” means the “state or quality of being essential.” “Essential” means “indispensably necessary; important in the highest degree; requisite.” The word “essence,” from which both said words are derived, means “that without which a thing cannot be itself.” The word “essentially” is not a synonym for “substantially.” The use of both words by the patentees is found in the second claim of the patent, which is not in litigation, and cannot there be deemed, even by the patentees, to have been intended as synonymous.

[2] It appears in the claim that there are seven separate metals which are to be expected in the alloy in addition to iron. The percentages of the metals, when compared with iron, are very small, but as between themselves they have quite a large range. With respect to three of the metals, to wit, sulphur, phosphorus, and manganese, the minimum amount is not disclosed, while the respective maximum percentages are sulphur .05, phosphorus .12, and manganese .45. Because, therefore, with respect to these three metals, the minimum is not expressed, it is reasonably concluded that their relation to the other metals was not deemed important, except that they should not exceed the respective percentages disclosed as the maximum limits. Nowhere in the specifications or in the evidence on the part of the plaintiff is emphasis placed upon the value of either of those three named elements. In the original first claim filed with the application for the patent in suit there is the statement that “manganese, sulphur and phosphorus are held uni[758]*758formly low approaching the standard for steel, in order to reduce their undesirable effects.” Mr. Speer, on the witness stand, referring to the same three elements, said:

“They exist in our product, as they do in other products of iron and steel, especially steel,” and that “our effort was to keep them as uniformly low as was reasonably consistent with good manufacturing practice.”

It is therefore reasonable to conclude that they were made parts of the alloy of the patent merely because they were found in all steels to a greater or less extent, and for that reason only were elements essential to the production of the metal which the patentees believed to be new.

Excluding, therefore, the said three metals, and as well also iron, which is necessarily the main constituent of the alloy, we have left four other metals which are essential, in accordance with the instructions of the patent, to give to the alloy the characteristics which the patentees claim it possesses. Because the words “nickel” and “chromium” and the words “silicon” and “carbon” occur in the specification, respectively, in apparent association, we have given a relative proximity to such terms in the following rearrangement of the five several analyses set forth in the patent, all of which come within the ranges of percentages found in the claim in suit:

(a) Chromium 1.05 Silicon .60 Sulphur .03
Phosphorus .043
Nickel .50 Carbon 2.13 Manganese .30
(b) Chromium: .85 Silicon 1.55 Sulphur .023
Phosphorus .096
Nickel .43 Carbon 2.93 Manganese .45
(c) Chromium .85 Silicon 1.70 Sulphur .023
Phosphorus .096
Nickel .43 Carbon 3.20 Manganese .45
(d) Chromium .90 Silicon .70 Sulphur .033
Phosphorus .040
Nickel .50 Carbon 1.88 Manganese .250
(e) Chromium .90 Silicon .60 Sulphur .033
Phosphorus .073
Nickel .53 Carbon 2.26 Manganese .22

The general statement is made in the specification in reference to castings containing the elements and percentages specified in claim 1 that:

“Such eastings show remarkable results in tensile and transverse strength, and in wearing and abrasive qualities, and in resistance to the action of heat.”

With respect to the product from the uses of the analysis above marked “(a),” this statement is made:

“The result was a very hard resistant material, requiring the lowest lathe speed and the highest grade of tool steel to dress it”

[759]*759With respect to the product arrived at from the uses of the analyses above marked “(b)” and “(c),” this statement is made:

“The results obtained in these cases were materials which were hard and resistant to the action of abrasion under heat, and susceptible of being forged.”

With respect to the alloy arrived at from the analyses above marked “(d)” and “(e),” it is stated:

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Bluebook (online)
236 F. 756, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburgh-iron-steel-foundries-co-v-seaman-sleeth-co-pawd-1916.