Ratigan v. Deckard Supply Co.

91 F.2d 722, 35 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 8, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4338
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 1937
DocketNo. 1483
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 91 F.2d 722 (Ratigan v. Deckard Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ratigan v. Deckard Supply Co., 91 F.2d 722, 35 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 8, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4338 (10th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

BRATTON, Circuit Judge.

Reference will be made to the parties to this action, having for its purpose the restraint of further infringement of letters patent and an accounting for past infringement, as they appeared in the court below. The original bill, filed in .1933, charged infringement of four patents issued [723]*723to plaintiff. During the pendency of the action, plaintiff acquired by assignment patent number 1,582,224, issued to George H. Prout in 1926. An amended bill was thereafter filed which included a charge of infringement of that patent. The defenses were invalidity and noninfringement. The court found that one of the patents issued to plaintiff was invalid; that another was valid, but not infringed; and that the two remaining ones were valid and infringed. Defendants paid the fixed damages for such infringement and surrendered all offending devices then on hand; and neither party appealed from the provisions in the decree relating to such patents. Plaintiff relied at the trial upon claims 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the Prout patent. The court found such claims valid, but not infringed. Plaintiff appealed from that provision in the decree.

The patent relates to an improvement in apparatus used in the pumping of deep wells. The equipment long used in pumping deep oil wells includes a perpendicular Sampson post about eleven feet in heighth from the floor of the derrick on which a walking beam twenty-four to twenty-six feet in length is mounted. The rearward end of the walking beam is linked to a crank associated with a handwheel. A hanger means at the forward end of the walking beam makes connection with a polish rod which extends through a stuffing box and for a short distance into the well at which point it connects with the sucker rod to which the pump is attached in the lower reaches of the well. As the walking beam oscillates, an upward and downward movement is transmitted to the polish rod, sucker rod and pump. The polish rod is a large steel rod, and it must fit closely into the stuffing box in order to prevent leakage. Since the point at which the hanger is mounted on the walking beam travels in .the arc of a circle of a pivot at the fulcrum, that line departs from the vertical axial line of the well. As the length of the stroke is increased the degree of departure of the arcuate path from the axial line becomes greater. The result is that the polish rod is deflected or bent. The deflection or bending is repeated with each stroke and that causes fatigue and wear. In an effort to bring about vertical movement of the polish rod, the patent discloses a hanger mounted on the forward end of the walking beam with a trunnion and extending vertically downward. The hanger is divided into two sections pivotally hinged together. The lower part extends downward to a carrier-bar or support to which the polish rod is screwed by a clamp. The hinge or pivotal connection between the two parts of the hanger is substantially the horizontal plane passing through the fulcrum of the walking beam, or slightly below such plane. A fixture is attached to the underside of the walking beam with bolts or lag screws. It consists of a slot about two and a half or three inches in length. A strut means extends in a diagonal downward direction from the slot to the hanger. The upper or inner end of the strut is mounted on a pin which is disposed within the slot and forms an attaching point. The lower end is pivotally attached to the hanger with the shaft or pin that connects the upper and lower parts of the hanger stem. As the beam lifts, the weight of the sucker rod and the fluid being pumped is suspended on the trunnion at the end of the beam; but when the beam has passed a certain point in the course of the stroke, the pin in the upper end of the strut moves into contact with the bottom or rear of the slot, and guidance of the polish rod is thus transferred from the trunnion to the hinge pin connecting the upper and lower sections of the hanger stem. As the beam is lowered from a horizontal position, the strut moves forward in the slot and in that manner the point of suspension is restored to the trunnion. Operation of that kind is commonly called a straight-line hanger method.

Defendants began the manufacture of their first straight-lift hanger in 1930. In structure the stem consists of two sections joined with a hinge. The upper section is provided with a cross tee rvhich rests on the top of the beam. A strut engages the upper section of the hanger near its lower end by means of a socket. The other end of the strut engages the lower end of a back brace by means of a socket. The upper end of the back brace is arranged to engage the walking beam at a pojnt adjacent to the cross tee. The strut has a spring which permits movement of about two and a half inches. In operation, the back of the back brace engages the beam on the upward stroke and thus transfers guidance of the polish rod from the cross tee to the point at which the strut engages [724]*724the hanger stem' through the socket connection. This type of device was manufactured for about six months, and about fifteen1 or twenty of them were sold. The manufacture of them was then discontinued because of certain undesirable ' features. The manufacture of the second type of hanger was begun soon after discontinuance of the first. .It is quite similar to the former type, except that the strut and back brace arrangement forms a part of a separate unit consisting of four or five parts. It has a secondary bar back of the upper section of the stem. The secondary bar is connected with the beam at the top by means of a beam plate and it is connected at the bottom with the upper section of the hanger stem. The diagonál strut is connected with the secondary bar at its lower end. The other end of the strut is connected with the third member or back of the brace, which is attached at its upper end to the secondary bar near its top. In like manner the back of the brace comes in contact with the beam on the upward movement. The next type manufactured is quite similar to the one just described, except that the sécondary bar is omitted, the strut is connected at its lower end directly to the lower end of the stem and at its upper end to the lower end of the back brace, and the back brace is connected at its upper- end with the beam near the cross tee. The next type need not be discussed at length because its manufacture was discontinued without it going into commercial use. It includes a back brace connected with the walking beam at its lower side and has a turnbuckle arrangement. The • remaining type has a vertical stem suspended from the walking beam by means of a cross tee. Two strut parts are connected at -their lower end with a crossbar which in turn is pivotally connected to a bearing at the lower end of the hanger stem. 1 The strut parts extend diagonally upward from their connection with the crossbar to the top of the walking beam, one being on each side of the beam. There is a plate on the top of the beam held in position with four' J bolts. There is a slot in the plate. A crossbar on the side reins drops into the slot and is held securely in the pocket of the slot with an eye bolt that- goes around the crossbar. The operating purpose of this type is to transfer guidance of the polish rod on the upward movement of the walking beam, from the cross tee to the point-' at the lower end of the hanger stem.

The essence of Prout’s improvement is the hanger stem consisting of two parts hinged together with. a shaft, and the strut means with one end positioned in the slot in the fixture attached to the interior of the walking beam and the other end pivotally attached to the hanger at the point where its two parts are hinged together.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 F.2d 722, 35 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 8, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratigan-v-deckard-supply-co-ca10-1937.