Renton v. Reilly

175 F. 96, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5725
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 F. 96 (Renton v. Reilly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Renton v. Reilly, 175 F. 96, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5725 (E.D.N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

CHATFEILD, District Judge.

The complainant claims rights under a patent issued to him upon the 29th day of December, 1903, No. 74.8,118, for what he calls improvements in floor-joints for water-closets. A statement of the six claims as set forth in the letters patent will make clear certain questions raised by the issues.

Claim 1 is as follows:

“1. A floor-flango for a water-closet bowl, comprising an annular clainpiespíate for connection with the bowl and an annular pipe-holding part projecting downward from the damping-plate and having a converging inner wall of substantial length to afford a long clamping-surface for the pipe.”

Claim 2 is the same, with the insertion of the words “with a solder-receiving enlargement therein” after the words “converging inner wall.”

Claim 3 is the same as claim 2 except that the words “solder-receiving enlargement” are not used, and in tlieir place is inserted “sharply inclined at its upper part and converging uniformly below the sharply-inclined part.”

Claim I is as follows:

“4. .V floor-joint for waier-closets, comprising a floor-flango having a damping-plate for conned,ion with the bowl and having an annular pipe-liolding pan witli a converging inner wall of substantial length, a sewer-pipe within i!u> pipe-holding part and expanded in contact with the wall thereof, a bowl having a recessed base and a spud projecting therefrom, a gasket extending between the base and floor-flange and also between the spud and pipe, and means for damping the clamping-plate of the floor-flange to the bowl.”

Claim 5 is substantially the same as .claim 4, with the addition of the provision for “a solder-receiving enlargement.”

Claim C is the same as claim a, except that the words “sokler-receiviug enlargement” are stricken out, and (as in claim 3) the phrase as to the sharply-inclined upper part of the converging inner wall is inserted. Claim 0 also has the added statement “substantially as set forth”; this phrase not being present in any of the other claims.

The complaint is in the usual form, charging the defendant with infringement of the above-recited patent, and the answer, while denying infringement, not only enumerates a number of patents which are alleged to be anticipatory, but also asserts prior knowledge for a considerable period in the trade generally. The defendant further denies any invention on the part of the complainant prior to use by the defendant’s foreman some year or more before tlie application for a patent, and also argues invalidity based upon the language of the patent itself.

It is apparent from the record that the needs of the plumbing or building trade, and also the course of invention as disclosed by the different patents introduced and the testimony of the witnesses, followed two general lines. The first of these lines has to do with joints or connections between sinks and similar structures, while the second line of progress had to do with the particular joint or pipe-connection present in all water-closets since the use of any porcelain self-sup[98]*98porting bowl. The fundamental difference between these two lines of development or the structures for each purpose lies in the fact that, in the case of a sink or wash-bowl, the joint or connection at the top of the pipe with the bottom of the sink is above the trap and does not need to be impervious to water or air, except in such a way as to prevent leakage, while in the construction of houses or rooms to be occupied by living creatures any joint below the trap or valve in direct connection with a sewer pipe must be hermetically sealed against the escape of gas; it being well known that such gas is frequently without odor, and may not be detected until it may have had. injur ions or fatal effects.

The present universal system of so constructing water-closet bowls as to include the support or seat, the siphon, and the extension toward the sewer pipe in one piece of porcelain, with a tightly fitting hollow flanged surface as a base for the bowl upon the floor (whether that floor be stone or other material) makes a joint at the floor not only the important, but the vulnerable,' point when either the house, the pipe, or the closet is subjected to strain. It is manifest, that any settling of the floor or twisting of the pipe will injure the joint, unless provision is made for sufficient freedom to prevent such result. The use of a section of lead pipe between the ordinary cast-iron soil-pipe and the porcelain spud which is the downward projection of the pipe in the bowl itself has afforded sufficient elasticity and yielding capacity, and has long been the ordinary method of construction. A correspondingly tight and strong joint between the top of the lead pipe and the porcelain spud is necessary, in order to give sufficient strength and rigidity to the porcelain bowl, thus causing any strain to be communicated to the yielding lead pipe. The close-fitting porcelain flange prevents access to the joint in question after the bowl has been set, and therein a radical difference must be noticed both in form of construction and the reasons therefor from the joints of sinks and similar structures, which are exposed and easy of access for the reasons above stated.

Without attempting to fix the exact scope of the ideas which Renton had in his mind at the time, it appears from the testimony that in the fall, or around December, 1901, he was experimenting upon improvements to floor-flanges or the joint-connections above described for porcelain bowl water-closets, and had as the object of such experiments a desire to obtain a strong and perfectly tight joint between a metal flange of cast material and the top of the lead or malleable pipe upon which the closet was to be set.

The testimony shows that at that time he had a brass model made, consisting of a flat flange with a vertical’ collar or ring; converging inward and downward, approximately four inches in diameter, the ordinary size of soil-pipe for the purposes in question. The angle or turn between the horizontal flange and the converging collar was beveled in such a way as to form an inverted! conical section similar to the feature described in claims 3 and 6 of the patent, and used in practice as a recess or space for solder. In all such structures the malleable or lead pipe projecting up through this flange is hammered out [99]*99over this conical section and horizontal flange. The solder inserted between the two makes a tight and strong union.

It also appears from the evidence that at the time of these experiments Renton commented thereon to his brother, and made the statement that what the plumbers wished was a flange or ring with a collar of sufficient length to give some strength to the joint; and it is also apparent that at that time, and in all the experiments connected with this subject, he had in mind the use (at that time well known) of some packing-ring or gasket, which would be indispensable if any joint between the flange and the spud of the water-closet bowl was to be rendered impervious to gas and liquid.

The testimony of the complainant shows that for a space of approximately two years Renton was experimenting with the flange in question, and his own testimony is that he was endeavoring to find a suitable material to furnish a satisfactory gasket.

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Bluebook (online)
175 F. 96, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renton-v-reilly-nyed-1909.