Riter-Conley Mfg. Co. v. Atlanta Gaslight Co.

234 F. 896, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1521
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedJune 10, 1916
DocketNo. 56
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 234 F. 896 (Riter-Conley Mfg. Co. v. Atlanta Gaslight Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riter-Conley Mfg. Co. v. Atlanta Gaslight Co., 234 F. 896, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1521 (N.D. Ga. 1916).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge

(after staling the facts as above). The order in which these patents were brought into this suit is shown in the above statement of the pleadings. The patent on which the suit was originally brought, No. 1,091,111, called the “standpipe patent,” was granted to Carpenter and Barnum on March 24, 1914. The first amendment sets up patent granted to Carpenter and Barnum on the 29th day of December, 1914, called the “valve patent,” or “lateral patent”; and the second amendment sets up a patent granted to Carpenter and Barnum on May 18, 1915, No. 1,140,113, which has been called, in this litigation, the “method patent,” and sometimes the “process patent.”

[1] In order to understand this last patent it has been necessary to examine with care the proceedings in the Patent Office with reference to the granting of this particular patent, and that has been made possible by the introduction in evidence of the file wrapper in the case. This patent was applied for, in different ways, four times before it was granted. From an examination of the different applications, and [902]*902the claims attached to each application, it appears that three times the claims made were rejected by the Commissioner of the Patent Office. The claims of the patent as finally granted are as follows :

“1. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described of reducing standpipe stoppage, consisting in discharging gas from a plurality of generating retorts directly into a vertical path formed by a standpipe and common to all of said retorts, and timing the charging with coal of each retort relatively to the charging of all the other retorts to maintain the temperature of said vertical path substantially uniform.
“2. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described of reducing standpipe stoppage, consisting in discharging gas simultaneously from a plurality of generating retorts directly and through relatively short lateral paths into a vertical path, said vertical path being formed by a standpipe and common to all the retorts, and timing the charging with coal of each retort relatively to the charging of all the other retorts to maintain the temperature of said vertical path substantially uniform.
“3. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described of reducing standpipe stoppage, consisting in discharging gas from a plurality of generating retorts directly and in lateral direction into' a vertical path formed by a standpipe and with the gas entering said path at different elevations, and timing the charging of each retort with coal relatively to the charging of every other retort to maintain the temperature of said' vertical path substantially uniform.
“4. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described of reducing standpipe stoppage, consisting in charging a group of retorts with coal at different times and thereby creating overlapping carbonization periods, the time of charging each retort of the group 'being remote from the time of charging the retorts nearest thereto and thereby minimizing variation in temperature of the retorts and of the gaseous output thereof, maintaining direct communication between each retort during its carbonization period and a vertical path-with said path formed by a standpipe common to all the retorts, and timing the charging of each retort relatively to the charging of all the other retorts to maintain the temperature of said path substantially uniform.
“5. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described which consists in charging in sequence a plurality of gas generating retorts with coal and retaining the charges within the retorts for corresponding periods of time and thereby maintaining overlapping carbonization periods of corresponding duration for all the retorts, discharging the gas from all the retorts directly into a vertical path with said path inclosed by a standpipe and common to all the retorts, and timing the charging of each retort relatively to charging of all the other retorts to maintain the composite gaseous stream within said vertical path substantially uniform in quality, temperature and volume.
“6. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described, consisting in discharging gas simultaneously from a plurality of generating retorts directly into a vertical path formed by a standpipe, said path common to all the retorts and proportioned relatively to the latter to forestall back pressure in any retort, and timing the charging with coal of each retort relatively to the charging of all the other retorts to maintain a gaseous stream within said path of substantially uniform volume.”

The claims that were rejected the last time by the Commissioner of the Patent Office, and which were succeeeded by the claims of the patent as issued, given above, were as follows:

“I. In the manufacture of gas, the method herein described which consists in heating a plurality of retorts to coal carbonizing temperature, charging the retorts with coal in such sequence as to produce carbonization periods differing one from another as to time of commencement, and separately delivering the gas from the retorts to a vertical standpipe during the respective car-bonization periods, the sequential charging of the apparatus producing in[903]*903dividual deliveries differing as to carbonization stages with, each delivery of substantially uniform stages.
•‘2. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described which consists in heating a plurality of retorts to coa.l carbonizing temperature, charging the retorts with coal in such sequence as to produce carbonization periods differing one from another as to time of commencement, and separately delivering the gas from the retorts to a vertical standpipe during the respective carbonization periods, the individual deliveries being in substantially uniform stages, the sequential charging producing a definite relationship between the gas delivery of different retorts.
“3. In the manufacture of coal gas, the method herein described which consists in heating a plurality of retorts to coal carbonizing temperature, charging the retorts with coal in such sequence as to produce carbonization periods differing one from another as to time of commencement, separately delivering the gas from the retorts to a vertical standpipe during the respective carboni-zation periods, the charging of the retorts in sequence and the delivery of the gas to the standpipe in stages differing from each other as to temperature, quality, and volume producing, through the resultant action of these differences, a diffusion of the deliveries within the standpipe with the outflow of gas from the standpipe substantially uniform in quality, temperature, and volume.
“4.

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Related

Riter-Conley Mfg. Co. v. Atlanta Gaslight Co.
246 F. 840 (Fifth Circuit, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 F. 896, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riter-conley-mfg-co-v-atlanta-gaslight-co-gand-1916.