Ruth v. Blue River Constructors

224 F. Supp. 717, 139 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 257, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10074
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedOctober 17, 1963
DocketCiv. A. No. 6679
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 224 F. Supp. 717 (Ruth v. Blue River Constructors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruth v. Blue River Constructors, 224 F. Supp. 717, 139 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 257, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10074 (D. Colo. 1963).

Opinion

CHRISTENSEN, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of U. S. Letters Patent No. 2,611,680 entitled “Exhaust Gas Conditioning Method”, which issued September 23, 1952, to the plaintiff, Joseph P. Ruth, upon an application filed January 16, 1950.

The case was tried to the Court without a jury April 15 to 20, 1963 and has been submitted for decision upon written briefs. Involved in addition to the issue of infringement are the usual questions of invention, novelty and utility with reference to a patent covering an air “scrubber” or “conditioner” designed to remove toxic gases from and to cool diesel engine exhaust, so as to make more feasible the employment of such engines in underground mining or construction operations.

The plaintiff, Joseph P. Ruth, is a resident of Denver, Colorado, and is the owner of Patent No. 2,611,680 in suit. The defendant, Blue River Constructors, is an unincorporated association in the nature of a joint venture which was organized for the sole purpose of constructing the Roberts Tunnel in the State of Colorado, having as its members Mid-Valley Utility Constructors, Inc., a Delaware corporation; S. A. Healy Company, an Ohio corporation; Charles H. Tompkins Company, a District of Columbia corporation; J. A. Jones Construction Company, a Delaware corporation; A. S. Horner Construction Company, a Colorado corporation; and Colorado Constructors, Inc., also a Colorado corporation. These members are also separately named as defendants. The City and County of Denver is a Municipal Corporation of Colorado. Denver, acting in its proprietary capacity, through its Board of Water Commissioners, had authority to enter into the contract for the construction of the water diversion tunnel known as the Roberts Tunnel. This contract provided for the services of The Blue River Constructors as independent contractors.

The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action and the parties hereto. In matters relating to the contract above mentioned, the place of business of the Blue River Constructors was within the District of Colorado. This was the regular and established [719]*719place of business of the several members of such joint venture in reference to their activities in performing the construction contract. They were served with process in this suit at such place of business through agents in charge. The objection of the defendant contractors to service of process upon them was not well taken.

The patent in suit more particularly relates to a method of conditioning internal combustion engine exhaust gases by directing them through a liquid body, thereby agitating the latter to form a gas-liquid mixture, and passing this mixture through an alkaline diffusing medium, such as limestone, insoluble in the liquid body and soluble in the gas-liquid mixture, to eliminate or reduce acidic constituents, the exhaust gases thereafter being emitted from the conditioner. It is claimed that the toxic acid in the exhaust is thereby converted to non-toxic salt. The alkaline medium, by neutralizing the acid gas as fast as it hydrolyzes, assertedly keeps the water in a condition to avidly absorb the acid constituents from the engine exhaust. Manifestly a conditioner effective for this purpose would be a boon to underground operations where work utilizing diesel engines has been hampered by noxious odors and gases as well as by excessive heat.

The claims of the patent are six in number. While they are repetitious in several respects their differentiating elements appear to be these: (a) the introduction of exhaust gases into a liquid body; (b) association with an interstieed alkaline medium insoluble in water but soluble in the gas-liquid mixture; (c) the agitation of the liquid body to form a gas liquid mixture; (d) repetitious washing of the gas-liquid mixture through the interstieed alkaline medium; (e) the collection in the liquid body of the drip condensate from the agitation and washing, and (f) the liberation of the undissolved gases.

Claim 1 will serve as an illustration:

“1. ’ The method of conditioning internal combustion engine exhaust gases to non-hazardous and unob-« noxious form free from entrained solids and acidic constituents which consists of introducing the gases under the influence of their discharge pressures into the lower portion of a liquid body associated with and disposed to wet the surfaces of an interstieed alkaline diffusing medium insoluble in the liquid of the body and soluble in the characteristic acidity of the gas-liquid mixture, agitating said liquid body in reaction to the gas input flow to dissolve the soluble gas constituents in the liquid and to wash the resulting gas-liquid mixture through the interstices of the diffusing medium with neutralizing effect on the acidity of the gases, collecting the condensate resulting from such agitation in the liquid body, and liberating the undissolved gases.”

The plaintiff charges that without license or consent from him air conditioners infringing his patent were used on diesel engines in the construction of the Roberts Tunnel by the defendants. I find that the accused devices as operated by the defendant joint venturers contained elements or functions of the patent in suit and that each of the claims of the patent in suit reads directly on the accused devices utilized by the joint ven-turers. If valid, there would be no question but that the patent in suit was infringed by the accused devices of the defendant joint venturers. The extent of that infringement or the damages, if any, occasioned thereby need not now be determined.

The plaintiff has failed to sustain his allegations that the City and County of Denver infringed or induced infringement of the patent in question in any manner. This defendant did sell to the other defendants certain diesel equipment with “Ruth conditioners” but these were under license from Ruth. The assertion that liability could be predicated upon a lawful sale to the other defendants because the City and County of Denver thereby made possible or “induced” infringing use of similar devices by the [720]*720other defendants is not supported by the facts and is too tenuous an inference or theory to justify further comment. As a consequence of this determination we need not consider the third party claim of the City and County of Denver against the insurance companies.

Prior public use of limestone in water conditioners on diesel locomotives was established, with such uses extending from late 1941 through 1949, first by Stiers Bros, and thereafter Tunnel Constructors, in separate tunnel excavations in Colorado. The testimony with respect to such uses was not clear and precise concerning the arrangement of baffles and trays although the witnesses were numerically impressive. It was further established that the use of limestone in a water bath through which exhaust fumes were discharged was well known and practiced in the art long prior to the Colorado experiences. With his long study and investigation of conditioning-apparatuses in this country and abroad and his prior unsuccessful applications for the patenting of air conditioners beginning as early as 1938, it is improbable that Ruth was unaware of this prior art.

The proof of the prior art, prior publications and these established prior public uses had established the use in such conditioners of various dispositions of lime rock; thus, the lime rock was placed on a tray entirely submerged in the water bath, on a tray partially submerged in the bath, or on a tray entirely above the bath.

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224 F. Supp. 717, 139 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 257, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruth-v-blue-river-constructors-cod-1963.