Salvage Process Co. v. James Shewan & Sons, Inc.

26 F.2d 258, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1185
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 18, 1928
DocketNo. 3103
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 258 (Salvage Process Co. v. James Shewan & Sons, Inc.) 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
Salvage Process Co. v. James Shewan & Sons, Inc., 26 F.2d 258, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1185 (E.D.N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is an action in equity for the alleged infringement of patent No. 1,405,173, issued to Hervey J. Wheeler, for pumping apparatus, dated January 31,1922, patent No. 1,480,482, issued to Hervey J. Wheeler, for pumping apparatus, dated January 8,1924, and patent No. 1,554,076, issued to Gunnar C. Eng-strand, for pumping apparatus, dated September 15,1925. '

Defendants have interposed the defenses of invalidity and noninfringement and license to the defendant United Marine & Contracting Corporation.

• The defendant James Shewan & Sons, Inc., operates a shipyard, and has let one or more contracts to the defendant United Marine & Contracting Corporation, which in performing said contracts has made use of the alleged infringing equipment.

The defendant United Marine & Contracting Corporation is the charterer of the barge Pateo, and engaged in pumping viscous material from the tanks of oil-burning ships.

; The defendant Pateo Salvage Corporation is the-owner of the barge Pateo, which contains the alleged infringing equipment.

Thé patents which form the basis of this suit, while broad enough to cover other operations, relate particularly to the art of extracting oils, sludge, sediment, and other things from the tanks of oil-burning ships.

The tanks of oil-burning ships must periodically be cleaned to remove the sediment called “sludge,” which is an extremely heavy, viscous material, and also any other material which may find its way into the tanks.

The tanks in question are located in many cases sixty or more feet below the deck of the vessel, and, until the invention of the method of the first patent in suit, the art showed no pumping equipment capable of pumping the heavy, -viscous material out of the tanks.

The sole practice prior to the first patent in suit was to clean the tanks by manually filling buckets, pails, barrels, or like receptacles, by means of shovels, and to carry or hoist the containers over the rails of the ship and dump them into a barge alongside the ship for ultimate disposal.

Even Hans E. Danstrup, the designer and builder of defendants’ system, and the president and general manager of the defendant Pateo Salvage Corporation,, admitted that cleaning was never done in any way but by hand before Mr. Wheeler started in, and also that Mr. Wheeler was the first one that was able to lift sludge above thirty-four feet.

The expense to the shipowner under the old method was very heavy, both because of the labor required and the time consumed in cleaning the ship.

The problem that confronted the patentee of the first patent in suit, Hervey J. Wheeler, was to lift the heavy, viscous material higher than it had been possible before that time to lift water, viz. thirty-four feet, and over the side of the ship, not the disposition of the sludge after it had been raised to the required height and over the side of the ship.

Wheeler’s solution, which some people thought was contrary to the laws of nature, was the method of the first patent in suit.

The only claim of the first Wheeler patent, No. 1,405,173, on which plaintiff relies in this action, is claim 1, which reads as follows:

“1. The herein discribed method of transferring viscous material directly from the interior of a maritime vessel to an overside receptacle, which consists in creating a high vacuum in said receptacle to thereby suck ■ such material to an elevation and deliver it directly into said receptacle, and admitting air in small quantities into the suction end of the conveying pipe to emulsify said material.”

The defendant contends that said claim is invalid (1) for want of patentable novelty over the prior art; (2) because it is fully anticipated by earlier patents; (3) is void for indefiniteness; (4) is not a proper method claim, but is directed to, the mere function of a machine; and (5) because it is not supported by a supplemental oath.

All of these contentions were raised on the trial of an earlier suit on this patent in this court, H. J. Wheeler Salvage Co., Inc., v. Kinelli & Guardino, Inc., et al. (D. C.) 295 F. 717, in which the validity of the patent in suit was’Sustained.

Defendants have offered in evidence substantially the same prior art as was offered in the former suit, with some additional evidence, all of which I have examined, but nothing additional that was offered was as near to the patent in suit as some of the patents that were received in evidence on the former trial, and therefore nothing will- be gained by repeating the analysis of the patents received in evidence on the former trial.

[260]*260The accomplishment of the patentee in the patent in suit was not the mere improvement of a method of pumping, but he introduced a method patentably novel, in that he not only supplanted the manual method theretofore in use, but he did it in an entirely different way, which had not been thought possible, and at a great saving of time and expense, and this clearly constituted invention. Even if all the elements of the invention were old, the selection and regrouping to solve this problem was invention.

The defendants have failed to show any anticipation of the patent in suit, and I cannot find that there was such indefiniteness as to impair its validity.

Undoubtedly the apparatus described in the patent in suit is adapted to and does accomplish the purpose of the patentee, but that purpose may also be accomplished by other forms of apparatus. In fact, it may be accomplished by the creation of a high vacuum in a receptacle by the use of any suitable vacuum pump and a suction hose, provided that the intake end of the hose shall not be wholly submerged in the material, but that a small portion of the orifice be left unsubmerged, so that a relatively small quantity of air may be admitted.

The method of the patent in suit is not the well-known piston and bubble method, and the material is not sucked or pushed up by pistons of air, hut, by the use-of a high vacuum and the admission of a small quantity of air at the nozzle, it is cracked and carried up in small particles, being emulsified and changed into an oily substance suspended in a fluid (air) capable of holding it in a state of minute subdivision.

The word “small,” as used in describing the quantity of air to be admitted at the nozzle, is relative, and its meaning is found by comparing the amount of air admitted to the quantity of material, either by weight or volume.

The word "emulsify” must be construed as the patentee obviously intended; that is, to form an emulsion, which is an oily substance suspended in some fluid (in this instance air) capable of holding it in a state of minute subdivision. ,

By the method of the patent in suit, the material is not only elevated, but its character is changed.

The defendants have presented nothing which would justify overturning the decision in the former ease of H. J. Wheeler Salvage Co., Inc., v. Rinelli & Guardino, Inc., supra, that no supplemental oath was required.

The first patent in suit is valid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 258, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvage-process-co-v-james-shewan-sons-inc-nyed-1928.