Schlicht Heat, Light & Power Co. v. ÆOLIPYLE Co.

117 F. 299, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5092
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedAugust 4, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 F. 299 (Schlicht Heat, Light & Power Co. v. ÆOLIPYLE Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schlicht Heat, Light & Power Co. v. ÆOLIPYLE Co., 117 F. 299, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5092 (circtsdny 1902).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge.

This is an action to restrain the infringement of four letters patent, numbered, respectively, 556,280, 556,282, 556.283, and 556,285, granted to Edmund Francis Eldredge, as assignee of Paul J. Schlicht, for improvements in the art of producing combustion and apparatus therefor.

No. 556,280 is the primary patent. It relates to an improved method of producing the greatest amount of heat or light from a given quantity of fuel and to means for making it practically effective without altering materially existing apparatus for producing combustion. Schlicht says that his method consists in causing air to flow to a combustion chamber in contact with a current of the hot products of combustion escaping therefrom and flowing in an opposite direction, whereby the air is heated and its rate of flow retarded before it reaches the combustion chamber, the quantity of air fed to the combustion chamber being regulated according to its needs. This result is accomplished by means of a deflector placed in a chimney or flue whereby the air is introduced and given an initial flow towards the combustion chamber. The invention in all its details is based upon the discovery “that a current of air and a current of combustion products will flow in contact without any substantial intermingling, and that if a current of air is properly introduced into a chimney or flue through which hot products of combustion are escaping the current of air will flow to the place of combustion in a direction opposite to that of the current of products.” The specification describes and the drawings illustrate various devices for causing the downward or inward flow of air. Different forms of deflectors are described but they are always located at or near the top of a tall chimney or stack so that the air [300]*300current when once established will maintain itself and during its extended passage will absorb heat from the escaping products of combustion until it reaches the fire chamber in a heated state.

The specification says:

“In practice the air will usually be admitted at or near the top of the flue; but its admission is not necessarily limited to this position. The advantage of introducing the air at the top of the flue is that the current of air is subjected to the action of hot gases throughout its entire length, and thus its temperature is raised much higher than would be possible if it were introduced at a lower point.”

The essence of the invention is the continuous flow in contact, through a chimney or flue, of the oppositely moving currents for a considerable distance, sufficient, at least, to maintain each current in a substantially distinct condition during its journey to and from the combustion chamber. It is clear, therefore, that the introduction of the air at a point where it passes directly to the combustion chamber or at a point where it enters a short and tortuous passage in which the maintenance of separate currents is doubtful, if not impossible, will not be an infringement of the Schlicht method.

The claims alleged to be infringed are numbered 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13, 14, and 22.

The third claim is as follows:

“The Improvement in the art of producing combustion which consists in causing a supporter of combustion to flow to a place of combustion in contact with a current of products of combustion flowing in a direction opposite to that in which the supporter of combustion is moving, said contact continuing throughout a substantial part of the length of said current of products of combustion, substantially as set forth.”

The claim uses the indefinite article in referring to the fire chamber, intending to cover a structure where the air is carried to a different fire chamber from the one that furnishes the hot products of combustion ; in this respect the claim differs from the fourth claim which is intended to cover an apparatus where the air current is carried to the same chamber from which the products of combustion are escaping.

The other claims, with slight verbal differences, are repetitions of the third claim, the design apparently being to cover every shade and shadow of distinction based upon the kind of fuel used, the character of the supporter of combustion, whether air or some other fluid, the manner of feeding it to the fire chamber by gravity or otherwise and • various other unimportant details. The specification contains 4,300. words of description and 22 claims. When it is remembered that it relates to a process which is carried out by the- simple expedient to placing a deflector or. damper in a flue in such a manner that the entering air is given an initial push towards the fire pot, the court may, especially in the month of August, be pardoned for suggesting that the inventor might, perhaps, have omitted a word or two here and there, and still have made clear his contribution to the art.

Patent No. 556,282 relates to an apparatus for carrying out the method of producing combustion described in the fundamental patent. This apparatus, so far as it is now in controversy, consists of a jacket so arranged as to heat the air before it enters the chimney proper. [301]*301After the air is heated by passing between the jacket and the outer wall of the chimney it reaches the deflector and is, directed down the chimney to the combustion chamber.

Claims i and 2 are involved.

Claim i is as follows:

“The combination with a chimney or stack of means for causing a current of air to move downward within said chimney or stack in contact with the products of combustion, and an air-heating device adapted to receive heat from the combustion products within the chimney or stack and to deliver heated air to said means, substantially as set forth.”

Claim 2 differs from claim 1 by the substitution of the words “means for initiating a downwardly moving current of air” for the words “means for causing a current of air to move downward.”

Patent No. 556,283, relates to another form of apparatus for carrying out the Schlicht method and consists of an air inlet pipe, which is sufficiently described in the only claim involved, which is as follows:

“The combination with a chimney or stack of an air-inlet pipe extending into the chimney or stack and adapted to introduce a current of air and direct it towards the place of combustion, substantially as set forth.”

Patent No. 556,285, so far as the same is in controversy, is intended to cover the Schlicht device in every variety of size and shape as “a new article of manufacture.”

Claims 1 and 2 aré involved; they are substantially similar.

Claim 1 is as follows:

“As a new article of manufacture, a chimney attachment provided with means for causing a current of air to flow downward within a chimney or flue, substantially as set forth.”

The title of the complainant to these patents and its right to sue is sufficiently established.

The defenses are noninfringement and invalidity of the patents by reason of anticipation, lack of patentability and the inoperative character of the apparatus described and shown.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F. 299, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlicht-heat-light-power-co-v-olipyle-co-circtsdny-1902.