Simplex Concrete Piling Co. v. MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Co.

227 F. 107, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1048
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 14, 1915
DocketNo. 317
StatusPublished

This text of 227 F. 107 (Simplex Concrete Piling Co. v. MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simplex Concrete Piling Co. v. MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Co., 227 F. 107, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1048 (D. Del. 1915).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

This suit has been brought by The Simplex Concrete Piling Company and the Simplex Foundation Company against the MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Company for alleged infringement of letters patent of the United States No. 733,288, granted July 7, 1903, to Frank Shuman, for improvements in removable piles for forming concrete piling, and of letters patent No. 739,268, granted September 15, 1903, to the same patentee for improvements in processes of making concrete piles. The complainants are the present owner and the licensee respectively of the two patents in suit, and no question is raised as to their title to maintain this suit. It appears that the subject-matter of both patents was disclosed in the original application, serial No. 138,921 of January 13, 1903; but in that year during the pendency of the proceedings, in conformity to the rule of the patent office that “claims for a machine and the process in the performance of which the machine- is used, must be presented in separate applications,” such applications were filed on which the two patents respectively were granted. In the description of patent No. 733,288 Shuman says:

“My invention relates to that method of forming piles of concreto or cement which consists in first driving- a pile into the ground, then withdrawing said pile, and then filling the-opening formed thereby with concrete or cement in plastic or fluid form, which when it sets forms the permanent pile. One object of my Invention is to provide for driving or withdrawing the removable pile with the exercise of much less power than is required when piles of this class as heretofore constructed are used, a further object being to render said removable pile available for under-water work or for use in unstable ground, another object being to so construct the pile that it will con[108]*108sist of but few parts, all of which can be easily made so strong as to effectually resist the shocks or strains to which they are subjected, in use, and a still further object being to provide at the bottom of the opening formed by the removable pile a base for the permanent cement or concrete pile. * * * For the purpose of forming in the ground openings for the reception of concrete or cement to constitute permanent piling the use of an ordinary wooden or metal preparatory pile of cylindrical form or tapering inwardly from top to bottom is objectionable for the reason that the frictional hold of the earth upon the sides of the pile is such that the pile cannot be driven beyond a limited distance without the exercise of destructive force and cannot be withdrawn after being driven without the exercise of still greater force, the frictional hold of the earth upon the pile being now assisted by atmospheric pressure, owing to the fact that the withdrawal of the pile tends to create a partial vacuum in the opening left thereby. For this reason various forms of collapsible piles have been proposed; but such piles, owing to their sectional character are necessarily limited in strength and, moreover, do not overcome the objection of resistance due to the frictional hold of the. earth thereupon while they are being driven. When the pile tapers inwardly from- top to bottom, there is the same resistance to the driving of the pile, and the resistance to the withdrawal of the pile is also Excessive, because, owing to the atmospheric pressure the earth is caused to firmly cling to the pile, so as to increase the difficulty of starting the same. Hence its movement is retarded for some, time after i£ is started. In carrying out my invention, therefore, I provide the pile with an enlarged point, so as tov displace the earth laterally at and near the point of the pile to a greater extent than the diameter of said pile, thereby freeing the pile, except as to a limited area at and near the point, from' frictional contact with the walls of the opening formed thereby, thus facilitating the driving of the pile and practically removing any limit in the depth to which the pile can be driven. To facilitate the withdrawal of the, pile, I make this enlarged point detachable therefrom. Hence the withdrawal of said pile can be effected without frictional contact of the walls of the opening to any material extent with the sides of the pile. The point, which remains at the bottom of the opening, forms an acceptable base or foundation for the permanent pile of cement or concrete. In underwater work or when working in unstable ground I provide the preparatory pile with a coffer-dam for preventing access of water or silt to- the opening formed by said preparatory pile in the firm ground beneath or for preventing the caving in of the walls of the opening when the latter is being formed in unstable ground. * * * If the point is attached to the pile, the casing 11 will be sufficiently large to permit of the withdrawal of said point through the same. * * * In case the ground is in the nature of quicksand or such as to preclude the opening from retaining its shape after the pile has been pulled out the casing 11 may be of the full length of the pile and riveted or otherwise firmly fastened to the point and permitted to remain in the opening with said point when -the pile is withdrawn, the casing being preferably slightly less in diameter than the greatest diameter of the point. * * * Another method of forming openings under water consists in forming a temporary water-tight joint between the hollow pile 1 and the detachable point S and, after the latter has been driven to the proper depth, pouring the concrete into the hollow pile and withdrawing the latter, either slowly or a little at a time, the temporary water-tight joint being broken on the withdrawal of the pile, so that the concrete can escape into the opening above the point as shown in Fig. 10, the concrete gradually displacing the water in the opening from the bottom of the same to the top. The concrete is introduced into the hollow pile at such a rate as always 'to maintain a head of concrete •at the bottom' of the same. This system of filling can also be adopted in cases where the nature of the ground is unstable, so as not to sustain the shape of the opening if the pile is wholly removed before introducing the concrete, or, as shown in Fig. 11, it can be employed in cases, where the long coffer-dam casing 11 is used, the concrete being filled into the latter slowly or intermittently and the coffer-dam casing being withdrawn slowly or intermittently so as to form the pile from the bottom to the top.”

[109]*109Tlic claims in this patent in suit are the fifth and the ninth, reading as follows:

“5. As í¡ device for forming in the ground an opening for the subsequent reception of concrete or otner fluid or plastic material, a removable preparatory pile baving a coffer-dam detachably secured thereto in such manner that the two can be driven together and the pile can be afterwards withdrawn, leaving the coffer-dam in the opening, substantially as specified.”
"0. ks a device for forming in the ground an opening for the subsequent reception of concrete or other fluid or plastic material, a removable pile having an enlarged point and a casing serving aa a coffer-dam, substantially as specified.”

In the description of the process patent No. 739,268 nothing material to the decision of this suit is disclosed which is not in substance contained or shown in the descriptive portion of the apparatus patent No. 733,288. The claims in suit of the process patent are Nos. 1, 3, 9 and 10, reading as follows:

“1.

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Bluebook (online)
227 F. 107, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simplex-concrete-piling-co-v-macarthur-concrete-pile-foundation-co-ded-1915.