Sutter v. Robinson

119 U.S. 530, 7 S. Ct. 376, 30 L. Ed. 492, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 2025
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 20, 1886
Docket87
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 119 U.S. 530 (Sutter v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutter v. Robinson, 119 U.S. 530, 7 S. Ct. 376, 30 L. Ed. 492, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 2025 (1886).

Opinion

Me. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity filed by Isaac Bobinson and Abraham Bobinson against the appellants to restrain an alleged infringement of letters-patent-granted by the United States to Abraham ' Bobinson on June 10, 1819, for an improved apparatus for re-sweating tobacco. The defences relied on are, that the patent is invalid for want of novelty, and a-Menial of the alleged infringement. The specifications and claims of the’ patent, with reference to accompanying drawings, [p. 533,] are’ as follows:

“ Figure 1 is a top or plan view of an apparatus embodying my improvements, and Fig. 2 is' a vertical central section of the steam-receiver and tobacco-holder.
“ Like letters of reference indicate like parts.
“ It is usual to soften the lehvés of tobacco, as is well known, in order to prepare them for being manufactured into cigars and other manufactured goods, and to bring out a good and uniform color. This has been done heretofore in various ways, and, among others, by dampening 'the leaves and exposing.. them to heat while in that condition.
“The object of this invention is to provide.improved means for exposing the leaves to the action of steam for the purposes above set forth; and to that end my invention consists of a tobacco-holding vessel made of wood sufficiently porous to permit the steam to percolate through it, in combination, sub *532 stantially-as hereinafter described, with a steam-generating' apparatus and a steam-receiving chamber surrounding the vessel - for containing the tobacco.
. I am aware that the general structural plan of the apparatus hereinafter described is óld, and I do not, therefore, here • intend to claim the same independently of a tobacco-receiving vessel made of wood sufficiently porous to permit the steam to percolate through it, as and. for the purposes set forth, the said-wooden vessel constituting, as I believe, an improvement upon the apparatus heretofore in use, for the reason that, in employ-: ing wood instead. of metal' in the construction of the said vessel, the tobacco is prevented from being tainted, and may be- kept continually moist by the action of the steam instead of being merely heated and sweated by it, or steamed, only ,by-..' ■ the generation of steam in the same vessel containing the to-baccó, it being obvious that, if the tobacco-receiving vessel be made of metal, as heretofore in devices of this class, the steam • in an outer surrounding vessel wpuld merely, heat' the tobacco ; and sweat it without imparting new moisture to it. Neither do I here intend to. claim the process, as such, of steaming tobacco.
“In the drawings A.represents an ordinary boiler for-gen- , erating steam.' B is a tank or vessel for receiving the steam generated by the boiler .A. 0 is a tight wooden vessel'for receiving the tobacco to .be treated.- This vessel should- be provided with a tight-fitting cover, a. I make the vessel C of wood, as an essential, feature of my invention, in order that the steam may sweat or percolate through it from the tank B, and' so that the tobacco will not be tainted by contact with metal. The vessel C is enough smaller than the tank B to be suspended in the latter and leave an annular space, ■ b, between the two, as well as a space underneath the bottom of the vessel C, as shown. The space b should also be covered. ■ In order to provide a cover for the space b, and also suspend the vessel C firmly in the tank B, I employ an annular rim or lid, o, ' having an-upwardly-turned flange, o', fitted to the vessel.C, and a downwardly-turned flange, c”, fitted to the tank B, screws' .or other fastenings passing through the flanges into the parts *533 to which they are fitted; but it is not essential that these flanges should be continuous' or extend entirely around the. vessels. Neither is it essential that the. flanged portions of. the lid g should be continuous, or in the saíne piece with the re-
roaming part of the said lid. It is, in fact, much the easier way to make the flanged portions separately from the lid proper, and I have represented them as.made in that manner.,
“ I do not, however, here intend to be restricted to any particular way of applying tlie lid c and suspending the vessel 'C, *534 as both, may be clone in various suitable ways; but I deem the manner shown to be the best.
■ “ D 'is a steam-pipe leading from the upper part of the boiler A into the upper part qf t.he space b, and E is a water7 pipe leading from the lower part of the said space into the lower part of the boiler. To use this apparatus for the purpose for which it is intended, the water in the boiler should be heated until steam is generated. The tobacco to be treated' should be placed in the vessel C and covered, the tobacco being then in the condition in which it exists when, .taken from the cases or packages in which it may have been packed ■by the producers or shippers.
“ The water, as well as the steam, will enter the space b and produce a sufficient temperature in the vessel C to sweat the tobacco therein, the steam producing moisture in the vessel C by sweating or percolating through it from the space b in addition to the moisture originally in the tobacco before it was confined in the vessel. The steam which enters the space b through the pipe D, finding a lower temperature in the said, space than in the boiler, becomes condensed, and is added or returned to the volume of water which flows from the said space into the boiler, and thus keeps the latter supplied. A circulation of water and steam is also kept up to a certain extent.
“ In a building where steam is supplied through pipes, the ■ steam may be conducted -into the space b from the boiler which supplies the steam, wherever the boiler may be situated. The tobacco should be exposed to this treatment from three to eight days, according to the result desired to be produced, and it will thus be rendered soft and pliable, and of a uniform and dark color, without being in any way injured. The tobacco prepared'in this manner may be’manufactured into various articles, like cigars and cigarettes.
“ I deem it preferable to make the tank B, as well as the tank C, of wood, so as to prevent tainting the tobacco, and so as to render the apparatus capable of treating large quantities of tobacco at the same time, and without making the apparatus heavy and expensive, and to employ a boiler wholly do- *535 tacked from the tank' B, excepting1 by the steam and water, pipes connecting the same,' thus enabling me to make' the outer or larger'tank of wood without exposing it to'danger from fire. A detached boiler amply sufficient to be employed in connection with very large tanks will be comparatively simple and cheap.

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Bluebook (online)
119 U.S. 530, 7 S. Ct. 376, 30 L. Ed. 492, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 2025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutter-v-robinson-scotus-1886.