The Texas Company v. Globe Oil & Refining Company, the Texas Company v. Globe Oil & Refining Company

225 F.2d 725
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1955
Docket10955_1
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 225 F.2d 725 (The Texas Company v. Globe Oil & Refining Company, the Texas Company v. Globe Oil & Refining Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Texas Company v. Globe Oil & Refining Company, the Texas Company v. Globe Oil & Refining Company, 225 F.2d 725 (7th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MAJOR, Circuit Judge.

The Texas Company (sometimes referred to as plaintiff or Texas) brought this action against Globe Oil & Refining Company (sometimes referred to as defendant or Globe), for the infringement of patent No. 1,883,850, issued to 0. Behimer October 18,1932, upon an application originally filed November 21,1918, subsequently assigned to plaintiff, entitled “Process for Making Gasoline.” Defendant pleaded numerous defenses, including that of non-invention, invalidity over the prior art, non-infringement, that the equity sought to be asserted was barred by laches and that plaintiff was guilty of unclean hands with respect to the relief sought.

The issues involved were referred to Honorable Joseph F. Elward, a Master-in-Chancery, for a hearing and a report. Such report was in the main approved by Judge William J. Campbell of the District Court, who in connection therewith filed an opinion. Texas Co. v. Globe Oil & Refining Co., D.C., 112 F.Supp. 455. In accordance with the recommendations of the Master, the court decided the issue of infringement adversely to plaintiff and all other issues pleaded as a defense, in its favor. Plaintiff, in No. 10954, appeals from the adverse decision on the issue of infringement. Defendant, in No. 10955, cross-appeals only from that portion of the decree which fails to award reasonable attorney’s fees to the defendant as part of its general costs." The time and labor devoted to this litigation, as is evidenced by the record, is appalling. The Master’s report as filed in this court occupies a volume of 436 pages of the printed record, and Judge Campbell’s opinion covers some 40 pages of the Federal Supplement. The Master in his report points out that hearings were conducted by him over a period of *727 71 days, at the conclusion of which printed briefs were submitted, consisting of 1402 pages. And this court has not been neglected, because we have been favored with briefs which cover some 400 printed pages.

In the beginning we think it not inappropriate to recognize the careful and thorough consideration given this case by the District Court and its Master, as well as the manner in which able counsel have presented to this court the contentions of the respective parties.

We shall first consider the issue of infringement. It is pertinent to note that the Tenth Circuit, in Texas Co. v. Anderson-Prichard Refining Corp. (sometimes hereinafter referred to as Anderson), 122 F.2d 829, opinion by Judge Phillips, in a suit by the instant plaintiff involving the same patent affirmed a District Court, 32 F.Supp. 347 which had dismissed the complaint on a holding of non-infringement of a process employed by the defendant in that case of the same type as that employed by the defendant in the instant case. We refer to the drawings of the apparatus shown by the patentee for the utilization of his process, reproduced by the court in Anderson, 122 F.2d at page 832.

Behimer in his specifications stated:

“This invention relates to methods of making condensable light oils, such as gasoline. More particularly it relates to certain novel improvements in the cracking of hydrocarbons whereby higher boiling hydrocarbons are decomposed into those of lower boiling point.”

As to prior methods he stated:

“In prior methods of cracking hydrocarbon oils, considerable difficulty has been experienced on account of carbon formations, which occur on the sides of tubes and stills exposed to the heat required to carry on the cracking operation.”

He stated:

“It is a broad novel feature of the herein disclosed process that substantially all of the cracking operation occurs in a vessel to which no external heat is applied, except at such times and in such quantities as are necessary to compensate for heat losses, the oil prior to its introduction to such vessel having been subjected to a high degree of cracking heat and the excess heat of the oil itself being used to effect its own decomposition. As a consequence, I avoid substantial carbon formations of the destructive character which have proved such an impediment to prior systems. The removal of the cracking operation from the heating zone also reduces the danger from fires such as frequently occur where cracking is carried on in highly heated stills and coils exposed to direct heat.”

And again he stated:

“Thus, although the oil is subjected to cracking heats in the heating zone, this temperature is attained only just previous to the exit of the oil therefrom, and therefore, the oil leaves the heating coil before any substantial decomposition and incident deposition of carbon takes place. Subsequently, the highly heated oil in a state of incipient decomposition, is delivered to the cracking zone, where the desired temperature and pressure conditions are continuously sustained and the cracking of the oil and the incident decomposition of carbon are effected. The bulk of the carbon is removed from the circuit by withdrawing from the cracking zone, portions of the residual oil.”

This process of heating oil in the coils to a high temperature without substantial cracking and delivering the same to a vessel or drum where cracking takes place is known as “postponed cracking.” The purpose was to obviate the problem of the formation of carbon in the coils where intense heat was applied by transferring the cracking operation to a vessel or drum which was heated only lightly, if at all.

We take it there is no dispute up to this point, but plaintiff contends that the *728 patent discloses not only the process of “postponed cracking” but another independent process dubbed “clean circulation.”

As plaintiff states in its brief:

“ ‘Clean circulation’ is associated with ‘postponed cracking’ in the specific embodiment of the process described in the specification of the original application. The patent in suit, which issued on a division .of the original application and hence with essentially the same disclosure, has claims only on ‘clean circulation’, some limited to the combination with ‘postponed cracking’ and some without such limitation. It is the latter only which are involved in this suit.”

On the other hand, defendant does not dispute but that the patent discloses “clean circulation” but contends that it is not a separate and independent process or invention, that it is auxiliary and to be employed only in connection with Behimer’s disclosure of “postponed cracking.”

The Master as to this theory of “clean circulation” found:

“Plaintiff claims that an essential feature of the patent-in-suit and of the claims-in-suit is ‘clean circulation’ which plaintiff defines as a continuous coil, and drum pressure cracking operation, whereby cracked residual oils are withdrawn from the drum and discharged from the system ; the separated vapors pass from the drum into a dephlegmator, in which vapors heavier than gasoline are condensed as reflux and the reflux from the dephlegmator is directly returned while hot to the heating coil and is forced under mechanical pressure through the coil with the fresh oil supplied thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
225 F.2d 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-texas-company-v-globe-oil-refining-company-the-texas-company-v-ca7-1955.