Tompkins v. St. Regis Paper Co.

226 F. 744, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1179
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedAugust 18, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 F. 744 (Tompkins v. St. Regis Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tompkins v. St. Regis Paper Co., 226 F. 744, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1179 (N.D.N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The patent in suit, alleged to have been infringed by defendant, dated August 18, 1891, and issued on application filed July 30, 1888, to John D. Tompkins, the complainant (his present title being by assignment), is for “a process of making paper stock,” and ha;; but one claim, which reads as follows:

“The herein described art of treating fibrous and other kindred materials for their conversion into paper stock, which consists in effecting the suspension of such materials in a constantly rising current of the treating liquid, and while tiras suspended subjecting the material to the heating, cleansing, or chemical action of the suspending liquid.”

This process consists, says the claim, in the art of treating fibrous and other kindred materials for their conversion into paper stock, and which process consists in (1) effecting the suspension of such materials (fibrous or their kindred) in a constantly rising current of the treating liquid; and (2) “while thus suspended subjecting the material (fibrous or their kindred) to the healing, cleansing, or chemical action of the suspending liquid.” To answer the claim there must be a constantly rising current of the said liquid contained in the vessel or digester, and in tiiia liquid the said fibrous material must be constantly suspended, and while so suspended it is subjected to the heating, cleansing, or-chemical action of the “suspending liquid”; that is, of the constantly ris’iig current of liquid.

The patentee first describes what he conceives to be the prior art and the objections to be overcome as follows;

“It lias heretofore been the practico to subject vegetable and other kindred msuerii'L from which paper stock is made to the successive action of various treating liquids within a closed vessel or digester, and while thus inclosed 1;o bring: the treating liquids into intimate contact with the material by spraying the liquids in a downward direction thereon, or by agitating the mass of material and liquids together, as by rotation of the digester. Both methods have boon found in practice to be open to objection: The first, by reason of the fact that the downwardly directed streams of liquid serve to pack the paper stock material upon the bottom diaphragm .of the digester, the effect of which is to transform the material into a strainer or filtering mass, gather the lignine and other material picked up by the treating liquors upon the top of tiie mass, and to unevenly affect the material by the treating liquids, it will be readily understood that, when the mass is packed upon the bottom of the digester, the upper portion of the mass will be much more affected than the lower, portion, and hence the material will be fully acted upon in one portion, partially acted upon in another, and, to a great extent, unacted upon at the lowermost part of the mass. The second, that agitation of the material and liquids by rotation or other movement of the digester tends, in [746]*746a measure, to break up and destroy tbe fibrous character of tbe paper stock material thus acted on.”

He then says his object is to treat the material in a closed digester and in such a manner that (1) no packing of the material will occur, by reason of the downward spraying above mentioned and the settling; (2) the fiber will not be injured, by the agitation of the material caused as by the rotation of the digester; (3) .the adventitious materials will be separated from the paper material; and (4) all the material brought into the best position to, be acted upon by the treating liquids evenly and at the same time effectively.

The patentee then points out that all, or nearly all, the substances from which paper is made are of a lower specific gravity than water, and hence will float in any of the treating liquids or fluids employed in this art. That such materials will also absorb the water, and when soaked with water sink or gravitate to the bottom of the vessel and become packed there. As a result such materials are not thoroughly and evenly acted'upon by the treating liquids. He then says :•

“My improved, method of treatment is based upon tbe theory that tbe material from which the paper stock is to be made should be suspended in the treating liquid while in the digester, and while thus suspended subjected to the heating, cleansing, or chemical action of the suspending liquid.”

The patentee then describes an apparatus for carrying out his process, and then says: •

“The material to be treated is introduced through the manhole D. At the same time the pump Gt is started, drawing the preliminary treating liquid from the tank within which it is stored, through the pipe II, and delivering it into the chamber O', and from thence in an upward direction through the perforations of the diaphragm, the sum of the areas of which is made preferably somewhat less than the area of the inlet pipe, so as to impart a certain velocity to the upwardly directed streams of liquid transmitted through the perforations. The -upwardly directed streams are projected against the material as it is introduced into the digesting chamber, so as in effect to effectually spray the material from below as it falls into the chamber. When sufficient quantities of material and liquid have been introduced into the digesting‘chamber, the valve in the pipe II is closed, and the pump <? draws the liquid from the upper chamber O, and introduces it into the lower chamber, from whence it is sprayed upward against the mass of material in the digester, which, becoming soaked, tends to gravitate. The effect of the upwardly directed streams of liquid impelled from the pump through the diaphragm is to overcome the gravity of the particles of material within the digesting chamber and to hold them, so to speak, in suspension in the treating liquid. It is my purpose in treating the material in the digesting chamber to keep the material in suspension in the treating liquid, and hence the direction of flow or circulation of the treating liquid is always from below upward.”

Later he says he does not limit himself to the apparatus described, digester and pipe connections, - as many changes may be made. He says, also:

“The apparatus shown and described is, however, that which I consider best adapted to carry my invention into’effect.”

In a general way the process may be described as follows: (1) The stock to be treated is inserted through the manhole in the top of the digester. (2) The treating liquid is forced in at the bottom through a [747]*747pipe or pipes by means of a. pump. The contents of the digester are highly heated and steam is forced in at the bottom. A pipe from the Lop extends to and connects with this injection pipe, so as to allow a consí ant upward current of the tt eating liquid. When the cooking or treating process is complete, the contents may be drawn off through a conduit at the bottom of the digester. The idea is that by reason of the. conslant upward current of treating liquid, combined with the steam, when used, the matter to be treated will be constantly forced or carried upward and he.kl suspended in the liquid in a loose, disintegrated ma.ss, as contradistinguished from a solid, packed mass, and that its particles will be thus subjected on all sides to treatment by such liquid.

Complainant’s Title.

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Bluebook (online)
226 F. 744, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-st-regis-paper-co-nynd-1915.