U. S. Industries, Inc., and v. Otis Engineering Corporation and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., and Otis Engineering Corporation and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., and v. U. S. Industries, Inc., And

254 F.2d 198
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1958
Docket16528_1
StatusPublished

This text of 254 F.2d 198 (U. S. Industries, Inc., and v. Otis Engineering Corporation and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., and Otis Engineering Corporation and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., and v. U. S. Industries, Inc., And) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U. S. Industries, Inc., and v. Otis Engineering Corporation and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., and Otis Engineering Corporation and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., and v. U. S. Industries, Inc., And, 254 F.2d 198 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

254 F.2d 198

U. S. INDUSTRIES, Inc., Appellant and Appellee,
v.
OTIS ENGINEERING CORPORATION and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., Appellees and Appellants.
OTIS ENGINEERING CORPORATION and Otis Pressure Control, Inc., Appellees and Appellants,
v.
U. S. INDUSTRIES, Inc., Appellant and Appellee.

No. 16528.

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.

April 8, 1958.

Rehearing Denied August 6, 1958.

James T. Wright, Houston, Tex., Thomas E. Scofield, Kansas City, Mo., William C. Dixon, Los Angeles, Cal., Dyche, Wheat & Thornton, Houston, Tex., for appellant and appellee, J. W. Hassel, Jr., Dallas, Tex., of counsel.

E. Hastings Ackley, Dallas, Tex., Oscar A. Mellin, Mellin, Hanscom & Hursh, San Francisco, Cal., for appellees and appellants.

Before RIVES, BROWN and WISDOM, Circuit Judges.

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal tests whether the District Court, on findings made after a trial at which there was considerable testimony, in person and by deposition, as well as the usual bulk of documents typical of this litigation, was correct in holding King patent No. 2,339,487 valid but not infringed. This clear-cut decision momentarily put an end to a complex controversy, since revived here, in which to Patentee's1 claim of validity, infringement, and estoppel to deny validity, the alleged infringer2 retorted in kind with the traditional fluid defenses of validity, noninfringement, monopolistic abuse of the patent monopoly and violation of federal anti-trust statutes.

This is another of the many suits3 reaching here involving the important field of gas-lift devices for oil well operations. More than that, it presents once again the same patent. King 487, dealt with in Bryan v. Garrett Oil Tools, Inc., 5 Cir., 245 F.2d 365, 371. Except for one claim (No. 11) which Patentee insists, but Otis denies, is also for a "valve" claim for a valve structure per se, and as such is infringed by the Cummings control valve, the controversy4 relates to the claims (5, 6, 7) describing the "system" of reverse loaded valves with surface control mechanism.

As we pointed out in our former decision, 245 F.2d at page 374, King 487 covers both "valve" and "system" claims. The valve is of little importance here, but in view of frequent parental boasting in its behalf, sometimes as though its presence is enough to convert old into new, ancient into novel, we mention it briefly. It is a flow valve structure to be affixed on the outside of the flow string (tubing). It is in the annular space between the casing and the tubing. When gas pressure in the annulus exceeds the set pressure of the valve, it opens allowing the escape of gas (or liquids) through the valve into and up the tubing. In place of a spring-loaded or weight-loaded valve, this structure was a gas pressure-charged valve. A predetermined charge of gas pressure was hermetically sealed behind a bellows which holds the valve member seated. It was, is, and has to be conceded that a gas pressure-charged valve was old in the art.

The "system" claims cover an apparatus by which flow control valves, whether gas pressure-charged, spring-loaded, or otherwise, and regardless of manufacturer are installed on the tubing in series. The flow control valve nearest the surface is set to open at the highest pressure and each succeeding valve from the top to bottom is set at a pressure somewhat lower than the valve immediately above. The purpose of this arrangement is to assure positive unloading of the liquid in the annulus (either altogether or to the static level) by sequential operation of the valves by gas pumped into the annulus from the surface in controlled amounts and at predetermined pressures. Once the well is unloaded, it may be produced by the gas-drive introduced from the annulus into the column of oil in the tubing at the particular selected valve of the series. For reasons which are more fully developed, the heart of King 487 is the disclosed methods by which gas in controlled amounts and at predetermined pressures is introduced.

The installations by Otis, or its customer-users, which are claimed to infringe have the series of control valves, here the Cummings type, set at successively lower pressures from top to bottom. The difference between the two is the arrangement at the surface. Where King 487 calls for both volume controller and intermitter, Otis uses but a timer. Whether that difference is a difference at all, is one in fact, or if in fact, is one in patent law, is a crucial one. The District Court held it was all three. Since infringement is a question of fact, Georgia Kaolin Co. v. Thiele Kaolin, 5 Cir., 228 F.2d 267; Fritz W. Glitsch & Sons, Inc., v. Wyatt Metal & Boiler Works, 5 Cir., 224 F.2d 331; Jeoffroy Mfg. Inc., v. Graham, 5 Cir., 206 F.2d 772; cf. Southern States Equipment Corp. v. USCO Power Equipment Corp., 5 Cir., 209 F.2d 111, that finding comes here with the buckler and shield of Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. rule 52(a), 28 U.S.C.A., Lumbermen's Mut. Casualty Co. v. Klotz, 5 Cir., 251 F.2d 499.

Unwilling to leave to patentee the role of pursuer, unsatisfied with a decree that exonerates it for the past, unsure what the adversary's licensing practices might do to it and its customers in the future, and undaunted that we have already spoken on the subject, Otis urges that we should declare the Judge to have been wrong in presumably heeding us, and here determine that King 487 is invalid.

In assaying validity (and infringement) of King 487, Otis asserts that the patent has a narrowly circumscribed field for several reasons. The use, for example, of a single flow control valve (that is, not in series) even with an intermitter would not be covered. Such an apparatus seems literally anticipated by Guiberson 2,188,656, and in any case, all of the claims here5 speak in terms of a series of valves. Likewise, a series of flow control valves set at reverse loading pressures but without an intermitter or surface volume control regulator mechanism would not be covered. This would be a literal application of Bryant 2,008,172.

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U. S. Industries, Inc. v. Otis Engineering Corp.
254 F.2d 198 (Fifth Circuit, 1958)

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