United Mfg. & Distributing Co. v. Evans

22 F.2d 936, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3510
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 1927
DocketNo. 3891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F.2d 936 (United Mfg. & Distributing Co. v. Evans) 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
United Mfg. & Distributing Co. v. Evans, 22 F.2d 936, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3510 (7th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

PAGE, Circuit Judge.

In plaintiffs’ (appellees’) suit, the court found validity and infringement of claims 13, 15, and 20 of Evans patent, No. 1,430,066, for air cleaner. The defenses were noninfringement and anticipation in the prior art.

The claims axe:

[937]*937“13. In an air cleaner, the combination with a casing, of a suction air conduit in communication with said casing, and a deflector in said easing and overlapping -the end of said air conduit, said casing with said deflector forming an unobstructed passage-; way adapted for the passage of a propelled current of air.”
“15. In a structure for purifying air passing to a carburetor, the combination with a suction conduit connected to the carburetor, of a deflector for guarding the mouth of said conduit, and a fan for forcing air past said deflector, some of the air passing said deflector being drawn into said conduit.”
“20. In an air purifier, the combination with a easing having open ends, of a deflector within said easing and forming therewith a Venturi passageway, means for causing a flow of air through said Venturi passageway, and a pipe having its end located adjacent to and protected by the deflector for withdrawing a portion of the air therefrom.”

A longitudinal section of appellees’ devise is shown herewith:

7 is the outer cylindrical casing, open at both ends. 10 is a conical, or nose-shaped, deflector, with diverging sides 11, so that there is a Venturi passage between 7 and the end of 11. With its end partially within the diverging sides 11 of the deflector, is the cylindrical connection 13, which leads, with other connections, to the carburetor. 15 is a deflector within the deflector 10. In operation, the air is blown through the casing 7, at the nose* end of the deflector 10, and gathers force and speed by the contraction at the Venturi passage, so that the dirt and dust are carried out through the other end of 7. There is a slight expansion at the end of 11, so that clean air passes around the end of 11 against the deflector 15, then is thrown and drawn by suction into the connection 13.

Appellant manufactured under Quam patent, No. 1,438,553, and its device is shown in the following:

1 is the outer casing. 11 is called a frusto-conical member, upon which are fastened the upright vanes 12. The air enters at 5 and passes out, carrying the dust and dirt, at 6, gathering force and speed by going through the Venturi passage created between the bottom of the frusto-conieal member and the casing 1. The clean air, in the larger chamber 10, expands at the lower edge of the frusto-conical member, and, drawn by the suction of the engine, enters the open end 8 of the conduit 2. The frusto-conieal member is carried on a shaft or spindle, on the lower end of which is rigidly fastened the propellor 4. The downward suction through 2 operates upon the propeller 4, and rotates the frustoconical member 11, with its vanes 12. The vanes 12, in operation, throw the air outwardly and downwardly, as claimed in the specification.

Appellant contends that the vanes 12 create an obstruction, so that there is not an “unobstructed passageway,” as called for in the claims in suit. That contention is based upon the argument:,

“The rotating deflector of appellant’s device corresponds * * * to the wheel on the well-known windmill. It is driven by the air current. Inasmuch as it is driven by the air, it necessarily follows that it obstructs the flow of air through the passageway.”

The “rotating deflector” is the frusto[938]*938conical member with the vanes 12. Whether, while not in motion, the vanes create an obstruction is immaterial, because the device is then inoperative. It is quite clear, from a study of the device and from the specification, that the rotating deflector is not driven by any action of the air upon the vanes. Instead, it is just as clear, that the vanes drive the air outwardly and downwardly through the Venturi passage, thereby accelerating, rather than obstructing the passage of air.

Appellant presented the only theory upon which there could be, in operation, any obstruction to the air by the vanes; but, as shown in the specification, the thing that rotates the frusto-conieal member, with its vanes, is the propeller 4. It is operated the same as the wheel on a windmill, being driven by the air current, which air current is created by suction through the conduit 2. The propeller 4 is wholly below the Venturi passage and within the open end 8 of the conduit 2. There is an unobstructed passagd of air through appellant’s, as there is through appellees’, device.

It is further urged that appellant uses no means to propel the air through its device. Instead of an outside fan to propel the air through the device, appellant uses the propellor 4, which is operated by suction through the conduit 2, thereby putting in motion the frusto-conical member, with its vanes, and, in addition to the centrifugal force, exerts a force that accelerates the movement of the air downwardly through the Venturi passage. We are of opinion that appellant has done no more than to change the location of the propeller, and such a change docs not constitute invention nor avoid infringement. Cramer v. Motor Player Corp. (C. C. A.) 18 F.(2d) 450.

The prior art cited and relied upon by appellant covers a wide range, and includes dust collectors, ore and grain separators, steam separators, spark arresters, and air purifiers. The only prior art air-cleaning device, considered of sufficient importance to be discussed by appellant, is Funk, No. 1,319,-059. .The only expert testimony dealing with that invention is to the effect that it looks like an utterly impractical device, with none of the characteristics of appellees’ device. We are unable to read any claim in suit on that device.

Appellant relies upon Argali, No. 527,-473, as embodying the elements of all three of the claims in suit. This is one of the patents cited in the Patent Office, and is one of the patents upon which the original claims 1, 2, 6, and 7 of the patent were rejected. It is called a eyanid and chlorination process of treating gold or silver bearing ores. The Argali device, in its uses and purposes, seems so foreign to the patent in suit that its pertinency as a citation is not seen. The purpose of the Evans patent was to separate, and direct toward the carburetor of an internal combustion engine, a small portion of clean air from the main body of the air, bearing dust and dirt.

The Argali device, relied upon for anticipating the Evans device, and called in the specification a dust extractor, is shown in the following Figure 2 of the patent:

Its use is not to extract dust from air, so as to provide clear air for use in a carburetor or otherwise; but its use is to extract ore-bearing dust from the heavier particles of ore. Neither is thrown away, but both are preserved for future treatment. While there is formed, between the bottom of a cone and the outer casing, a Venturi passage, the cone, in [939]

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Bluebook (online)
22 F.2d 936, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-mfg-distributing-co-v-evans-ca7-1927.