Universal Oil Products Co. v. Skelly Oil Co.

20 F.2d 995, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1304
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 13, 1927
DocketNo. 582
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 995 (Universal Oil Products Co. v. Skelly Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Universal Oil Products Co. v. Skelly Oil Co., 20 F.2d 995, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1304 (D. Del. 1927).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

Process claims T to 3, inclusive, and apparatus claim 4, of patent No. 1,281,884, for converting heavy petroleum oils into light oils — cracking— granted to Trumble October 15, 1918, are here alleged by Universal Oil Products Company, the plaintiff, the owner of the patent, to have been infringed by Skelly Oil Company, the defendant. The defenses are anticipation,- want of invention, and noninfringement.

Petroleum consists of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons differing in specific gravity and other properties. Separation of the lighter and the heavier constituents may be brought about by the physical process of simple distillation. Gasoline, a mixture of light hydrocarbons, was thus obtained. But the increasing demand for gasoline outran the supply to be had by this method. “Cracking” was resorted to. That is a chemical process. It is the conversion, by means of heat and (usually)’ pressure, of the complex hydrocarbon molecules of the heavier oils into the molecular structure of the desired lighter oils. But the process yields as well free carbon, heavier oils, and some incondensable gases. These products, particularly the [996]*996free carbon, gave rise to problems with wbieb Trumble undertook to cope.

Trumble was not a pioneer. Before he entered tbe field, stills of various designs bad been employed. One was tbe large cylinder placed in or immediately above tbe fire. Another was tbe tube and tank still, in wbieb tbe pipe extended through tbe beating zone from tbe bottom of a tank outside the furnace to tbe top of tbe tank. Another consisted of a pipe extending from the oil supply, through tbe beating zone, to a vaporizing chamber. Tbe process employed in this still is known to tbe art as tbe onee-tbrougb process. Tbe oil, supplied continuously during the run to tbe intake end of tbe pipe, is subjected during its single passage through tbe fire zone to beat great enough to crack it. Tbe methods of operation in tbe large cylinder were two. One was to conduct tbe operation with an isolated batch of oil. In tbe other a continuous supply of fresh oil flowed into tbe tank during tbe run, and degraded oil continuously flowed out. Tbe process employed in tbe tube and tank still, in which a tube passing through tbe fire zone connected externally tbe two ends of tbe tank, was to cycle repeatedly through tbe system tbe isolated batch of oil with which tbe still was charged. It is with this cyclic process and apparatus that tbe patent in suit has to do. To tbe old cyclic system Trumble added a continuous intake of fresh oil and a continuous discharge of degraded oil. He claimed:

“2. Tbe process of converting a heavy petroleum oil into a light one, which consists in circulating tbe heavy oil through a closed ying, continuously beating a portion of tbe ring, maintaining a pressure on tbe portion of tbe ring so heated, continuously taking off fight vapors from tbe ring, continuously relieving tbe ring of'a small amount of heavy oil, and continuously supplying fresh oil in sufficient quantities to maintain constant tbe volume of oil in tbe closed ring.
“4. An apparatus for converting heavy petroleum mixtures into light petroleum oils, comprising a beating means, a vapor releaser, means for conducting the heated mixture from tbe primary beating means to tbe vapor releasex’, means for withdrawing light vapors from tbe vapor releaser, means for continuously withdrawing a portion of tbe mixture, means for forcing tbe residuum from tbe vapor releaser through tbe primary beating means, and means for injecting sufficient fresh heavy oil into said residuum to maintain tbe volume of oil in.the apparatus approximately constant.”

Tbe defendant contends that tbe patents and publications of the prior art, other than those relied upon as anticipations, disclose tbe once-tbrough process, tbe continuous intake and discharge of tbe shell or boiler still, and the closed ring; that no inventive skill was required to add a continuous intake and discharge to tbe process and apparatus of the cyclic still; and that consequently tbe claims are invalid, unless by reference to the specification tbe “small amount” of tbe discharge called for can be eonstraed to mean an amount of discharge made small by sedimentation, as by a settling tank described in tbe specification. It denies infringement, because, it says, its discharge is not within tbe claims thus construed.

Patent to Burton, No. 1,049,667, illustrates tbe shell still employing tbe isolated batch cracking process. Patent to Stombs & Brace, No. 27,842, and patent to Barbet, No. 836,732, disclose tbe shell still operated with a continuous intake and a continuous discharge; tbe former for distillation, tbe latter for cracking. Tbe patent to Benton, No. 342,564, and to Pielstieker, No. 477,153, illustrate tbe onee-tbrougb process. Patent to Clark, No. 1,119,496, and the Burton-Clark still, modeled after the Babcock & Wilcox water boiler, typify tbe cycled-batch process of tbe tube and tank still.

Shell stills, howsoever employed, have inherent disadvantages. They are located in tbe fire zone and heated by direct contact of tbe flames and hot gases. By reason of tbe large quantity of oil in tbe shell, beat transference is poor. In ease of wall rupture, tbe entire body of oil is discharged into tbe fire, with danger of great conflagrations and explosions. When employed in tbe cracking process, tbe deposit of carbon on tbe inner surface diminishes tbe beat transference, insulates tbe oil, brings about overheating, and consequent weakening, of tbe shell, with a probable blowing out of tbe hot spots, unless tbe ran be texminated and the shell cleaned. Tbe duration of ran in the Burton still is thus limited to about 36 hours, after wbieb about 24 hours are required for reconditioning tbe still. I find no evidence that a shell still having a continuous intake and discharge of oil has been commercially employed for cracking. No evidence showing that practice has demonstrated that tbe ran of a shell still may be substantially prolonged by providing it with a continuous intake and discharge of oil has been pointed out.

That tbe pipes connecting tbe several stills in tbe Stombs & Brace set-up, were it [997]*997employed for cracking, would be quickly choked by deposits of carbon terminating the run, is, I think, quite clear. While the agitator or stirrer of Barbet may have been an aid to heat transference,' and tended in some degree towards uniformity of temperature and composition of the body of oil, it was not put in practice, and consequently it remains to be established that by it the art progressed toward a solution of the carbon problem. By the once-through process of Benton, Pielstieker, and others, the time elapsing between compulsory shutdowns was much prolonged. But this advantage was gained at the expense of much added heat and consequent overcracking, with resulting increase of incondensable gases.

It seems to me that, while the once-through process was a demonstration that a continuous process could be advantageously employed in the once-through method, it was not a revelation that, or how, the desire for continuity could be otherwise converted into terms of practical means.

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Related

Skelly Oil Co. v. Universal Oil Products Co.
31 F.2d 427 (Third Circuit, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 995, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/universal-oil-products-co-v-skelly-oil-co-ded-1927.