Vapor Car Heating Co. v. Gold Car Heating & Lighting Co.

7 F.2d 284, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3523
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1925
Docket225
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 284 (Vapor Car Heating Co. v. Gold Car Heating & Lighting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vapor Car Heating Co. v. Gold Car Heating & Lighting Co., 7 F.2d 284, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3523 (2d Cir. 1925).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

The patent in suit is for a method in the art of heating, and was applied for April 25, 1904, and granted May 5, 1908. The object of the invention is said to bo to provide a reliable, efficient, and inexpensive method of heating whereby an equable temperature is maintained without necessary waste of energy. Primarily, the invention consists in heating an apartment by means of a heating medium such as steam, which is substantially confined in any suitable radiator, but is also in open communication with tho atmosphere with some outlet from tho radiator, and which is automatically maintained in its normal condition by a continuous supply from a relatively high pressure main or source of supply; the inflow from such source of supply being automatically regulated by thermostatic condition adjacent to the outlet from the radiator, whereby any suitable thermostatic motor is actuated to operate the valve mechanism located between the heating body and the supply. Railway cars have been steam-heated in three ways — first, the high pressure or train pipe system; second, the low pressure or vapor system; and third, an intermediate pressure system. There is another, called the convertible system or interchangeable system, whereby high or low pressure vapor may be used at will.

There has been very considerable patent litigation between the parties here. Heretofore, the appellant sued the appellee for *286 infringement of patent No. 758,436, -which is a patent for a low pressure heating system, alleging that claims 10,11, and 12 were infringed. The trial court there held the claims void because of the prior art, holding that prior art patents disclosed vapor systems, the apparatus of which anticipates these claims. 296 F. 188. No appeal was taken from the decree entered on May 22, 1920.

The tenth claim of that patent provides:

“10. In a car-heating system, the combination with a ear, of a radiator located within the ear, a train pipe arranged to supply steam to the radiator, a valve interposed between the train pipe and radiator to control the flow of steam into the radiator, a fluid conduit leading from the radiator and open to the atmosphere, and a thermostatic device located within said conduit and eon-, neeted with said valve.”

The bill in the present suit was filed January 12, 1921, and is between the same pair-ties, except that Edward E. Gold has been named as a defendant. The patent No. 758,-436, held void in the former suit, is for an apparatus for heating by the vapor system, while the patent in suit is for a method of heating by using the same apparatus. The characteristic of the vapor system is that the high pressure from the train pipe is throttled at the inlet valve so that the pressure in the radiator is practically atmospheric pressure; the same being vapor at a temperature of about 212“ F. The outlet from the radiator is free, so that any excess pressure, if it exists, would escape by the drip outlet. The outflowing vapor heats the expansion- vessel or thermostat, expansion of which acts through a rod or lever to close the inlet valve. Thus, when the valve is open wide enough to let steam enter the radiator so that hot steam flows out at the outlet, the thermostat is heated and expanded and closes the inlet valve so as to'check the inflow of the steam to the -radiator. Because the outlet is free, the pressure in the radiator cannot exeeed atmospheric pressure or about 212° F. The thermostat used to control the inlet valve is the same thermostat or expansion vessel used in the old automatic traps.

The apparatus patent, No. 758,436, provides for a steam pipe entering a car by -a branch pipe which is controlled by an inlet valve, and, passing through the branch, enters the radiator, and the spent steam or condensation flows out through a chamber in which is a thermostatic vessel, and thus through a drip pipe. The heating of the vessel expands it and pushes down the valve stem and closes the valve to or toward its seat, thus throttling the steam. The outlet being open, the pressure in the radiator is substantially atmospheric. Claim 10, referred to above, included a thermostatie device located within said conduit and connected with said valve. The court, in the previous case, decided that the French patent to Cleuet (1887) and the patent to Tuder, No. 618,921, anticipated the basis idea, and the • patent to Weber, No. 403,162, showed a thermostat situated in the discharging chamber. These disclosures were held to anticipate the claims of the apparatus patent. Weber patent, No. 403,162, and Heintz patent, No. 777,203, were considered in anticipation of claim 10. The patent in suit was applied for April 25, 1904, one day before the issuance of the apparatus patent, No. 758,436, and therefore, if, as claimed by the appellee, the method patent merely provides for the method or function of the apparatus patent, it prolongs the patent monopoly granted on the vapor system for at least four years.

The earlier patent has been adjudicated void, and it is argued by the appellee that it is res adjudieata as to the method patent. Both patents are based on the drawings of the same mechanism. The drawings show the same construction. The same parts are designated by the same reference number and letters on the drawings. The descriptions of the apparatus are alike; the operation described is the same, although the language differs slightly. They are both concerned with the vapor system of steam heating. The apparatus operates necessarily according to this vapor system. The operation of the apparatus patent is all that is described in the' elaims of the patent in suit. The claims assume a train of cars and speak of a lower pressure system in the ear radiators in plural number. The operation thus claimed is precisely what must occur whenever the apparatus No. 758,436 is applied to two or more cars which are coupled up in a train and heated by steam from the locomotive in the same way. Because the essential fact at issue in the present case is the same as that which was decided in appellee’s favor in a previous ease, the conclusion follows that the question is res adjudicata. In that ease it was claimed that the apparatus introduced a new mode of operation, namely, a method known as the vapor system, but the court held the vapor system was old in the art, so that the method of operation characteristic of the appara *287 tns was old also. It was further held there that the mechanism itself as covered genetically in claim 10, was without novelty, and the claim was therefore held to be void. To sustain the contentions of the appellant here would be tantamount to a reversal of that decision as to the essential fact in issue, namely, the novelty of the vapor system of railway ear heating. That essential fact was adjudicated as between the same parties in that litigation. If a customer bought the apparatus, and it were held that the patent in suit was valid, he would be unable to use the apparatus until after the expiration of the patent in suit. This illustrates the untenability of the present suit. It points out a need of the defense of the doctrine of res ad judicata.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 284, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vapor-car-heating-co-v-gold-car-heating-lighting-co-ca2-1925.