Vinton v. Hamilton

104 U.S. 485, 26 L. Ed. 807, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2032
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1882
Docket171
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 485 (Vinton v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vinton v. Hamilton, 104 U.S. 485, 26 L. Ed. 807, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2032 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Woods,

after stating the case, delivered the ■ opinion of the court. ■■

It is matter of general knowledge .that pig-iron is made from iron ore in a blast or smelting furnace; that to' secure this product the furnace is charged, first, with a layer of coke or charcoal, then with a layer of iron ore, mixed with broken limestone, and so on in alternate layers until the proper quantity of these materials is placed in the furnace. The fuel is then ignited,' and, for the purpose of increasing the heat, streams of air are forced into the furnace by means of blast-pipes, the nozzles of Avhich,. called tuyeres, are inserted in openings in the., walls of the furnace, usually from four to six feet above its bottom.

The limestone is used merely as a flux. The ore under this process undergoes a chemical change, and iron is formed and sinks in a molten state to the bottom of-the hearth, by Avhich is meant' not only the bottom of the furnace, but its sides as high up as the fopt of the boshes. The refuse deft after the melted iron has -dropped into the hearth is also in a molten state, and, being lighter than the iron, floats.on its top. This is indifferently called “ cinder ” and “ slag.” About three or four times in every tAventy-four hours the melted iron is drawn from the furnace. This is. accomplished in the folloAving manner: The furnace is constructed Avith tvvo holes, one called the iron and the other the cinder notch. The iron notch is made at the bottom of the hearth. The cinder notch is higher up the side of the furnace, just below the level of the tuyeres 5 so high that the. cinder can be drawn through it without letting off the molten iron. These holes are kept habitually closed Avith clay or other similar material. At frequent intervals, and always -just before drawing off the molten iron, or making a cast, as the ironmongers call it, the cinder notch is opened, and the cinder or slag is allowed to escape, and is carried aAvay from the furnace in a trough made of moistened sand. The cinder notch is then closed and the iron notch is opened, and the molten iron is drawn off through a sand-trough, and con *488 ducted into moulds made in sand-beds, called the sow and pigs, where it is allowed to cool. . The result is the pig-iron of commerce.

In the mean time, the furnace is supplied with constant charges of fuel and ore, mixed with limestone, in alternate layers, dumped in from the top; and this process is kept up without cessation for months and sometimes for- years.

The sand-trough which connects the pig-beds with the iron notch is usually larger and deeper, but more elevated than the sow or general gutter which conducts the iron into the moulds or grooves in the pig-beds. When the metal is first let into the trough it accumulates so as to fill it nearly to the brim. As the flow from the iron notch decreases, the iron, and a small quantity of cinder or slag, which has been chilled by coming in contact with the cold surface of the trough, adhere to its sides and bottom. When the molten iron on the hearth is about exhausted, the blast is increased, and the material left ori the hearth is blown out through the iron notch into the sand-trough. This also cools in the trough, and thus is formed what are known as trough runners, consisting of iron and slag, which have been forced through the iron notch by letting on the blast as just mentioned.

A. cupola furnace is one used for melting pig-iron for the purpose of casting it into useful forms and articles. It constitutes part of the equipment of a foundry. In shape it is generally a hollow cylinder. The iron is melted by substantially the same process as the ore in a blast furnace. The cupola furnace has an iron notch but no cinder n'ótch, because there, is generally so little cinder or slag in pig-iron, as to render such an opening unnecessary.'.

In order to reach the merits of the controversy, it is necessary to obtain a definite idea of what, if anything, the appellants ’ are entitled to undeb Vinton’s patent • • •

The specifications are ambiguous in respect to.the-particular kind of .slag which is to' be used in the process- therein described, that is to say, whether it is the slag-drawn off-through, the cinder notch, or the’runners which- are left in’ the trough through which the molten iron Is discharged'f^om the iron notch of a-blast furnace... It appears,’ however, from- the *489 evidence that, the use of-the latter only is contemplated, .the former containing: such ¡ a very inconsiderable quantity of iron as to be valueless;

We observe, in the first place, that the patent eannot be held to cover the discovery that the slag, which -is to be used in the process described' in the- specifications,- contains so large a percentage of good metallic iron that it-can be profitably extracted by again smelting it.-.

■The evidence shows beyond controversy that for many years before-Sept. 18, 187-3, the earliest, date assigned to the discovery or invention of- Vinton, it had been well and generally known that the trough runners contained a large* proportion of metallic iron, and they were broken up and resmelted in blast -furnaces. — They» were thrown into the furnace with scrap iron and iron ore, and smelted in the same manner. It was formerly a notion aiüong old-fasHibned furnace men, that the use of this material injured- the furnace, and deteriorated the quality of the iron produced. But this, conceit had been exploded long before the date of his patent, .and the runners and other heavy slag were used habitually in many blast furnaces as above stated.-

Secondly, The use of a cupola • furnace for the purpose of resmelting trough runners and heavy slag, cannot be claimed as any .part of Vinton’s invention. ■ The evidence in the record shows that as early as the year 1844, at the Jackson furnace, in Venango County, Pennsylvania, which was a blast furnace, a cupola furnace was erected and used for the' purpose of smelting heavy slag, from which was manufactured plow-points and hollow-ware, such-as skillets, pots, and Dutch-ovens. Sometimes the .product was made into pig-iron. This cupola furnace was thus* used for three or four years. The fact of such use was public; no effort was made to keep it secret, and it was known, in the language of the witnesses, “ all around-the furnace.”

. The testimony of -Robert Paisley, William J. Shaner, and Thomas W. Kennedy, which is found in the record, shows-that the Beaver Falls Co-operative Foundry Association, in April, 1872, made the experiment of using slag and runners in their ■ cupola furnace; and the experiment proving successful, the *490 runners, as early as August, 1872, were procured by tbe carload, and mixed with pig-iron and run into stove-plates. In this way fifty-eight or sixty tons of runners were used prior tp Oct. 14, 1873, the date of Vinton’s patent.

This use of heavy slag and runners was open and public. No one was excluded from the foundry where the work was carried on. Any one was at liberty to enter and see what was going on, and persons not interested in the furnace — among them the witness Thomas W. Kennedy — did so. No injunction of secrecy was imposed on them.

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Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 485, 26 L. Ed. 807, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinton-v-hamilton-scotus-1882.