Westco-Chippewa Pump Co. v. Autoprime Pump Co.

57 F.2d 556
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 4, 1931
DocketNo. 3455
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 556 (Westco-Chippewa Pump Co. v. Autoprime Pump Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westco-Chippewa Pump Co. v. Autoprime Pump Co., 57 F.2d 556 (N.D. Ohio 1931).

Opinion

WEST, District Judge.

On May 29, 1917, patent 1,228,2:67, relating to rotary pumps, wag issued to Adolph Wahle with eight claims. On May 19', 1925, there was a reissue to the same patentee by which four claims were added and some insignificant alterations in the specifications. This suit is for the infringement of claims 3 and 6 of the reissue patent, 16,074. The defenses are invalidity and noninfringement.

The device which the plaintiff makes- and sells under this patent consists essentially of a metal casing formed with an interior channel around the circumference, within which a flat circular disk with slots or buckets extending from the periphery a short distance toward the axis revolves in such a manner as to draw the water into the channel, carry it about the circumference, and discharge it into an outlet under considerable pressure. The prior art, as exhibited by the evidence, discloses a very similar casing with circumferential passage in Andrews 390,332. There, as in the patent in suit, the passage was directly connected with the inlet and outlet openings, and the lesser diameter of the passage was slotted to- allow the Andrews rotor to operate within it. But, beyond this, I find nothing in the prior art which remotely suggests what is now embodied by the pat-entee. The Andrews rotor was an entirely different construction from that of Wahle, and I think operated upon a different principle. Wahle’s former patent 1,146,375 covered a rotor of somewhat similar nature as the rotor of the patent in suit, it had buckets about the periphery in the form of V-shaped grooves, but there was no circumferential waterway, the rotor protmding into a horizontal pipe at the bottom of the casing. The evidence is that it had little effect in stimulating the flow of the water and was of no practical value. Both these patents were cited against Wahle’s application in the Patent Office. Other patents were introduced by the defendant, but, so far as 1 see, none of them contain disclosures of any consequence. Both Bolton 184,952 and Brush 3,162,848 relate to pumps through which the water flows from inlet to outlet axially and across the blades of the rotor. There is no separation between inlet and outlet; and the construction is such that the water carried by the blades or buckets would not be thrown out radially, so that centrifugal force, which is a prime characteristic of Wahle, is absent. Meier 1,0‘89,572, a suction fan for cleaning cotton, and Nash 1,0-91,5-29, which seems to be a contrivance for compressing and pumping air through the use of water as pistons [see Trane Co. v. Nash Eng. Co. (C. C. A. 1) 25 F.(2d) 267 at 270], show nothing'of value respecting the patentee’s problem.

It is fairly plain that the most the defendant hopes is to establish that, when Wahle entered the field, the state of the art was such and his advance so slight that he should be restricted to the exact form of device disclosed by him. And it is argued that Andrews’ pump, which is the only portion of the prior art having any substantial relevancy, not only does what Wahle’s device accomplishes, but operates on the same principle, and is structurally like it. It was demonstrated and is not denied by the plaintiff that Andrews produced a pump which works, and the court, after giving considerable consideration to the evidence, including the demonstration, is not prepared to express a definite opinion as to the principle of physics upon which it operates-. One thing is impressive: The rotor is so constructed that through it is a,n uninterrupted passage from inlet to outlet, and it is difficult to see how there could be any substantially greater pressure at the latter than the former. The theory of Wahle’s device is that it does build up pressure from the moment the water encounters his rotor at the inlet until it passes around the circumference to- the outlet. The only communication between inlet and outlet is through the passage around the easing. As there is no chance to short circuit any accumulated pressure, the claimed result does not seem physically, impossible, as it does in the case of Andrews.

The view of the defendant, as expressed by its expert, Mr. Brush, is that all those rotors, whether of Andrews, Wahle, or the defendant, operate on the same underlying [558]*558principle. He calls this "the eddy extension drag.” Any roughening or irregularity upon an exterior surface moving through water will cause eddies; the action of these eddies in a circumscribed channel will, he says, accumulate and build up the pressure. He thinks centrifugal force of the water thrown off the periphery of a rotor by its revolutions has little, if anything, to do with it. Defendant’s counsel goes to the extent of saying that a straight bar with buckets formed along the lower edge, moved swiftly through a straight channel of circumscribed area, where no centrifugal movement can be produced, would have the same effect, because of eddies created by the buckets, as seems to be produced by the revolving rotors of both plaintiff and defendant.

Mr. Brush says that this eddy extension drag theory is his own, and that he knows of no other quarter in which it is held. The expert for the plaintiff, Mr. Ray, has an entirely different view about the principle on which these rotors operate, in which centrifugal force plays a leading part. The court is convinced, and I think there is no dispute on the point, that the principle of the devices of the plaintiff and the defendant and their mode of operation is the same. I am not at all convinced that the Andrews device operates on a like principle.

I give little weight to the tests showing that under courtroom operation the Andrews pump produced a certain pressure, the plaintiff’s substantially more, and defendant’s much 'more than plaintiff’s. If, as I understand, counsel claims that Wahle’s advance over Andrews was so slight as compared to defendant’s later advance over both that, even if defendant has appropriated the Wahle idea, the courts can give no relief because of the success that has attended the appropriation, then I do not agree. Wahle did not merely improve upon Andrews, but conceived something different. The structural differences between Andrews' and the patent in suit are very marked. The blades, or wings of Andrews. which protrude into the water channel and which alone exert the propelling force are utterly different from the buckets of Wahle’s rotor. The evidence shows that, after being emptied by centrifugal motion, the latter, as well as defendant’s buckets, are filled by water entering at the ^ides; the Andrews construction prevents this. In my judgment, the evidence requires a finding that Wahle’s advance over anything in the prior art, including his own former rotor, not only entitled him to a patent, but was sufficient to protect him against other and later devices employing side buckets around the periphery of a rotor revolving in a restricted circumferential channel. This idea expresses his invention, and I think it is fairly embodied in the claims sued on, and further that the disclosure of his specifications, including the drawings, is entirely sufficient. On the latter point some claim is made that, because the dimensions of the rotor and channel are not more specific, Wahle does nothing but propose a problem for solution by experiment rather than solve one. But the evidence is quite clear that a device made according to the specifications and drawings will work, and accomplish more than the Andrews rotor. The fact that it is capable of improvement and has been improved by the plaintiff, and probably by the defendant, is not important.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westco-chippewa-pump-co-v-autoprime-pump-co-ohnd-1931.