Westco-Chippewa Pump Co. v. Delaware Electric & Supply Co.

64 F.2d 185, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 145, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4044
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1933
Docket4779, 4780
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 185 (Westco-Chippewa Pump Co. v. Delaware Electric & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 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. Delaware Electric & Supply Co., 64 F.2d 185, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 145, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4044 (3d Cir. 1933).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a decree of the District Court, dismissing tho complaint in a snit charging the defendants, Delaware Electric & Supply Company and Decatur Pump Company, with infringement of the reissue of United States letters patent No. 16,074, for a rotary pump, issued on May 19, 1925, to Adolph Wahle of Iowa. The original patent, No. 1,228,267, was issued to Wahle on May 29, 1917. The plaintiff was tho exclusive licensee of Wahle until June 19, 1929, when Wahle assigned his patent to it. Snit was brought on July 9, 1929, against the Delaware Electric & Supply Company, a dealer in pumps, but the Decatur Pump Company, the manufacturer, intervened, and has assumed and conducted the entire defense. The defendants appellees will bo referred to as defendant, meaning tho Decatur Pump Company, and the appellant will be referred to as the plaintiff.

The reissue has twelve claims, the eight of the original patent and four others, but only claims 3 and 6 of the original patent are in issue. They read as follows:

3. “In a rotary pump, a easing having a passage extending circumferentially from a suitable inlet to a suitable outlet located adjacent thereon and having a circumferential slot in the annular transverse partition constituting the inner circumference of the same, of a rotor the axis of which is concentric to the center from which said axis is struck and which has an outer marginal portion which *186 extends through said slot into said passage and is provided with a series of buckets therein each having a substantially flat bottom inclining from the periphery to the side thereof at a point adjacent said annular partition and separated by transverse blades.”

6. “In a rotary pump, a easing consisting of two circular sections, one of which has a cylindrical rim projecting from its transverse web, and an annular flange projecting from said web in the same direction as said rim and between the same and its axis and has a suitable inlet opening in said rim and a discharge opening therein adjacent thereto but separated therefrom by a transverse partition, and the other section of which closes the open side of said first mentioned section and has an annular flange projecting sidewise toward and is the same diameter as the annular flange of the other section, in combination with a shaft journaled in suitable bearings in the center of said first-mentioned section, and a rotor securely mounted thereon within said section and having its marginal portion extending between said annular flanges into the circumferential passage between said annular flanges and said rim and provided with a series of buckets therein each having a substantially flat bottom inclining from the periphery to the side thereof at a point adjacent said annular partition and separated by transverse blades.”

The following defenses were interposed: (1) Invalidity of the patent; (2) nonin--fringement of the claims in issue, and (3) laches of the plaintiff in bringing suit.

The learned trial judge found the claims to be valid and infringed, but held that the plaintiff had been guilty of laehes, and so refused an injunction and an accounting, and accordingly dismissed the bill of complaint.

.. The plaintiff appealed from that portion of the decree which sustained -the defense of laehes and the denial of an injunction, and the defendant appealed from that portion which held claims 3 and '6 valid and infringed.

We therefore necessarily have one question before us for decision, the validity of the claims. If they are held to be invalid, that disposes of the entire ease, but, if they are valid, then one or both of the other two questions, infringement and laehes, must be considered.

The patent relates to that class of rotary pumps which employs what is known as an overshot rotor. The pump comprises a casing and rotor.as its principal features. In the ordinary rotary pump, water engages the buckets or blades only once, but in the course of the water through the passageway between the inlet and outlet of the easing, in the Wable pump, it is repeatedly engaged by the buckets or blades of the rotor, and its pressure and velocity are thus and thereby constantly increased. This constitutes a new type of rotary pump. As the District Judge said: “While Wahle was not a pioneer in the ■ sense of creating a new art, he was a pioneer in his class,” not of creating a new centrifugal pump, but of creating “an entirely new type of such pump, having an entirely new mode of operation.”

The mechanism, method, and principle of operation of the pumps of the plaintiff and defendant are fully set forth in the clear and comprehensive opinion of the learned District Judge. While there is some difference in the construction and location of the buckets in the two pumps, we think that the action of the rotor upon the water in both pumps is' substantially the same.

Being an improvement substantially advancing the art, the patent should be construed liberally, Eibel Process Company v. Minnesota & Ontario Paper Company, 261 U. S. 45, 63, 43 S. Ct. 322, 67 L. Ed. 523. and, when so construed, we are satisfied that, for the reasons set 'forth in the opinion of Judge Nields, the claims are valid and infringed.

This conclusion necessarily leads to the consideration of laehes of the plaintiff in bringing suit.

In the decision of this question, there must be a balancing of equities. It is rather hard and seemingly unjust that any one should be allowed to infringe a valid patent and deprive its owner of royalty to which the patent entitles him. On the other hand, it does not seqm equitable for a person with full knowledge to sleep on his rights for seven years and thus lead another to think that he. is safe in following his counsel’s advice that he may manufacture a proposed device with impunity, and then, when he has made large investments and built up a good business, punish him and innocent investors for doing what might have been prevented by timely action on the part of the patentee. Or, to state this in the language of the plaintiff, there are two elements in laches: (1) Lack of diligence on the part of the plaintiff; and (2) injury to defendant due to the inaction of the plaintiff.

When the reissue was granted, it contained four new claims, but the defendant is not charged with infringing any one of thesfe. *187 So from 1921, or at latest early in 1822, the plaintiff knew that the defendant was infringing its original patent rights, and it is of the infringement of these rights that it is now complaining.

The plaintilf excuses itself for not proceeding before by saying that the application for reissue barred the action while it was pending. But assuming, without deciding, for there is inferential authority on both sides, that defendant could not sue on these claims while it was seeking a reissue of the patent, it had the option of either suing on the old claims in 1921 or 1922, or of trying to secure a reissue with broader claims. For reasons which it thought advantageous, it chose the latter, and should now abide by the consequences of its choice.

In May, 1921, Arthur W. Burks had completed his application for a patent under which defendant’s pump is manufactured.

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Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 185, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 145, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westco-chippewa-pump-co-v-delaware-electric-supply-co-ca3-1933.