Wetherill v. New Jersey Zinc Co.

29 F. Cas. 832, 1 Ban. & A. 105
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 832 (Wetherill v. New Jersey Zinc Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wetherill v. New Jersey Zinc Co., 29 F. Cas. 832, 1 Ban. & A. 105 (circtdnj 1874).

Opinion

McKENNAN, Circuit Judge.

At a final hearing of this cause, it was adjudged, that the-defendants had infringed letters patent [No. 13,806] granted to Samuel Wetherill. on the 13th of November, 1855, and extended for seven years, for a process for making white oxide of zinc, and they were perpetually enjoined “from the further constructing, using, or selling in any way or manner, directly or indirectly, the said patented improvements or any part or parts thereof.” They are now alleged to have violated this injunction, in the use of a process substantially the same as Wetherill’s, or at least embracing its essential features, and a motion has been made for an attachment against them for contempt.

The affidavits presented in support of this motion, fully sustain the alleged violation of the injunction. This is controverted by counter affidavits. and hence it is urged that the motion should be denied, and the question of infringement involved, investigated and determined upon a new bill.

It is certainly desirable that any adjudication by the court, touching interests of such magnitude as are involved in this proceeding, should be in such form that it may be susceptible of revision by a superior tribunal. But that is no sufficient reason for withholding from a litigant Hie benefit of a remedy to which he is entitled, if he establishes a meritorious claim to it, nor would it justify the court in abdicating the discharge of a duty which the law imposes upon it. Not only has a party, in whose favor judicial process has been awarded, a right to demand the full measure of protection it was intended to afford him, but, in a more general sense, it is essential to the due administration of justice, that obedience to it should be enforced. If its requirements are wilfully unheeded, a summary method of correction is [833]*833imperative; on the other hand, if the delinquency, either as to its character or the fact of its commission, is doubtful upon the proofs, such mode of interposition ought not to be applied. This is the import of all the authorities. It is not enough, therefore, to arrest a summary exercise of the power of the court, that the proofs of the violation of its decree are conflicting, or that the thing used by the respondent is, in some of its features, different from the thing whose use is interdicted. The evidence must be carefully weighed, and as it establishes clearly or falls short of establishing a substantial transgression, it is the duty of the court to act or forbear to act accordingly.

The decisive inquiry here, then, is whether a violation of the injunction is satisfactorily proved. Before Wetherill’s invention metallic ores were reduced by means of blast and muffled furnaces; and at the final hearing of this cause, the methods of operation in both of these were fully described to illustrate the state of the art, and to establish the novelty of Wetherill's method. To contradistin-guish these processes, as well as to indicate the points of resemblance between the process used by the defendants and claimed to be an infringement, and Wetherill’s, the characteristic features of Wetherill’s process were stated to consist in the employment of a thin bed-fire of chestnut coal and of a superin-cumbent layer of pulverized ore and pea coal of the approximate thickness of three inches; the enforced passage of atmospheric air in numerous jets through the mass, by which its combustion is maintained; the vaporization of the zinc and its oxidation in the furnace above the charge, when the zinc in the ore is expelled, and the repetition of the process. In the blast-furnace — to which alone, as a prior device, it is necessary to refer — the fuel and ore are not comminuted, nor is the charge spread in a thin layer, and when its working is begun it must necessarily be continued without interruption until the furnace is blown out. In all these particulars the Weth-erill process is different. The bed-fire consists of fuel in a comminuted form: so also does the charge of mingled ore and carbon. This charge is spread in a layer of the maximum depth of eight or nine inches, and through it, is diffused a blast of air, not only to keep up combustion, but to supply the vaporized zinc with sufficient oxygen in the furnace-chamber to convert it into white oxide, and, when the metallic zinc is expelled from the ore. the scoria or slag is removed, and the process repeated. It is thus an alternating process, inasmuch as it is susceptible of temporary suspension and repetition, whereby it is distinguishable from the operation of the blast-furnace, which is continuous and incapable of interruption.

The process used by the defendants, is claimed to differ essentially from Wetherill’s, first, in the character of the charges employed, and, second, in the continuity of their treatment; and upon the determination of these facts the result of the present application depends.

The bottom of the furnace-chamber described in Wetherill’s patent is composed of perforated iron grate-bars. The double function of these bars is to support the burden of the bed-fire and the charge, and to diffuse through it a blast of air forced into the closed ash-pit below. When the furnace is to be put in operation, a thin bed of comminuted coal is placed upon the grate-bars, and when this is ignited, the charge of mixed ore and coal is superimposed, and is spread out evenly through a wide door provided for that purpose, so as to cause an equable diffusion of the air through it. As soon as the vapors of zinc are observed to come off, the connection with the collecting-chamber is opened, into which the oxide passes and is gathered in bags. When the charge is brought to the condition of clinker, or is “slagged up,” the process of reduction is at an end, and the clinker is then removed and the furnace recharged as -before.

The furnace used by the defendants has a like large superficial area, into which a wide door opens, and is provided with a blast underneath the charge, but it is without grate-bars. When it is to be put in operation, the bottom is filled to the depth of about two and a half feet with scoria or slag, coarsely broken, “upon this is put a bed of charcoal, then pea coal upon the burning charcoal, and then, when the pea coal is all on fire, is put finely-crushed ore, dust coal, and marble,” of the depth of about six inches. Through the wide or charging door, the blow holes in the charge are filled, and it is thus made of uniform thickness. The first products of combustion are discharged into the air, until the green flames of burning zinc are observed, when a supplemental blast is introduced above the charge, and the oxide is conducted to the collecting-chamber. When the charge is slagged, the scoria is thoroughly broken through the opened charging door, a portion of the lower stratum of scoria, equal to that produced by the worked-off charge, is drawn off from below, and a new charge similar to the previous one is introduced directly upon the red-hot scoria.

In starting the operation of the furnace, the defendant’s method is, in the main, indistinguishable from Wetherill’s. The preliminary bed-fire is the same in both, and so also is the charge in every essential particular. In the one case, however, the charge is supported upon a bed of perforated iron grate-bars, and in the other upon a bed of coarsely broken clinkers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 832, 1 Ban. & A. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetherill-v-new-jersey-zinc-co-circtdnj-1874.