Opinion
STILZ v. BETHLEHEM SHIPBUILDING CORPORATION, Limited.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
November 5, 1927.
Rehearing Denied November 21, 1928.
No. 3744.
Harry B. Stilz, of Philadelphia, Pa., for appellant.
Fraley & Paul, of Philadelphia, Pa. (Henry N. Paul and Henry N. Paul, Jr., both of Philadelphia, Pa., of counsel), for appellee.
Before BUFFINGTON, WOOLLEY, and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.
Certiorari denied 49 S. Ct. 254, 73 L. Ed. â-.
[MAJORITY â DAVIS, Circuit Judge.]
DAVIS, Circuit Judge.
Harry B. Stilz, the plaintiff, brought this action against the defendant for injunction and damages for the infringement of his patent, No. 1,006,161, issued to him July 1, 1913. The District Court held that the patent was a meritorious one, but was limited to the specific devices disclosed, and as thus limited it was not infringed by the defendant, and so the bill of complaint was dismissed. The ease is here on plaintiffâs appeal.
The patent relates to improvements in oil burners. It has seven claims, but only four are in issue, Nos. 1, 5, 6, and 7. Claims 1 and 5 are typical and are as follows:
â1. A nozzle having a small discharge orifice, means immediately adjacent to said orifice for producing a whirling motion in a liquid fluid passing therethrough, a easing surrounding said nozzle and having a restricted discharge port concentric with said orifice and means for causing a gaseous fluid passing through the space within said casing to enter said port in a whirling current.â
â5. A liquid spray nozzle having a passage abruptly contracted at one end by a cone shaped surface into a small delivery orifice, a transverse spiral within said passage and resting against the base of said cone shaped surface, a casing surrounding said nozzle and having a restricted discharge port in line with said orifice and means within said easing for whirling a gaseous fluid passing therethrough.â
The patent relates to improvements in oil burners, and particularly to the means by which fuel oil is atomized so that it may bum freely in the combustion chamber of a boiler.
The prior art discloses two types of burners known as mechanical atomizers and steam atomizers. The burner covered by the patent in suit is a âsteam atomizerâ in which steam, air, or other gaseous fluid under pressure is used as an aid to atomization of oil.
In order to utilize oil efficiently to generate-steam, it is necessary first to break up the oil into minute particles and to project them in a âfog-likeâ spray, into the furnace chamber of the boiler. At the same time, it must have the proper amount of air mixed with the spray so that the oxygen of the air will unite with oil and produce perfect combustion. The means ordinarily used to effect this mixture are an atomizer which produces the oil spray and some mechanical arrangement to regulate the admission of the proper amount of air. In the atomizer of the patent oil leaves the inner orifice of the nozzle in a conical spray, and before it can pass through the outer orifice, 19, it is caught by a jet of rotating steam, projected under heavy pressure which strikes the spray of oil tangentially, and is âperfectly atomizedâ before leaving the outer orifice which is the restricted discharge port of the casing, 17, surrounding the plug, 12. The casing is hollowed out so as to produce an annular passage within which steam is admitted. This causes a violent rotation and secures perfect atomization before the oil reaches the furnace chamber. âIn this condition,â the patentee says, âthe oil mixes with the requisite amount of air just as it reaches the hot refractory wall,â 11 in figure 1, âand perfect combustion ensues,â as the mixture is projected into the chamber of the furnace.
The alleged novelty in the plaintiffâs invention was the means employed to project the steam tangentially into the oil to perfect atomization before it leaves the outer orifice, 19. But in the defendantâs device the oil is atomized by being forced through restricted tangential slots or passageways without the assistance of a jet of steam or other gaseous fluid. This is the old and usual method of atomization. The oil is then combined with the oxygen of the air which is admitted under low pressure through a surrounding air register. This produces, as distinguished from the âviolent rotationâ of the patent,, slow rotation of the air and facilitates the intermingling of the oil and air for combustion.
The distinctive and novel features of the-patent in suit have no counterpart in the defendantâs structure. It does not have a casing, 17, surrounding the plug, 12, with âa restricted port 19,â nor any mechanical equivalent therefor. The broad interpretation urged by Mr. Stilz, in order to include the defendantâs device within his patent, would bring his within the prior art and invalidate it. The plaintiff urges that the air supplied for combustion in defendantâs burner is equivalent to the âgaseous fluidâ used for atomization in his device, and that the large furnace opening in the defendantâs structure is the equivalent of the ârestricted discharge portâ in his patent. This interpretation, applied to the plaintiffâs patent, would bring it within the disclosures of the Schutte patent, No. 391,865, issued October 30, 1888. The same argument by which Mr. Stilz avoided Schutte in the Patent Office distinguishes his patent from the defendantâs device. He said:
âThe examiner consistently refuses to give any weight to the word 'smallâ or 'restrictedâ in applicantâs claims; - but it will be seen that the main object of Schutte is to -do away with small openings, the oil being atomized mechanically 'and then delivered through a round unobstructed opening of large size.â It will be seen from an inspection of Schutteâs drawings, even without reading the specification, that the part C has no counterpart in applicantâs. burner unless it be the hole through the front wall of the furnace. The part C simply supplies outside air in sufficient quantities to give the proper combustion mixture. * * * Applicantâs burner depends upon small orifices and this is just what Schutte tries to avoid.â
The patent in suit has been before the United States District Courts for the Southern District of New York, for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the Court of Claims, and the Supreme Court. All of these held that Mr. Stilz did not have a broad pioneer patent. He entered a crowded art, and his patent is limited to a narrow range of equivalency, if not to the particular device disclosed. As thus limited the defendantâs device does not infringe.
However, the plaintiffâs patent, within the limits of its novel disclosures, is meritorious. Mr. Stilz has not only a patent of real worth, but he has carried on âthis long and difficult litigation with credit and conduct deserving commendation.
Under the law and the facts, we are constrained to affirm the decree of the District Court.