New York Filter Mfg. Co. v. Elmira Waterworks Co.

Decision Date20 September 1897
Citation82 F. 459
PartiesNEW YORK FILTER MANUF'G CO. v. ELMIRA WATERWORKS CO. et al.
CourtU.S. District Court — Northern District of New York

John R Bennett, M. H. Phelps, and F. G. Fincke, for complainant.

Frederic H. Betts, for defendants.

COXE District Judge.

I have examined with care all of the testimony relating to the only question now open-- the question of infringement. In view of what has been said heretofore by this court and the circuit court of appeals it will serve no useful purpose to discuss this question at length. Suffice it to say that, in my judgment, the Elmira plant infringes the Hyatt patent. The defendants seem to entertain the opinion that they may use the Hyatt process if they use something else in connection with it. I do not think so. The real work of purification at Elmira is done by the Hyatt process. The cisterns underneath the filters may or may not be an improvement, but the filters act in precisely the same manner as those which have already been condemned by the courts. The tanks are larger than in the Niagara Case and the sedimentation is greater, but the difference is one of degree only. If a tank, through which a continuous flow of water passes in eddying currents, can become a 'settling basin' the Niagara tanks are within this category as fully as those at Elmira. Tanks of this type are not the settling basins of the prior art to which the appellate court alluded in the closing sentence of its opinion.

It would have been better for the complainant if the court had voided the patent in limine rather than place a construction upon it which enables any one to infringe who has wit enough to pass the water on its way to the filter through a cistern where some of the impurities are caught. Upon the theory of the defendants, water of precisely the same degree of purity might be passed to the filter bed from two distinct sources if conducted there direct it would be an infringement, but if passed through a tank, where the coarser impurities are caught, it would not be. In each instance the water actually filtered contains the same amount of impurities, but in the latter it is found more convenient, owing to its greater turbidity, to arrest some of the coarser impurities before introducing it to the filter bed. In both cases the Hyatt process is used.

It is due to the defendants, I think, in order to avoid further misunderstanding, to say that, in my opinion, they cannot...

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2 cases
  • New York Filter Mfg. Co. v. Jackson
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Eastern District of Missouri
    • 27 décembre 1898
    ...of New York Filter Mfg. Co. v. Elmira Waterworks Co., in the Northern district of New York, on an application for a preliminary injunction (82 F. 459; 83 F. 1013), and also the case of Same Complainant v. Loomis-Manning Filter Co., 91 F. 421. In the several opinions pronounced in these case......
  • Heap v. Greene
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — First Circuit
    • 30 janvier 1899

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