I. It is first insisted by plaintiffs that the patent is void for want of-novelty in the invention, that the contri-1 jubisdic-novelty of. vanee, which is covered by the patent, was in use ' prior to defendant’s alleged invention. This objection is met by defendant with the position that this court has no jurisdiction to pass upon the validity of his patent. The Federal Courts, it is claimed, alone have authority to decide upon such matters. We find it unnecessary to pass upon this jurisdictional question, and therefore enter upon no consideration of the arguments and authorities adduced thereon. In our opinion, the facts disclosed by the record satisfactorily establish the conclusion that the invention in question was not so wanting in novelty as to defeat the patent. A brief consideration of the facts will, in our opinion, support the correctness of our conclusion.
The apparatus covered by the patent is intended to conduct air, supplied by a “blower” under the grate bars of the furnace, and thus increase the rapidity of the combustion of fuel, and consequently add to the capacity of the boiler to produce steam by the increase of heat. . Among the advantages claimed from its use, is that inferior fuel, as slack coal, may be used profitably with it, when without it such fuel cannot *288be used in many furnaces. It may, in general terms, be described as a horizontal pipe passing transversely under the grate bars, in the front part of the furnace. It is supplied with orifices at proper intervals from which the air, propelled by the “ blower,” escapes under the grate bars and fuel in the direction of the draft of the furnace.
It is shown by the evidence that contrivances for conducting air, supplied in the same way, under the fires of furnaces, have been used, in some instances, twenty years before defendant’s invention. We are not able to say from the evidence that any of them so resembles defendant’s invention as to deprive it of novelty. They all conduct the air to the fire, but the place and manner of the air reaching the fire in defendant’s invention, is entirely different from the other contrivances, or, at least, there is an absence of evidence showing them to be alike in these respects. We do not presume it is claimed that defendant’s patent covers the bringing of air to the fire to increase combustion, or that he is the discoverer of the principle that an artificial supply of air will aid combustion and increase the intensity of the fire. This is understood by the rudest savage who hastens combustion in kindling his fire by the breath blown from his lips. But the manner of conducting the air artificially set in motion to the fire, and the point where, and direction in which it comes in contact with the burning fuel, may be the subject of an invention and of a patent. One contrivance somewhat resembles defendant’s; it was used' in furnaces of a peculiar build many years before the invention in question. It was a pipe running laterally under the grate bars parallel with the boilers. This description, without more, will indicate the difference between it and defendant’s invention. We have evidence that other contrivances were used for the same purpose, but we are unable to determine from the evidence that they were like defendant’s invention, or of the same character. We conclude, therefore, that defendant’s patent cannot be void for want of novelty in the invention, or because of a prior discovery and use of the same apparatus.
II. It is insisted that defendant deceived and defrauded *289the plaintiffs by representing that he held a patent upon an 2. sale of property: tatiotLWesen improvement of his contrivance, which consisted in the use of certain small tubes conducting tlie air from the orifices of the pipes in the direction of the fuel. They were attached to the air pipe. It is urged that he claimed to hold a patent upon this improvement, and represented it to be of great utility, when in fact he had no such patent, and the tubes were utterly useless. That he had no such patent is not denied, and it is clearly shown that the additional contrivance of the tubes was of no utility. There is a conflict of evidence as to the representations made by him in regard to the patent thereon and its utility. But, we may concede for the purpose of this case, that the facts as claimed by plaintiffs appear in the evidence. We have, then, the case of a claim of a patent upon the tubes, and representations of their utility, without the existence of such patent, and the conceded fact that they are of no practical use. The tubes being useless, plaintiffs, of course, suffered no injury because defendant held no patent thereon. This cannot be questioned. But there is evidence to show that the tubes are covered by defendant’s first patent, at least an application of other parties for a patent upon them was refused at the patent office on the ground that they were covered by defendant’s patent. We are unable to reach the conclusion that plaintiffs jmrchased the interest in the patent because of their belief that the tubes were patented and were useful. We do not think that the belief in the utility of the. tubes at all influenced plaintiffs in the purchase. They doubtless purchased because of their belief in the utility of the whole apparatus taken together. Now if the tubes were of no benefit, and the contrivance was as good without them as with them, plaintiffs were not deceived by defendant’s representations, or defrauded by the want of a patent on the tubes or because of their inutility.
III. Upon the question of the usefulness of defendant’s invention it is necessary to say but little. The evidence upon 3_:equlty. this point is conflicting. Many witnesses for plaintiff testify that it is of no value, while many of defendant’s witnesses speak highly of its utility and value. *290We conclude that it is a useful invention; the degree of its usefulness, its value, we are not required to determine. In more than one instance it is shown to have been tested and its usefulness thereby established. Such tests were made in Des Moines where the parties all lived, and plaintiffs were at the time of the purchase aware that trials of the practical working of the apparatus had been then made. We cannot conclude that defendant by falsehood and fraud induced plaintiffs to make the purchase. If a consideration beyond the value of the interest purchased was paid by plaintiffs, it is simply a case of mistaken judgment as to value, against which equity will not relieve.
A decree will be entered in this court dismissing plaintiff’s petition.
REVERSED.