Upon this rehearing two questions arise: First. Bid the Howatson British patent anticipate Peifer’s invention, described in and claimed by his patent here in suit? Second. Has the defendant company infringed Peifer’s patent?
1. I do not think it necessary to recite or discuss at any length the new proofs. They have been attentively examined. After careful consideration of the specification and drawings of the Howatson patent in connection with the model and the other evidence, my conclusion is adverse to the defendant upon the specific issue raised by the amendment to the answer, to wit, the question of anticipation by Howatson. The Howatson patent, I think, bears the same general relation to the art as the patents which the office cited against the allowance of Peifer’s original application. This British patent, in my judgment, no more anticipated Peifer than did the patents which the defendant put in evidence under the original answer.
2. Has there been infringement by the defendant of Peifer’s patent? Upon this question the proofs are now full. At the former hearing they were incomplete. Especially were they unsatisfactory for lack of clear evidence as to the construction of the defendant’s furnace. That deficiency has been supplied. It is plain upon the face of his patent that Peifer’s invention, as described and claimed by him, consists of a specific device to protect the walls of the neck of the heating chamber of a furnace from the action of the boiling slag which accumulates there. In his specification the patentee thus declares himself: “My invention consists in the construction hereinafter described and claimed.” The subject-matter of the patent is a particular construction, which is definitely stated and claimed. After a general reference to the patent drawings, the specification proceeds thus:
“In the drawings, 10 represents a metallurgical furnace, of which the nock of the heating chamber is shown at 11. In the side walls, 12, about this heating chamber, there are formed flues, 13, which communicate with the surrounding atmosphere through the medium of ports, 2. The flues, 13, load to The stack, 14, the upper ends of the flues being preferably slightly contracted. These ports, 2, range along the lower sides of the neck. 11. just below Its floor line, so that the draft of (he furnace will cause a series of jeis or streams of cold air to impinge against the side walls of the neck .at the points where they are ordinarily cut away by the slag, and effectually prevent such action.”
The patent has a single claim, which is as follows:
“A straight draft metallurgical furnace, 10, having a heating chamber terminating in a neck, 11, and a slack over the neck, the air spaces, 13. in the side walls of the neck extending above and below its floor line, provided Inflow the floor line with the series of cold air Inlet ports, 2, opening through the outer side walls, and flues connecting the upper ends of the air spaces with (lie interior of the furnace, whereby the draft will cause jeis of cold air to be drawn through the ports. 2. and impinged against the sides of the neck just below its floor line, substantially as set forth.”
Peifer’s application was thrice rejected by the patent office upon references to prior patents. These rejections were followed by *940amendments in Ms specification and claim which brought them to their present form. In a communication to the commissioner, transmitting the second amendment, the applicant’s solicitors wrote:
“The air spaces without the'series of ports, 2, will not effect the objects sought, and the force of the furnace is also necessary to give force to the air, and cause it to impinge against the sides of the neck at the points named.”
The proofs before the court establish, I think, that the air ports or lateral holes through the outer side walls whereby jets or streams of cold air are drawn in and caused to impinge directly against the side walls of the neck, is the feature of novelty which distinguishes Peifer’s construction from prior devices for cooling the walls of a furnace by currents of air coursing in or along the same. In the defendant’s furnace the air is taken from above, and brought down by means of a vertical pipe to the end of a horizontal flue, through which it passes backwardly to a short vertical flue, and down the same into a lower horizontal flue, through wMch the air passes forwardly. There is some dispute as to the precise location of this lower flue, but according to the clear weight of evidence it does not extend below the floor line of the neck. Certainly, the defendant’s furnace does not have the lateral air ports of the Peifer patent. In the defendant’s construction there is no impingement of cold air against the side walls of the furnace neck, within the meaning of Peifer’s patent. The cooling effected is by means of a current of air coursing through flues in the masonry. It is said that the purpose sought to be effected by the defendant is the same as that contemplated by Peifer. But identity of object is not the test of infringement. There is here a very substantial difference in the means employed. In view of the prior state of the furnacé-building art, the proceedings in the patent office upon Peifer’s application, the terms of his specification, and his< limited claim, it is impossible, in my judgment, so to construe the Peifer patent as to bring within its scope the defendant’s furnace. Keystone Bridge Co. v. Phœnix Iron Co., 95 U. S. 274, 24 L. Ed. 344; Railroad Co. v. Mellon, 104 U. S. 112, 26 L. Ed. 639; Knapp v. Morss, 150. U. S. 221, 14 Sup. Ct. 81, 37 L. Ed. 1059; Morgan Envelope Co. v. Albany Perforated Wrapping Paper Co., 152 U. S. 425, 14 Sup. Ct. 627, 38 L. Ed. 500. If it be true, as suggested by the plaintiff’s expert witness, Mr. Clarke, that the patent granted to Mr. Peifer, and accepted by him, did not adequately cover his real invention, it is a misfortune which the court is powerless to redress. McClain v. Ortmayer, 141 U. S. 419, 12 Sup. Ct. 76, 35 L. Ed. 800; Lewis v. Steel Co., 17 U. S. App. 296, 8 C. C. A. 41, 59 Fed. 129. As to what use the defendant company made of the plaintiff’s patented improvement after he left the defendant’s employment the testimony is conflicting. Thomas Orgill, who succeeded the plaintiff as master bricklayer in the defendant’s works, and has since continued to act in that capacity, testifies positively that, as the several furnaces into wMch the plaintiff had introduced his construction needed repairs at the neck, his construction was abandoned, and the defendant’s above-described construction was substituted, *941and that (lie defendant never afterwards used tbe plainüíFs construction. This witness speaks from personal knowledge. I do not see how he could be mistaken, and (here is no reason for imputing. to him willful false swearing. Other witnesses, who likewise testify from actual personal knowledge, fully corroborate Orgill. The weight of evidence here, I think, is with the defendant. I feel satisfied that Mr. Peii'er and Mr. Pedder are mistaken in what they say on this subject. Under the pleadings the burden of proof to show infringement is bn the plaintiff. Upon the most careful consideration of the evidence I am constrained to hold that the charge of infringement has not been made out. A decree must be entered dismissing the bill, but without costs. Hie costs down to the time of filing the amendment to the answer were paid by the defendant as the condition of reopening the case. Substantially all the subsequent costs have been incurred in the investigation and trial of the issue — the alleged Howatsou anticipation — raised by ihe amendment. As that issue has been decided against the defendant, I think it but just that all the costs since the amendment was allowed should be paid by the defendant. Let a decree be drawn in accordance with the views expressed in the foregoing opinion.