The question whether or not the battery plates used by the defendants are infringements of the first claim of complainant’s (Faure) patent, as it stands after filing of the disclaimer, is to be determined in view of the construction given to that patent by Judge Coxe in the action brought by the complainant against the Julien Electric Company. 38 Fed. Rep. 117. Under that construction, what Faure discovered was the application of the active layer “to the supports, [electrodes, plates, or grids,] in the form of a paste, paint, or cement, prior to their immersion in the battery fluid.” After hearing the testimony as to the experiments of Brush, and the other proofs as to the prior state of the art, which are again presented on the present motion, Judge Coxe found that the invention was one of more than usual merit, and allowed plaintiff to file a disclaimer, which should save him what he discovered. Defendants’ plates have been made in either of three ways: First. By the use of an active material containing over 10 per cent, of fluid. This they concede to be a paste, and assert that they no longer use it. Second. By mixing the dry powder with about 2⅞ per cent, of the fluid, and then applying the mixture to the plates or grids under hydraulic prc. ¾-ure. The mixture, before application, does not present the appearance of an ordinary paste; but when it is subjected to high pressure, and when *329the particles of the powder and of the fluid are thus extended, or brought into closer contact, there ensues either molecular or chemical action which produces what is known as “setting,” the particles of the mixture adhering to each other, and cohering to the grid. To the production of this action the fluid is apparently an indispensable agent. No other satisfactory reason for its use is shown. Whetherornot, therefore, a mixture of dry powder with 2» per cent, of fluid is apaste while in the mixing tub, it sccius to be a true paste at the moment of application. 1 is components arc substances by whose combination a paste may be formed, and such mixture acts as a paste does. Third. Defendants also force an absolutely dry powder into the interstices of the grid by hydraulic pressure. While the particles of the powder, thus compacted together, arc still in place, the grid is moistened with the fluid, either by brushing it over, or by applying it to a carpel saturated with the fluid; being laid for a moment first on one side and Aon on the other upon the carpet. Sometimes ii is also dipped momentarily in a bath of the fluid. The result of these processes (or either of them) is a saturation of the powder. The percentage of fluid in the mixture thus formed is not stated, but it is probably considerably higher than the 21 por cent, of the second mixture. The mixture thus formed on the grid hardens in a few seconds, apparently going through the same process of sotting as when mixed in the other methods.
The defendants claim that this last process is the same as that used by brush in the experiments proved in the former case, and that therefore it is still open to them, despite the affirmance of the first claim of Jhuire, as modified by the disclaimer. They contend that all Faure did which Brush did not was to mix his paste before he applied it to the plate at all. This, however, seems too narrow a construction of Judge Ooxn’s opinion. If that is all that Faure invented, it is difficult to sec in what respect his discovery merited the encomiums passed upon it in the opinion. What Brush did was to immerse a plate coated with dry material, not only into fluid, but into the very fluid in which it was forthwith, and without removal therefrom, put to use as a battery plate, if such immersion of Brush’s dry material in the battery fluid did not form a paste because the electrical action to which it was subjected prevented its setting (which is what complainant claims,) Brush’s experiments did not anticipate Faure. who did discover the use of paste.. .If such immersion of Brush’s dry material did form a paste, it was formed after, and not before, the immersion of the plate in the battery fluid. Complainant’s patent, however, covers any ease where the form in which the layer of active material is applied is that of a paint, paste, or cement; I ho application of such paste, paint, or cement being completed, so as to leave the plates ready for use, “prior to their immersion in the battery fluid.” Whether the paste is compounded in the mixing tub, or on the surface of the grid, seems immaterial, if the paste, etc., is in fact formed, and that process completed, before immersion for battery purposes. The Brush experiments, however, would no doubt cover the defendants’ fourth method, as described by their witnesses, viz., where a perfectly *330dry powder is-compacted upon the grid by hydraulic pressure, and no fluid -is added until the plate goes into use in the battery. Order accordingly.