The old mode of repairing asphalt pavements was to dig out with a pick “the surface material around the spot to be repaired, sometimes applying heat to the spot to soften the material so that it could be more easily removed.” After the material was removed, the hole was cleaned and coated with tar. The new material, which was placed in the hole in a heated state, was ironed and smoothed in the usual manner. This system is said to have been defective, because a thorough-union or commingling was not made between the old and new material, and was expensive, because the old material, which was torn away by the pick, must be discarded. The patented method subjected “the spot to be repaired and the surrounding edges to such a degree of heat that the surface asphalt, not only the exact spot to be repaired, but the surrounding portion to a greater or less degree, is reduced to the soft, pliable state in which it was originally laid. With a rake or other shitable instrument, it is then agitated and mixed with enough new material to fill up the spot to be repaired. It is then subjected to the usual finishing operation of ironing and burnishing.” There is no soldering and no dividing line between the new and the old, “because the new material has been mixed with, and becomes a part of, the old material.” The apparatus for the application of heat which is described in the patent is a portable gasoline tank, with burners underneath, which throw a sudden strong blast of heat upon the spot to be repaired. The flame, it is said, creates a thin burned skin or crust upon the surface of the asphalt, and melts or liquifies the particles underneath so that they do not lose their cohesive character, but can be used again, after being suitably stirred and mixed with new material. The claims of the patent are as follows:
“(1) The method of repairing asphalt pavements which consists in subjecting the spot to be repaired to heat, adding new material, and smoothing and burnishing it, substantially as described. (2) The method of repairing asphalt pavements which consists in subjecting the spot to be repaired to heat until the material is softened, agitating it, and mixing with it new material, and finally smoothing and burnishing it, substantially as described.”
The Crochet patent, which was for a method of repairing the French pavements of rock asphalt, and which used the intense heat of the patent in suit, seemed to the circuit court an anticipation. Crochet heated the part to be repaired, by a movable furnace, until the surface became friable.. The upper and damaged part of the layer was removed by a toothed iron hoe, which performed the function of a rake, and roughened the part not removed. A suitable thickness of asphalt in powder was then spread over the depression, and tamped in the ordinary way. From the similarity of the two patents, it seemed well-nigh manifest that the French patent had been read *139by the patentee, who was urged by the first assignee of the patent in suit to invent an economical method oí repairing asphalt pavements. It is, however, important, upon the question oí anticipation, to appreciate ihe fact that the rock asphalt of France, from which its asphalt pavements are made, is a limestone or a sandstone rock containing from 15 to 25 per cent,, of bitumen, and that the pavement made of tiiis kind of limestone, when reduced to fragments and compressed, is a different thing from the surface asphalt pavement of this counlry, which is formed from Trinidad asphalt, consisting to a great extent of bitumen, united with petroleum and heated sand, and is melted by heat. The application of heat to rock asphalt causes it to crumble, and reduces it .to sand or powder, which does not firmly unite or “bond” with the old material, while a similar sudden application oí violent heat to the surface of a Trinidad asphalt pavement melts the particles, which, when commingled with a new mixture, can become united with the fresh material.
It is, however, noteworthy that Crochet thought that the beneficial effect of his process was to soften the subjacent layer of the French pavement so that it should “unite perfectly with the new layer, and form with it a thickness, without solution of continuity.” Nevertheless, there is, in fact, a difference in the material of the two pavements, and we are inclined to differ from the circuit court, and to regard the Perkins patent as patentable, because it was an application of an old process of intense heating, by means of a movable furnace, to different and dissimilar materials. The two processes were not exactly alike. Crochet treated the surface by vivid heat, removed the damaged part, roughened the remaining surface, and added new material. Perkins heated in the same way, minced the old material (o a soft, pliable state, agitated it with a rake, and mixed it with enough new material to till up the spot to be repaired. No other anticipation of importance was presented in the record.
The defendant used in Buffalo, for its heating purposes, a coke furnace upon wheels, and its process is described by Mr. Kent, who carefully watched it for two months, for the purpose of giving testimony, as follows:
Asbestos sheets were placed on the outside of the edges of the spot to he repaired so as to protect the surrounding pavement from the heat. The com--plainants aleo use these sheets. “'This coke heater was then left over the spot io he repaired a sufficient length of time to soften the asphalt to a depth of half an inch, more or less. The coke heater was then wheeled away, the asbestos removed, and the heated jjertion of the pavement scraped off to a depth of half an inch, more or less, with notched hoes, and ihe edge of the portion scraped off was made even and smooth, and then the surface of the patch was sprinkled with asphalt, cement, and the edges daubed with the same-material. New asphalt was then tin own on, and made level with the surrounding pavement with the hack of an iron rake. It was Hum compressed or tamped with iron tampers or smoothers, and rolled with a hot roller.” The cement was in very slight quantity, and was sprinkled in narrow threads from a broom'. The softened asphalt was generally removed with an iron rake, the action of which on the lower surface left it in a rough or in a sort of grooved state, it was not deemed necessary that the new asphalt should bo added at once, while the spot to be repaired was hot, though that was the rule. There was no agitation or raking of the bottom when the new material was added, which was thrown in with a shovel and smoothed off or made level.
*140The question is whether this process is that of the patent. If claim 1 is to be literally construed, it is void, for it is simply for the application of heat for a purpose, and of a character and amount, not expressed, the addition of new material, and the usual smoothing and burnishing; but no contention is made that it is not to be construed for the process substantially as described, — that is, that the old material shall be heated until it is softened or partially melted, sha.l be agitated, and that the new material is to be mixed with, and become a part of, the old material. Thé claim could hardly be construed to permit the omission of any of the described steps of the process, unless such omission had been recognized in the specification. Claims 1 and 2 do not, therefore, materially differ from each other.
The patented process omits the use of tar as a solder, and does not look to the use of any material for that purpose. The defendant, after the burned or crusted portion of the surface had been scraped off, sprinkled the hole with asphalt cement. The sprinkling, though the amount of the cement which was applied was very small, was for the purpose of causing the new material to adhere to the old. It was for a solder, and not for the purpose of fusion. The sprinkling shows the existence of another variancé between the two processes which is substantial. In the Perkins process, the old and melted material is used. It is agitated so as to become thoroughly plastic, is mixed with the new material, and the two become homogeneous. In the defendant’s process, the hole is scraped, the softened asphalt is removed with a rake, which leaves the lower surface in a rough state, “the surface of the patch is sprinkled with asphalt cement,” which shows that the old material had practically disappeared, and new asphalt is shoveled into the hole and tamped down. The Perkins process places stress upon the perfect commingling of old and new asphalt as a result of the agitation of the particles of old and new material. The defendant’s process places no reliance upon this kind of commingling, but scrapes or cleans out the depression, sprinkles a little cement upon the bottom and edges, to be of some benefit in causing the old and new to adhere, and shovels in and tamps down the new material. Wherein the defendant’s process differs from that of Perkins it corresponds with that of Crochet. The decree of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.