Tbe complainant claims protection for a structure designed for use in connection with various .kinds *591of furnaces which must be highly heated. The structure is of iron, aud may be so placed as to sustain the mouth of the furnace; but the main purpose is to arrange about the highly-heated parts a successful circulation of water, in order that the troublesome burning out of the furnace mouth may be averted. For a considerable number of years various devices employing water for such purpose have been in operation, but, generally speaking, with unsatisfactory results. In 1888, B. B. Lamprey and A. 0. Bugbee procured hitters patent (numbered 388,367), in which they claimed an invention consisting of the combination with a furnace and its mouth, a series of pipes extending along the opposite sides and over the top of the mouth of the furnace, with inlet pipes for the supply of water, and outlet pipes for the escape of the heated wafer and steam, and all so arranged and connected as to brace or support the brickwork, around the mouth thereof. It, is claimed that experience with this device disclosed defects of a serious character, so serious as to render the appliance of little or no value. It would seem that the failure resulted from the fact that there was no provision for steam generating in the lining or pipe's as the water was passing there-through, and, as a consequence, the steam rising to the highest point in the pipes became superheated, and forced the water hack into the boiler, thus leaving the pipes, and furnace mouth as well, exposed to the highly heated and dangerous conditions which the structure was intended to avert. In February, 1890, Lamprey and Bugbee procured a patent, based upon what was claimed to be an improvement on their earlier patent, and which relieved the difficulty to which I have referred. This alleged improvement and invention, which the complainant owns, and on which it now relies, is covered by the first and second claims in letters patent numbered 421,588, dated February 18,1890, aud consists of an appliance to the furnace mouth linings, constructed and arranged for the circulation of water, substantially as set forth in their earlier patent, combined with a steam dome connecting with the lining, a pipe affording means of communication between the steam dome and boiler, and another pipe affording communication between the boiler and lining; hut the material and important device is the steam dome, which is designed to be located at a high point, and where the vertical and horizontal pipes unite, and above the line of the pipes through, which, the water circulates. In other words, it is a space above the header or manifold (the contrivance used in the ordinary steam radiator), into which the steam generated in the pipes may collect, and from which it may pass, together with superheated water, into flu; boiler. My conclusion is (hat this device is new, and an improvement upon any device known prior to the patent in suit. It is proper, however, that I should slate that I have not been free from doubt as to the proposition urged by the defendant, that the Sloane patent of May 10, 1882, which provides for a drum in connection with its pipes, contemplates a device involving the same principle and accomplishing the same results as the one involved in the patent on which the complainant relies. But, after more careful examination, I have come to the view that the com*592plainant’s improvement was not anticipated by tlie Sloane patent, and that the steam-dome device, as combined with the structure contemplated by the earlier patent of Lamprey and Bugbee, involves patentable novelty, and is of practical utility. The evidence satisfies me that in the old structure, under certain conditions, the circulation of water was retarded by steam generated at the highly-heated points, and that the water was sometimes forced from the pipes, leaving them exposed, thus rendering the appliance worse than useless in respect to the purpose for which it was designed. It would seeem that the steam dome or space above the ordinary water line in the pipes, and above the manifold or header, averts the danger, and relieves the difficulty described, and that a combination results therefrom which accomplishes the purpose intended,- — that of protecting the furnace mouth by an uninterrupted and continuous flow of water. For these reasons I must sustain the patent.
I should perhaps state my view as to certain positions -taken by the defense upon the record and argument. One position is that there.is no invention or novelty in the patent under consideration, and a large number of prior patents were introduced, which it is claimed involve all the ideas embraced in the patent in suit; and to sustain this view one McDanniell was called as a witness, who, after testifying as to the state of the art, details a conversation with Lamprey, one of the patentees, during a journey from Bristol in November, 1888, in which the same idea was discussed, not as anything new or novel, but as a known device, which might be applied to the original Lamprey and Bugbee patent. The same witness also says that he subsequently made a rough draft, and submitted it to Lamprey and Bugbee in the presence of one Coveil, illustrating the known device, and the manner in which it could be applied to the old Lamprey and Bugbee structure. Lamprey, Bugbee, and Covell all deny that any such conversation took place, thus putting in issue a question which it is always uncomfortable to decide. But, in view of the situation, aided somewhat by the fact that McDanniell subsequently applied for a patent providing for a structure for the protection of furnace mouths with drums at the top or ends of the water legs and over its middle leg, into which steam formed in the channels of the heater might rise, and thence pass through pipes connecting such drums with the steam space of-the boiler, I must find that McDanniell did not understand such device was old in 1888, and that the defendant’s position as to the conversation is not sustained.
. The. defense further contended that the patent in suit was invalid for the reason that the patent-office fee was not paid within the time provided by section 4897 of thé Revised Statutes. It is not understood that this -objection is open to the defense in a proceeding of this character, and I therefore dispose of this point on the ground that patents regular on their face are not the subject of collateral attack.
Defendant also contended that it was entitled to protection for the structure which they had manufactured and put in operation *593under the McDanniell patent of April 11, 1893; that their structure is an improvement upon anything previously in use, and that it involves patentable novelty. The defendant’s manner of patting the water in circulation is different in this respect: The channels of circulation are created by an M-shaped shell structure, but the principle is the same, and the structure involves the steam-dome idea, which is the essential feature of the later patent to Lamprey and Bugbee; and, inasmuch as the Lamprey and Bugbee patent provides for and describes a structure, which may be “a hollow shell or other contrivance” as well as pipes, the defendant’s M-shaped shell structure, combined with the steam-dome idea, must he treated as a violation of the rights of the complainant. The result reached is that the device or appliance employed for the collection and expansion of steam, and located ata point higher than the pipes or channels through which the water circulates, and whether called a “drum” or a “steam dome,” is an infringement of the complainant’s rights under its patent of February 18.1890.
Decree for complainant for injunction in accordance with these views, and for an accounting according to the* prayer of the bill.