Bulletin 90 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mine and Mining

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 192
- File Size:
- 5476 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1915
Abstract
ORES PROCESS OF ORE CONCENTRATION-PATENTABILITY.
The patent issued to Sulman, Pickard, and Ballot, November 6, 1905, and assigned to Minerals Separation and Minerals Separation American Syndicate, for new and useful improvements in ore concen- tration, its object being to separate metalliferous matter from gangue by means of oils and fatty acids that have a preferential affinity for such metalliferous matter, the principal feature of which is "agitat- ing the mixture to cause the oil-coated mineral to form a froth," was clearly anticipated by other patents, and each step in the process described in the Sulman, Pickard, and Ballot patent is fully described in more than one of the prior patents, with the single exception of the reduced quantity of oil used; but the discovery that the small fraction of oil is sufficient to produce flotation of the metalliferous matter can not be made by itself or in combination, the subject of a patent.
Hyde v. Minerals Separation, 214 Fed., 100, p. 109, May, 1914.
ACTION FOR CONVERSION OF MINERALS.
In an action by the grantor of a certain mine and mining property against his grantee to recover damages for the conversion of a quantity of ore that the grantor before the conveyance had mined and extracted from the mine and placed on the dump near the mine, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover where it appears that at the time the ore was placed on the dump the mine was owned and operated by a mining company and that at the time the ore was taken out of the mine the company had no intention of doing anything with it but simply deposited it on the dump as waste and to give an opportunity to develop the mine and get better ore to send to the smelter, and that
Citation
APA:
(1915) Bulletin 90 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mine and MiningMLA: Bulletin 90 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mine and Mining. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1915.