Dey Time-Register Co. v. W. H. Bundy Recording Co.

169 F. 807, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5478
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedMarch 12, 1909
DocketNo. 7,174
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 169 F. 807 (Dey Time-Register Co. v. W. H. Bundy Recording Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dey Time-Register Co. v. W. H. Bundy Recording Co., 169 F. 807, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5478 (N.D.N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The alleged invention disclosed and claimed in the patent in suit relates to time-recorders, and, says the patent:

“While as to some of its features the invention may bo applied to various classes óf printing or recording machines, the invention is moro particularly [808]*808directed to certain improvements in time-recorders adapted for recording the times of entering or leaving a factory or other establishment of the individuals ■employed therein.”

The patent further says:

“One of the objects of the invention; is to provide means In a workman’s time-recorder whereby records of different classes are made in marks of different colors or otherwise characteristic of the classes.
“Another object thereof is to provide means whereby the operations of the machine are placed beyond the control of the workman at all times.”

The patent contains 66 claims, of which claims 35, 54, 60, 61, 62, 63, and 64 only are in issue here. The claims of the patent are preceded by the following statement:

“As many changes could be made in the above construction, and many apiparently widely different embodiments of our invention could be made without departing from the scope thereof, we intend that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense. We desire it also to be understood that the language used in the following claims is intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described, and all statements of the scope of the invention which, as a matter of language, might be said to fall there-between.”

The- claims in issue read as follows:

“(35) A clock-controlled time-recorder having automatically-acting time-printing means adapted to print regular records in a certain color and irregular records in a certain other color. * * *
“(54) A clock-controlled time-recorder having automatically-actuated time-printing means adapted to print regular records with an impression of a certain color, and irregular records with an impression of a certain other color. * * *
“(60) A time-recorder including, in combination, time-controlled printing mechanism, means for taking impressions from said printing mechanism upon a record-surface, and means whereby the impressions made by said printing mechanism during different predetermined intervals are made in different colors.
“(61) A time-recorder including, in combination, time-controlled printing mechanism, means for taking impressions from said printing mechanism upon a record-surface, and automatic time-controlled means adapted to cause the impressions made by said printing mechanism during different predetermined intervals of time to appear in different colors.
“(62) In a time-recorder, in combination, time-controlled printing mechanism, means for taking impressions from said printing mechanism upon a record: surface, and automatic means whereby said impressions of different classes are made in colors distinctive of said classes.
“(63) In a time-recorder, in combination, time-controlled printing mechanism, means for taking impressions from said printing mechanism upon a record-surface, and automatic time-controlled means adapted to cause such impressions of different classes to appear in colors distinctive of said classes.
“(64) In a time-recorder, in combination, time-controlled printing mechanism, means for taking impressions from said printing mechanism upon a record-surface, and automatic means whereby irregular records formed by said impressions are made in a certain color and regular records in a certain other color.”

'The patent in suit does not purport to cover, show, or describe a time-recorder complete in all its details, but only so much thereof as will show and illustrate the parts mentioned in the 66 claims of the patent.

[809]*809Claims 35 and 54 call for a clock-controlled time-recorder having automatically-acting time-printing means and automatically-actuated lime-printing means respectively. Claim 35, in addition, says that such time-printing means must be “adapted to print regular records, in a certain color, and irregular records in a certain other color.” Claim 51, in addition to calling for a time-printing means, states that same must be adapted to print regular records with an impression of a certain color, and irregular records with an impression of a certain other color. It seems to me clear that if regular records are printed in a certain color, as, for instance, blue, and irregular records are printed in a certain other color, as, for instance, red, the regular records are printed with an impression of the color blue, and irregular records are printed with an impression of the color red, which is another color. The difference between automatically-acting time-printing means and automatically-actuated time-printing means has not been explained to the court, and it is not sufficiently acute to distinguish any substantial difference between claim 35 and claim 54. Regular records are those made by the workman when he enters and records his time of entry at the regular hour for commencing work, or when, he departs and records his time of leaving at the regular hour of departure. Irregular records are those made by the workman when he enters late and records his time of arrival, or when he departs out of the regular time for departure, and records his time oí leaving. The workman records in figures or characters the hour and minute of his arrival or the hour and mirmte of his departure. Whether the printing devices are such as will make figures or such as will indicate the hour and minute by other characters is immaterial; to be a record within the meaning of these claims the marks made on the card must indicate the hour and minute of arrival or departure, as the case may be.

It would not satisfy claims 35 and 54 to provide an automatically-actuated or acting printing mechanism or device or means which, without recording the time, hour, and minute, of arrival or departure, would simply, by some mark, indicate that the workman had entered late or departed early; that is, out of the regular time. But may not the claims be satisfied by and do they not include, broadly construed, such printing means which record the time of arrival or departure, as the case may be, regular or irregular, all in one color, and also indicate by an impression of some added character, made in some other color, the fact that such record of such irregular time is a record of irregular time ?

The word “adapted,” as used in these claims, evidently refers to the fact that prior dock-controlled time-recorders having automatically-acting time-printing means are not calculated to or so constructed as to print the time or impress the characters indicating the time, when recording irregular time, on the card, or paper in a color different from the imprint or impression 1 hereon recording the regular time. It was the purpose to add to the old clock-controlled time-recorder having automatically-actuated time printing means such means, acting in conjunction therewith, as would print irregular time in a different color from the regular time, or to so modify and change the print[810]

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Bluebook (online)
169 F. 807, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dey-time-register-co-v-w-h-bundy-recording-co-nynd-1909.