McCaskey Register Co. v. Mantz

217 F. 415, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1510
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedOctober 31, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 217 F. 415 (McCaskey Register Co. v. Mantz) 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
McCaskey Register Co. v. Mantz, 217 F. 415, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1510 (N.D.N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The patent in suit, No. 783,126, to Perry A. McCaskey, relates to systems for keeping records of credit sales of merchandise and also the cash payments thereon, and was granted February 21, 1905, on application filed April 27, 1904. It has novelty and new features and great utility. Claims 12, 13, 15, and 22 are in issiie her,e. Claims 2, 13, 15, and 22 have been the subject of former litigation in McCaskey Register Co. v. Divens (C. C.) 181 Fed. 171, affirmed 194 Fed. 967, 114 C. C. A. 603. It was held at circuit that the claims in issue there “must be limited to the new and precise devices as shown in the drawings and specification.” The Circuit Court of Appeals (Third Circuit) on this subject said:

“From what has been said, it is obvious' that the patent is a very narrow one, and that, if it is sustained, it must be narrowly construed, and practically confined to its exact disclosures. No broad construction is permissible, nor can the doctrine of equivalents be applied, without encountering the prior art and destroying the patent. Thus construed, the defendant has not infringed.”

[1] It is seen that the validity of the patent and of the claims in issue, the same as here with one exception, were conceded by the Circuit Court of Appeals. There can be no serious question on this subject, and this court also finds the patent and all the claims in issue here valid. The real question is that of infringement, which incidentally, of course, involves that of construction. This art is in no sense a very old one, and it is far from crowded, so far as this record shows. Bill files and bill holders and receptacles for storing and preserving papers are, of course, very old; but they are not really of the prior art we are considering and to which the McCaskey patent in suit belongs. ■ In patent of October 10, 1899, to Yorger and West for “store cabinet for sales accounts,” it is said:

“Our invention relates to devices for the use of merchants for facilitating and simplifying business transactions connected with the selling of goods on a credit system; and it consists in a convenient cabinet, embodying new and novel elements in the construction thereof, whereby billing-forms are retained and on which the names of purchasers are entered in alphabetical order, together with the entries of their purchases at the moment of making the sale, and whereby the bill of any purchaser may be instantly referred to for making subsequent charges, or for summing up and rendering statement of account.
“Our invention consists, further, in the parts and combination and arrangement of parts embraced in the details of construction, as will be hereinafter described, and pointed out in the claims. In conducting a retail store, much detail work is required, with great possibilities of errors, in keeping the accounts of those to whom credit is given, entailing considerable expense in the keeping of account books, usually involving the multiplication of entries, all of which is a serious loss to the merchant, particularly in cases where the entries of sales may be inadvertently omitted in crowded hours.
“Our object is to provide a simple and convenient means whereby the ordinary billing-forms may be substituted for the usual system of books in making sales entries and rendering the transferring of accounts from book to book unnecessary, so that the original entries stand until liquidated. A further object is to provide equally convenient receptacles wherein the bills, as the sheets become filled up and accumulate, may be placed so as to be readily accessible when rendering accounts for settlement. These objects are fully attained in our invention, which is, furthermore, of utility in being portable, so that the accounts may be transferred, when desired, to a safe, and it is cheaply manufactured and durable and economical in use.”

[417]*417This was followed in November, 1900, by a patent to Braddock, No. 661,710, and patent to Huber, No. 708,230, in 1902, and this by a patent to McCaskey, No. 717,247, applied for September 19, 1902,- and issued December 30, 1902, and that was followed by the patent in suit, and is, of course an improvement on his former device. Probably McCaskey’s patent of 1902 taught him something, but it was his own invention. Whatever instruction it gave was from himself. It was, of course, in the prior art when he made his discovery and invention of 1904, the patent in suit. Pie could not have two patents for the same thing, but could have a later patent for an improvement, or for something discovered or invented in 1902, but not patented until 1904, provided it was not disclosed and abandoned to the public.

A mere reading of the claims and specification of the two McCaskey patents show clearly that the second is an advance on- and an improvement over the first, and its patentability is presumed until the contrary is proved. The last is better than the first, and those who copy it and the improved features may be assumed to do so for the reason they, too, see some advantage in so doing, some advance over that which has gone before.

The claims in issue read as follows:

“12. Account-recording appliances, including a bill-holder frame, bill-holders mounted on the frame and having pairs of apertures therein, bill-clamps mounted oppositely on both sides of the bill-holders and having members extending through the apertures to opposite sides thereof, the bill-clamps on both sides of tile bill-holders extending from the apertures in the same direction.
“13. Account-recording appliances, including pivoted bill-holders, bill-clamps mounted on the bill-holders, tab-holders attached to the bill-clamps near the free ends thereof, and index-tabs mounted on the tab-holders.
* * * ❖ # -f * # * *
“15. Account-recording appliances, including a bill-holder frame, bill-holders mounted on the frame and having pairs of apertures therein, bill-clamps mounted oppositely on both sides of the bill-holders and having members extending through the apertures to opposite sides thereof, and rubbing-strips on the bill-holders in pairs on opposing holders and co-operating one with another.
«£******••
“22. In account-recording appliances, the combination, with a plurality of pivoted bill-holders, of a plurality of bill-clamps mounted on the holders, tab-holders attached to the bill-clamps, and index-tabs attached to the tab-holders.”

Claim 12 calls for, in combination, account-recording appliances, including :

(1) Bill-holder frame.

(2) Bill-holders mounted on the frame, and having pairs of apertures therein.

(3) Bill-clamps mounted oppositely on both sides of the bill-holders and having members extending through the apertures to opposite sides thereof; the bill-clamps on both sides of the biil-holders extending from the apertures in the same direction.

Claim 13 calls for, in combination, account-recording appliances, in-eluding:

(1) Pivoted bill-holders.

(2) Bill-clamps mounted on the bill-holders.

[418]*418(3) Tab-holders attached to the bill-clamps near the free ends thereof.

(4) Index-tabs mounted on the tab-holders.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCaskey Register Co. v. Divens
181 F. 171 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania, 1910)
McCaskey Register Co. v. Divens
194 F. 967 (Third Circuit, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 F. 415, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaskey-register-co-v-mantz-nynd-1914.