National Cash Register Co. v. Boston Cash Indicator & Recorder Co.

156 U.S. 502, 15 S. Ct. 434, 39 L. Ed. 511, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2156
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1895
Docket155
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 156 U.S. 502 (National Cash Register Co. v. Boston Cash Indicator & Recorder Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Cash Register Co. v. Boston Cash Indicator & Recorder Co., 156 U.S. 502, 15 S. Ct. 434, 39 L. Ed. 511, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2156 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

In the past fifteen years, cash registers have become extensively used in retail shops, where each, sale is small in amount, such as drug stores, cigar stands, restaurants, and other small establishments, for the purpose of affording a convenient deposit for the cash received, and of preserving a record of every sale made during each day, and of the amount received therefor. The correspondence between the amount indicated by the register and the amount in the drawer shows whether each Sale has been properly accounted for. It thus enables the *508 proprietor to ascertain at the close of each day’s business the amount of sales, and also operates as a check upon the dishonesty of clerks who are held accountable for the amount of money indicated by the register.

To fulfil all its requirements, the cash register and indicator should perform the following functions :

1. It should register the number of sales. This is done upon somewhat the same principle as a steam engine records its own revolutions.

2. ' It should also register the amount of each sale, and to this end it is provided with a series of keys representing different amounts from five cents to five dollars, by the pressure of which keys a corresponding amount is registered, and added to the previous aggregate of small amounts upon a revolving cylinder.

3. It should also indicate to the customer the proper amount of his purchase by exposing a tablet containing such amount in large figures, which tablet should remain in sight until the next sale is made. If the -amount of such, sale is a dollar and a fraction of another dollar, two such tablets are exposed, the aggregate of which represents the proper amount. It is necessary in each case that the tablet should remain exposed until another key is touched, when it ought to disappear, that the next customer may recognize the amount of his .purchase. The customer is thus made to a certain extent an involuntary detective of the action of the clerk making the sale.

4. The pressure upon the key should also ring a bell, to call the attention of the customer to the exposed indicator or tablet.

5. The pressure of the key is also intended to unlock, and by the aid of a spring, to throw open, the money drawer, which should be shoved back.and closed after each sale is made.

6. In some machines a record is made of the number of times the lid is opened, that the proprietor may know whether the box has been tampered with.

If the mechanism does its work properly, it should operate as a complete check upon any attempt at embezzlement, by the salesman, of the funds.

*509 The patent in suit covers the registering or recording, as well as the indicating mechanism; but as the only claim of the patent alleged to be infringed deals with the indicating mechanism alone, no further reference to the other features of the patent is necessary. This mechanism consists of keys, E, having figures representing values upon their front ends, c, and hinged upon a horizontal shaft, D, extending across the machine. The rear end of each key is flattened and slotted to receive the lower ends of vertical rods, F, carrying tablets, H, which are labelled Avith a figure corresponding Avith that upon the key. The depression of the front ends of the keys raises the rear ends, together with the rods attached thereto, and brings the tablet into view. Back of these rods is a Aving, I, pivoted at its lower edge,/1, inclined forward, and resting at its upper edge against the rear sides of the upper parts of the rods F. Each rod contains an elbow or projection, d, which, as the rod rises, presses back the wing I, and Avhen the pressure is taken off the key, the elbow catches upon the upper side of the wing, and thus holds the tablet up and exposed to view until the-key is depressed again, Avhen the wing is again pressed back, the elbow is relieved, and the tablet falls.

To secure a more perfect operation of this Aving, a bar, K, is extended across and directly underneath the front ends of the keys, so that whenever any key is depressed this bar is also depressed. Connected Avith this bar is a train of mechanism, which appears in the drawing and is described in the specification, but which is not necessary to be set out here in full. This mechanism operates directly upon the wing I, and secures beyond peradvénture the falling of the tablet, before the elbow of the flext tablet rod has passed the upper edge of the wing. This subsidiary train of mechanism, operating directly upon the vving, and independently of the elbow in the rods, is the special feature of the JRitty and Birch patent.

To answer satisfactorily the question of infringement, it is necessary to refer to the state of the art, and to distinguish that which was already Avell known at the date of this patent, from that which Bitty and Birch contributed by their invention. 'While the novelty of their device is not directly at *510 tacked, it is claimed that, in view of certain prior patents, their patent is subject to limitations which affect materially the construction of the first claim, and show defendant’s machine not to be an infringement.

. The earliest patent to which our attention is called, and which may be said to represent the infancy of the art, is that to James Russell, October 10, 1829, for an improvement in bell hanging. This patent, which was issued long before electricity was put to any serviceable use, was intended to be employed in hotels or other buildings,- where a series or row of bells had theretofore been used to connect each room with the office. These bells had been hung upon wires.or springs, and, when rung, oscillated long enough to call the attention of the attendant to the number of the room with which they were connected. The Russell patent substituted, for the familiar row of bells in the office, a single bell, in a box, with a series of indicators or tablets which protruded from grooves in the box as each bell was sounded. These indicators were mounted upon notched plates of metal, and as each indicator was pulled out by its wire, the plate was caught by a pivoted wing or bar, and the tablet held outside of the box until the next bell was sounded, when it fell back to its place. The wing cooperated with the notch in the metallic plate of the tablet precisely as the wing in the Ritty and Birch patent cooperates with the elbow of the tablet rod, and holds it up until the next tablet is raised. The wing is an obvious anticipation of that in the Ritty and Birch patent, and the whole device differs from it in .principle, only in the absence of the connecting mechanism between the keys and the pivoted wing.

The British patent to Henry Pottin of May 28, 1877, for a cash register exhibits, in place of the pivoted wing of the Russell patent, a sliding bar operated by keys. -This sliding bar is moved aside by a shoulder in each tablet rod as the rod .is raised. After the shoulder has passed a cooperating latch or trip-lever, pivoted upon the bar, the latter is brought back to its position by a spring, and the tablet remains exposed to view.

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Bluebook (online)
156 U.S. 502, 15 S. Ct. 434, 39 L. Ed. 511, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-cash-register-co-v-boston-cash-indicator-recorder-co-scotus-1895.