Yale Lock Manufacturing Co. v. Sargent

117 U.S. 536, 6 S. Ct. 934, 29 L. Ed. 954, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1871
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 29, 1886
Docket164
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 117 U.S. 536 (Yale Lock Manufacturing Co. v. Sargent) 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
Yale Lock Manufacturing Co. v. Sargent, 117 U.S. 536, 6 S. Ct. 934, 29 L. Ed. 954, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1871 (1886).

Opinion

MR. Justice Blatohford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York, by James Sargent against the Yale Lock Manufacturing Company, to recover for the infringement of reissued letters patent *538 No. 4696, granted to Sargent, January 2, 1872, for an “ improvement in locks,”' on an application therefor filed September 25, 1871 (the original pate , No. 57,574, haying been granted to him August 28, 1866).

The specification and drawings of the reissue are as follows:

“■My invention consists in combining with the ordinary com- ■ bination-wheels, and the other working parts of a combination lock which has no sliding lock-bolt, a bolt turning on a pivot or bearing, which is so isolated or- removed from contact with the said wheels as to receive any pressure or strain which may be applied through the separate bolt-work of the safe or vault-door, ‘and cut off the communication between the bolt-work of the door and the wheels or fence-lever of the lock, whereby the position of the slots in the wheels cah be determined and the lock picked,’ as can be done in most cases where the ordiriary. sliding-bolt is used without some mechanical device to prevent.

In the drawings, Figure 1 is an elevation of my improved lock, with the back plate removed; Figs. 2 and 3, an elevation and top view, respectively, of the pivoted bolt, the combinar _ tion-Wheels, the cam, and the .lever work that connects them; Fig. 4, a perspective view of the pivoted bolt; Fig. 5, a similar view of the magnet and armatures-; Fig. 6, a view showing the manner of applying the spindle and cam to a safe or vault door.

A, represents the plate of a safe door, and B, the case of the lock which is applied thereto. O, O, G, are the combination-wheels, and D, the operating spindle. The spindle passes through a hollow stud,, a, of the case, and has screwed upon its inner end the cam E, as shown most clearly in Fig. 6. The wheels themselves rest on the stud a. • /, is the bolt, turning " on a pivot or bearing, q. . Its location is such as to-rest closely in the rear of the stem, ‡, of the heavy bolt-work of the door, and to hold it out when in one position, but to allow' it to retract, to free the bolt-work, when in the other position, said bolt, I, turning on its pivot or bearing to allow this to be done. H is a sliding-bar, which gives motion'to the bolt as it ’ is. thrown forward or backward, being connected together by cog-teeth p r. The bar slides on studs, n nA by- which it keeps *539 its horizontal position. G is a lever pivoted at f, to bar II, and serving to'throw the'latter back- It has a hook, 5, Fig.'2, which engages with the bit, d, of the cam, to draw the bar back. The forward motion is given by the cam striking the end o, oí the bar II. L is a magnet of the.form shown in Fig. 5, which is suspended on a pivot, ■ i. Its open end rests .between armatures h le, which are separated by a brass pendant, l. The armature h is attached to the end of lever G. "When the magnet is in contact with the lower armature, ii, the dog, g, will be held away from the wheels; "but' when raised and brought in contact with the upper armature, k, the lever is released and the dog is then allowed to fall into the notches of the wheels, to release the bolt. The magnet is raised by a roller, c, of the cam, which strikes a bearing, m, of the magnet.

In general principle the magnet is the same as that covered by the patent of Sargent and Covert, May 2, 1865; but the construction and arrangement of the magnet and armatures, are much simpler and more effective, and constitute one feature of my present invention.

An important feature in my invention is the employment of the bolt I, turning on a pivot or bearing, instead of the sliding-bolt heretofore in use. .It, is isolated, so to speak, from the combination-wheels and the other main working parts of the lock, and, therefore, any strain which is brought to bear upon it by the heavy bolt-work will be expended on the bolt itself,' " and not upon the wheels. In the old form of lock the sliding-bolt extends back so as to connect with or come near to the wheels, and any strain thereon is liable to disarrange the lock works.

Another important advantage of the isolation of the bolt is that it increases the difficulty of ‘ picking,’ by. being removed from all contact with the wheels. A common mode of picking ordinary locks is to force the bolt back, so as to get a contact with it and the edges of the wheels, by which their position is ascertained. In my lock this cannot occur, as the bolt simply turns on its bearing or pivot, and no back aption can bring it or the lever work against the wheels.

The bolt may not only be of the circular form shown in the *540 drawings, but of a segmental form, which will serve the same purpose.

I am aware that the combination-wheels themselves have been made with notches, and so arranged that the ordinary sliding-bolt which rests against their edges may fall back and *541 within the notches, when they, are all set. Such is not the equivalent of- my invention, as my express purpose is to avoid all contact of the(bolt.with the edges oí th^ wheels.”

The claims of the reissue, five in number, are as follows, but. only claim one is alleged to have been infringed:

“ 1. In a combination lock for safe or vault doors, a bolt, I, which turns on a pivot 'Or bearing, when said bolt, I, is used in a lock having no ordinary sliding. lock-bolt, ana in connection with the separate bolt-work of the door, and so arranged as to receive the pressure of the said, bolt-work without transmitting it to the wheels or other equivalent works of the lock.
2. In a combination lock for. safe and vault doors, I claim the -combinatioh of the bolt I, bar II, and cog-connection jp r, when sáid bolt, I, turns on a pivot or bearing, and receives the pressure of the bolt-work situated outside the lock-works, and inter-, venes between the bolt-work and the wheels.
• 3. I claim, in combination with the bolt I, the bar. H and lever G, arranged and operating as herein set forth.1
4: I claim, in combination with the vibrating magnet, Z, the armatures 7i 7c and pendant l. arranged as herein described.'
5.

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Bluebook (online)
117 U.S. 536, 6 S. Ct. 934, 29 L. Ed. 954, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yale-lock-manufacturing-co-v-sargent-scotus-1886.