Yale Lock Manuf'g Co. v. Berkshire Nat. Bank

17 F. 531, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2295
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 14, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. 531 (Yale Lock Manuf'g Co. v. Berkshire Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yale Lock Manuf'g Co. v. Berkshire Nat. Bank, 17 F. 531, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2295 (circtdma 1883).

Opinion

Lowell, J.

This suit is brought to establish and enforce the rights of the plaintiffs as the owners of the two patents for improvements in locks for safes and vaults, reissue 8,550, to Samuel A. Little, and reissue 7,947, to James Sargent. The Little patent was reissued three times for the benefit of the plaintiffs, and its claims have been enlarged in number from 3 to 17. It is probable that the motive of this action was to enjoin the use of locks like the defendants’; and, if this intent were decisive, the reissue must he held void. The plaintiffs contend that intent and act must concur, as in other penal cases; that Little was the first person to make a time-lock, with adjustable devices for controlling the time of locking as well as that of unlocking a door; that this invention was clearly described and claimed in the original specification; and .insist that claims 1 and 7 are saved by the operation of this rulo. These claims were sustained by Judge Shipman in Yale Lock Manufg Co. v. Norwich Nat. Bank, 19 Blatchf. 123, (S. C. 6 Fed. Rep. 377,) and all the questions of novelty and patentability were passed upon. With his opinion I fully agree, and I refer to the report of that case for an able, thorough, and satisfactory discussion of those questions. When the case in Connecticut was decided, Miller v. Bridgeport Brass Co. 104 U. S. 350, had not been published; but it was said in the argument before me that Judge Shipman had had his attention called to that decision by a motion to dissolve the injunction in Connecticut, and had refused to dissolve it. This point, though a difficult one, I decide in conformity with Judge Shipman’s action, for the reason that in a patent like the original patent of Little, it would be proper to construe his second claim somewhat broadly, and so as to reach the substituted adjustable devices and their connection with the “dog,” in the lock of the defendants in that case, which were substantially like those in question here.

The Hall lock hás, besides the devices above referred to, an arrangement entirely different from any shown in the case in Connecticut. The plaintiff’s have two time movements to control the lever which controls the “dog,” and the defendant has hut one. The seventh [532]*532claim of the patent is for the combination of the “time movements,” in the plural number, “and two adjustable devices, one for determining the time of locking and the other of unlocking.” But the first claim, which differs but little from the seventh, has the words “time mechanism,” and both forms were well-known substitutes for each other at the date of the patent. The two movements are exactly alike, and the whole purpose of the second movement is to give an additional safeguard against a lock-out, if one movement should stop. It is not to be expected that the patentee would make the use of a single or double time movement an essential element of his invention, and I am fully satisfied that he had not such intent, and that he has not so expressed himself in his first claim, even if he has in his seventh claim, which, I think, he has not, when that claim is construed in connection with the rest of the specification.

I am not able to agree with the commissioner of patents, and with Judge Shipman, that claim 3 of the Sargent reissue, No. 7,9é7, is valid; and my excuse for a somewhat elaborate discussion of the subject is that I differ from those high authorities, as well as from the able board of examiners in chief of the patent-office.

This patent'was reissued so soon after its grant that it is not obnoxious to the objection of undue delay. Its invalidity is inherent in its nature. The specification mentions, without describing, a combination lock, which is declared to be of any ordinary construction; it carefully describes a time-lock, which is said by the plaintiffs to be new and highly useful, but says that any time-lock will serve the purpose of the combination. Claims 1 and 3 make no reference to this mechanism; and claim 3 undertakes to monopolize what is now called the triple combination of any time-lock, and any combination or key lock, with the multiple bolt-work of a single door of a vault or safe. The claim must be construed in the broadest possible manner, or there is no infringement. It is—

“ (3) The combination, with the bolt-work of a safe or vault door, of a combination or key lock, controllable mechanically from the exterior of said door, with a tim.e-lock having a lock-bolt or obstruction for locking and unlocking controllable from the interior of said door, both of said locks being arranged so as to rest against or connect with the bolt-work, the time-lock being automatically unlocked by the operation of the time-movement, both of said locks being independent of each other, and arranged to control the locking and unlocking of the bolt-work, so that said safe or vault door cannot be opened when locked until both of said locks have been unlocked, or have released their clogging action, to enable the door to be opened substantially as described.”

This claim is a complete patent in itself, and has no necessary connection with the mechanism described in the 'specification; and the words “substantially as described” have no meaning.

Multiple bolt-work, which means several bolts connected with a common cross-bar, so that by locking the bar you lock all the bolts, had been used on heavy iron doors, such as those of safes and vaults, [533]*533long before ihe date of the patent, and had been known to Sargent himself for 16 years or more when lie testified in 1877. Safe doors had been fastened by key-loeks, by combination locks, and by time-locks, and all these locks had been applied to independent bolt-work. Two combination locks had been used upon a single door with such bolt-work; and a time-lock and combination lock had been put upon a single door with two sets of multiple bolt-work. This is found to be the state of the art by Judge Shipman, and the record of his case, and of still another, as well as the evidence taken for this case, are made part of the record here, and I agree with his findings of fact. In this state of the art, there was no patentable novelty in putting one old form of lock, a time-lock, in place of another, a combination lock, in the instance above mentioned, of two combination locks dogging one compound holt-work. Nor was it patentable to substitute a well-known multiple holt-work for two such holt-works with which a time-lock and combination lock had been combined in another of those instances. But my opinion doos not depend wholly upon the proved state of the art, excepting that multiple bolt-work was a familiar part of a vault door. There never was a time, in my judgment, since the first lock was invented by Tubal Cain, or whoever was the inventor, when there was patentable novelty in combining two locks with a single door. There may be no record of its having been done, but no one can doubt that whenever one lock was found to be inadequate, another was added. I cannot make this plainer by argument, but I may, perhaps, by illustration. When nails were invented and had become public property, the carpenter who had the right to use one nail might use two, if he found one would not fasten his two pieces of wood sufficiently for his purpose. If one has invented a pair of shoes of a new form, and another a pair of shoes of a different form, a combination, consisting of putting a shoe of one of these forms upon the right foot, and one of the other form upon the left, would not he patentable.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. 531, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yale-lock-manufg-co-v-berkshire-nat-bank-circtdma-1883.