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

6 F. 377, 19 Blatchf. 123, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2143
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 29, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 F. 377 (Yale Lock Manuf'g Co. v. Norwich Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut 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. Norwich Nat. Bank, 6 F. 377, 19 Blatchf. 123, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2143 (circtdct 1881).

Opinion

Shipman, 1). J.

Tlie suit against the Norwich National Bank is a bill in equity, founded upon the alleged infringement of three letters patent now owned by the plaintiffs, viz.: re-issued letters patent No. 8,550, issued January 21, 1879, to the Yale Lock Manufacturing Company, as assignee of Samuel A. Little, the original patent to Little having been granted January 27, 1874; letters patent No. 173,366, granted February 8, 1876, to the said company, as assignee of Emory Stockwell; and re-issued letters patent No. 7,947, to J ames Sargent, dated November 13, 1877, the original patent having been dated September 25, 1877. The first two patents are for improvements in “time locks;” the third patent is for an improvement in a combined time lock, combination lock, and bolt work for safe and vault doors. The bill in equity against the New Haven Savings Bank relates only to the first two patents.

The object of the Littlo invention was to furnish a time lock by which the multiple bolt work of a safe or vault door could be automatically both “dogged;” or locked, and unlocked at predetermined times; the dogging and releasing being caused by the operation of the time mechanism, and the time for locking or for unlocking being capable of alteration at the will of the operator, without disturbance of the clockwork. Before this invention, automatic unlocking at a predetermined time, and locking whenever the door was shut and the bolts were thrown, were known. No arrangement of time mechanism had been applied to a safe door by means of which looking would take place automatically at a predetermined time. Time locks which lock by the operation of time mechanism after the bolts have been thrown are called after-lockers. Locking at the time when the bolts are thrown is called instant locking.

The inventor says in his specification: “I provide adjustable devices, so that the periods when the lock shall be locked and unlocked may be varied at will; and I also provide a [380]*380device whereby, at certain intervals, — say on every seventh day, — the lock will remain locked during the time when ordinarily it would be unlocked.” In order to give a more clear idea of the “adjustable devices,” and the means for actuating the dogging mechanism, I quote the following de-. scription, which I believe to be accurate:

“The time movement revolves a compound disk, composed of two single disks of the same shape and size, placed face to face on a common axis, each having an equal portion of its periphery cut away so as to leave in each a depression of the same form and size as that in the other. When these two disks or wheels are fastened together by a thumb-screw they form one wheel or dial, having a depression in its periphery.

“The inner wheel is adjustable on the common axis relatively to the other. The depressipn in the periphery of the double disk, caused by the cutting away of the periphery of each of the single disks, can be made longer or shorter, therefore, according to whether the inner disk is turned so that its cut-away portion is more or less in coincidence with the cut-away portion of the outer disk or dial. The outer dial is adjustable relatively to the time movement, because the ratchets in the time movement permit it to be moved by hand in the direction it is carried by the time movement, just as the hands of a clock may be moved forward by hand.

“One end of a bent pivoted lever rests upon the edge of the double disk or dial, and the other end supports a “dog,” pivoted to the side Of the safe in such a position that its pivotal movement brings it behind or away from the multiple bolt work. When the ‘dog’ is behind the bolt work the latter cannot be thrown back, and the door is held locked. When it drops down out of the way of the bolt work the bolt work is free to be retracted and the door may be opened.

“When the double disk revolves, and the shoulder at one end of the cut-away portion of its periphery comes under the lever, the lever drops, and when the shoulder at the other end of the cut-away portion comes under the lever, it lifts the lever up, and, as the other end of the lever supports the ‘ dog/ [381]*381the ‘ dog’ is oscillated in correspondence to the movements of tbe lever. Thus tho revolution of the disk causes the ‘ dog,’ through the medium of the lever, to alternately move into or out of the locking position. By moving the outer disk by hand, it may be turned so that the shoulder which lifts the ‘ dog’ through the lever into the locking position shall come under the end of the lever at any desired hour, and by loosening the thumb-screw and turning the inner disk to any desired position, and then screwing the disks again together, so that they move as one, the cut-away portion of the compound disk may be lengthened or shortened, so that the shoulder, which allows the ‘ dog’ to drop into the unlocking position, may be made to come under the lever, as the dial revolves, at any desired hour thereafter.”

The re-issue contains 17 claims, of which the first and seventh only are alleged to have been infringed. These claims are as follows:

“(1) The combination of independent multiple bolt work with the time mechanism and locking or dogging mechanism of a time-lock, automatically both dogging and releasing the bolt work at predetermined times, substantially as described.

“ (7) In a time lock the combination, substantially as above set forth, of the time movements, and two adjustable devices, one for determining the time of locking and the other of unlocking.”

The defendant, denying infringement, strenuously urges the defences of want of novelty, and want of patentability or non-invention.

There were in the art, prior to Little’s invention — (1) Time locks which opened a safe at a predetermined time, and which were instant lockers. The prominent examples of this^lass were the Butherford lock, the Pyeloek, and the Derby patent. (2) Time locks which were instant lockers, and never had been used as subsequent lockers, but which it is now said could have been made subsequent lockers by the appliances within reach of mechanical skill. The Derby patent is the one which is relied upon. (3) Chronometric movements, capable, at predetermined times, of opening and closing a gas-cock, [382]*382ihe periods of opening and closing being adjustable relatively to each other. The Herzberg patent and the Paine self-illuminating clock are the members of this class. (4) The Cope patent, ■ which was, for time mechanism, capable of being applied to open and close at predetermined times, the periods •of opening and closing being adjustable relatively to each other, the door of a bee-hive.

As has been stated, no time lock or time mechanism had been applied to dog and release the bolt of a safe door at predetermined hours, and capable of being adjusted relatively to each other without disturbance of the mechanism of the clock. This fact compels a finding in favor'of the novelty of- the patented structure unless the seventh claim should receive a. construction which would include the chronometric devices which had been applied to very different structures, such as a gas pipe or á bee-hive, but does not compel a conclusion in regard to the patentability of the Little structure, or the question whether it was a new invention.

If the words “in a time lock,” in the seventh claim, were omitted, or-if “time lock” simply means chronometric mechanism whereby an obstruction can be interposed or removed, then the Herzberg patent is an anticipation of that .claim.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. 377, 19 Blatchf. 123, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yale-lock-manufg-co-v-norwich-nat-bank-circtdct-1881.