47 F. 212 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1891
Those two cases are between the same parties, and were heard together. One of them is a suit for the infringement of letters patent No. 271,363, granted January 30,1883, to James Bitty and John ■Birch, for improvements in cash-registers and indicators. The other suit is for the infringement of letters patent No. 253,506, granted February 14, 1882, to Michael Campbell for an improvement in the like apparatus. The Bitty and .Birch invention relates to eash-regislers and indicators designed for the use of store-keepers and others as a means of accurately registering the cash receipts for any given period of time, and for indicating to the customers that the amounts paid have been registered. The machine described in the patent is provided with a series of numbered keys, each of which maybe independently operated; a series of indicators bearing numbers corresponding to those on the keys, one of which indicators is brought into view whenever its appropriate key is pressed; and a bell sounded to attract the attention of the customer and by-standers. The keys are levers pivoted on a horizontal shaft in the lower part of the machine, and on the rear end of each rests a vertical rod, working in guides, so as to freely rise and fall. The upper end of each of these rods carries a tablet bearing a number answering to that on the button of its key. The tablets are normally out of sight; but upon the depression of any key the rear end of the key-lever rises, and, lifting the vortical rod, which rests upon it, exposes to view the tablet it carries. As a means of holding the indicator up after its key has been released, each tablet-rod is provided with a shoulder, and across the machine, in position to engage the under side of these shoulders, is a supporting bar, (designated in the patent “wing, I,”) which is pivoted at each end, and is thus free to vibrate. Its upper edge inclines towards the tablet-rods, and is yieldingly held against them by a spring, so that when any rod is lifted its shoulder- may press back the edge of the bar until it. passes above it, whereupon the bar is moved forward by its spring into the path of the shoulder, and the latter drops back, and rests upon the bar when the key is released. Everything thus far described had existed in some form or other in machines of this class before the date of the Bitty and Birch invention. The novel contrivance devised by them consists in a “connecting mechanism,” which is operated by any one of the series of keys, and moves the supporting bar (wing, Ij independently of the shoulders on the tablet-rods. This mechanism is of this nature: Underneath the front ends of the key-levers, and held up against them, is a cross-bar, K, having at either end an arm, J, by which it is pivoted, and may have a rising and falling motion. One of those arms connects with a link extending rearwardly and. attached to a trigger or lever, m. Above this lever is an L-shaped bar, pivoted at the upper end of its vertical arm, and having the end of its lateral arm bearing against the upper front edge of the supporting bar or wing, I. A trip (“follower, j,”) is so pivoted and suspended that it extends below the elbow of the L-shaped bar, resting against a shoulder thereon, while against the lower projecting end of the trip the lever, m, bears. These
“In a registering and indicating machine, the combination, with a series of indicating tablets operated by a series of keys, of a series of rods, each provided with a detent or shoulder, and carrying one of the aforesaid tablets, and a supporting wing, with connecting mechanism, whereby, upon operating any one of the keys, the wing is so moved as to permit the passage of the rod, and whereby, upon the release of the key, che wing engages with and holds up the tablet-rod and tablet, substantially as described.”
The evidence satisfies us that this combination was absolutely -new, and that it gives to the machine increased efficiency, and, indeed, a new capability, completely remedying serious defects.' It is highly important when a key is operated, and its rod and tablet are elevated, that any tablet-rod already up and resting by its shoulder upon the supporting bar shall be released, so that its tablet may disappear. But in actual practice with the old machines operated by a separate mechanism for each key of a series, it was found that the shoulder of the rising tablet-rod frequently failed to move the supporting bar sufficiently to effect the liberation of the tablet-rods already up by reason of a lack of perfect adjustment of the parts, the wear of the same, or the clogging by dirt. This difficulty was effectually overcome by the Kitty and Birch invention, which interposes a train of mechanism, common to the whole series of keys, between them and the supporting-bar, so that, whenever any key is depressed the connecting mechanism is set in motion, and thereby the supporting bar is moved so far back as to insure the disengagement and fall of any tablet-rod whose shoulder may be resting upon it. It must he conceded that previously means had been employed — namely, a series of pivoted latches or levers, one for each tablet-rod, co-operating with the shoulders of the rods — to move the supporting bar further away than could be done by the shoulders themselves. But it is also true that Kitty and Birch were the first to accomplish this result with entire certainty of operation, and by means altogether different, both as respects construction and mode of operation, from the old devices; thus perfecting the machine in this regard. Again, we think the evidence shows that Ritty and Birch achieved also an important new result; certainly one which before had never been accom
The defendant's machine is a cash-register and indicator of the same general character as that set forth in the Kitty and Birch patent, and embodies substantially all the old elements of parts above described. Its tablets, indeed, are not carried directly by the shouldered rods, but are stationary, while the rods carry screens to alternately hide and expose them; the dille fence consisting in moving a screen at the top of the rod to bring an underlying tablet into view, instead of having the tablet itself into view by its attachment to the rod. While the defendant’s counsel directed our attention to this difference between the indicating devices, we did not understand thorn as seriously contending that it was a substantial distinction, ikior to the date of theimention in question, these two arrangements were well-known substitutes for each other in indicating mechanisms, and we regard the difference as formal and imma,teriai. The upholding instrumentality in the defendant’s machine is a transverse bar proximate to the tablet-rods, with an inclined side facing them. The ends of this bar work in guides, and the bar is movable from and towards the row of rods, the latter movement being effected by a spring at either end of the bar. At the lower rear part of the machine is a cross-bar, with which each key-lever, by means of a pendant arm, is so connected that by the depression of any key the cross-bar will ho lifted and will fall when the key is released. At each end of the crossbar, and adapted to rise and fall with it, is a vertically sliding bar, having at its upper end a nose or lateral projection, which engages a trip on a bell-crank lever. Whenever a key is operated, and the cross-bars and the vertically sliding bar are thereby lifted, the nose on the upper end of the latter strikes the trip, grid the bell-crank lever is thrown with such effect as to move the rod-supporting bar so far away as to release any tablet rods whose shoulders are resting upon it. When the nose on the vertical bars has slipped past the trip, the hell-crank lever is released, and the rod-supporting bar returns into position to engage the shoulder of the rising rod. When the operated key is released, the cross-bar, with its vertical bar, falls with the descent of the key-lever. From what
“When any key is pressed down, its rod and tablet are raised, and the elbow, (shoulder,) d, of the rod, in rising, aids in pressing back the wing, I; but to aid the elbow the arm, J, * * * imparts motion to the link, t, and trigger, m, whose upper end, acting on the nose, i, of the follower, j, presses it back, and with it the bell-crank, L, which is thus forced against the wing, and presses it back. ”
The plaintiff’s expert states, what is undoubtedly the truth, that in the very nature of the described devices the simultaneous action of the shoulder of the rod and the connecting mechanism upon the wing, I, for any appreciable length of time is impossible. Both, however, at one time or another, take part in pressing back the wing, I, and this is the fair meaning of the specification. In that sense the shoulders on the rods and the connecting mechanism in the defendant’s machine aid each other. Their exact action is shown to be this: The shoulder of the rising rod strikes and begins to move the supporting bar. Then the connecting mechanism acts upion the bar, moving it out of contact with the shoulder. At this instant of time the previously upheld tablet-bar is liberated. Then the supporting bar returns, while the shoulder is still opposite its upper part, so that it strikes the shoulder, and is held outwardly and slightly moved backwardly thereby, until the shoulder escapes it. Now, the essential thing to be accomplished is the certain liberation
The counsel for the defendant have pressed upon our attention the decision of Judge Colt in the case of National Cash-Register Co. v. Boston Cash Indicator & Recorder Co., 45 Fed. Rep. 481, which was a suit on this patent, and in which the hill was dismissed; the court adjudging that the Boston Company’s “plate and connecting devices” were not the equivalents of tho wing with the connecting mechanism described in the Kitty and Birch patent. Now, wore we dealing with the same mechanism, we would unhesitatingly conform our decision to that of Judge Colt, agreeably to our settled practice to follow the decision of a court of another circuit upon the same question in a suit on the same patent. But a specimen of the machine of the Boston Company has been exhibited to us, and, upon inspection, we find that there are obvious differences between it and the machine of the present defendant. We do not feel called on to make a critical comparison between tho two machines, or even to particularize the points of distinction plainly observable. It is enough for us to say that, without intending to intimate a doubt as to the correctness of the decision made by the court in the first circuit upon the case there presented, we feel bound to follow our own convictions on the question of infringement involved in this snit. In our apprehension, the invention of Kitty and Birch was one of more than ordinary merit, and we cannot bring ourselves to the conclusion that their patent can bo successfully evaded by such structural changes as the defendant has made. If it could be, then ivas the grant of' the patent a vain thing. In this case, then, there must be a decree in favor of the plaintiff as respects the first claim of the patent.
In the suit on the Campbell patent, the defendant is charged with the infringement of the third claim (hereof, namely:
“(8) In a cash-registering apparatus, a series of keys, to designate certain amounts, combined with a draw, the draw-holder, D, mediately connected with said keys, and the spring to throw the draw open when released by the draw-holder, substantially as described. ”
This patent was also the subject of adjudication in the case of National Cash-Register Co. v. Boston Cash Indicator & Recorder Co., supra, and the third claim was construed by Judge Colt, who held that the device there alleged to infringe that claim was not within its scope. Now, it seems to us that, in respect to the subject-matter of this claim of the Campbell patent, no such distinction exists between the device of the Boston Com
Butler, J., concurs.