American Safety Razor Corp. v. International Safety Razor Corp.

26 F.2d 108, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1168
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedApril 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 108 (American Safety Razor Corp. v. International Safety Razor Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Safety Razor Corp. v. International Safety Razor Corp., 26 F.2d 108, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1168 (D.N.J. 1928).

Opinion

RUNYON, District Judge.

The complainant herein seeks a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from alleged trademark infringement and unfair trade practices, through the use of the trade-names “Gem,” “Ever-Réady,” and “Star,” in connection with the manufacture, sale, and display of defendant’s safety razor blades, together with an accounting for profits, damages, and costs.

The complainant herein is a corporation organized under the laws of Virginia on July 17, 1919, and is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling safety razors and safety razor blades in extraordinary volume, the annual sales of razor blades alone aggregating more than 100,000,000. At the time of its organization it acquired through purchase and consolidation the business of three of the largest safety razor companies in the United States, viz. that of the Gem Safety Razor Corporation, manufacturers - of the “Gem” safety razor and blade, of the American Safety Razor Company, Inc., manufacturers of the “Ever-Ready” safety razor and blade, and of the.Star Safety Razor Corporation, manufacturers of the “Star” safety razor and blade. At the time of the purchase and consolidation these three companies had been in business for long periods, and were, through the extensive advertising of their wares and trade-names, as well as by reason of the quality of their merchandise, exceptionally well known.

The complainant states that $4,000,000 in cash was paid for the assets of the Gem Safety Razor Corporation, of which sum $3,600,000 represented the value of the trade-name “Gem”; further, that the equivalent of $4,350,000 was paid to the American Safety Razor Company, Inc., for the trade-name “Ever-Ready”; and that, of the sum of $278,-000 paid for the assets of the Stax- Safety Razor Corporation, all but $28,000 thereof represented the value of the trade-name “Star.” In addition to these sums, the complainant during the first- six years of its corporate existence expended upwards of $4,-000,000 in advertising its safety razor frames and blades under the three trade-names above noted, the “Ever-Ready” and “Gem” brands being the more prominently featured m the advertisements.

In fact, in all its forms of advertisement the complainant stresses the three trade-names above mentioned, for the use of which it had paid something like $8,000,000, and in rare instances only mentions the fact that it is the manufacturer and seller. This procedure is thus described in complainant’s brief:

“These trade-names have been continually featured by the complainant and its predecessors for one-third of a century or more on all packages, wrappers, cartons and advertising matter, and except in isolated instances, the complainant does not mention the fact that ‘Gem’ or ‘Ever-Ready’ or ‘Star’ razors or blades are manufactured or sold by the complainant. The purchasing public, therefore, does not know the name of the manufacturer of these razors and blades. The complainant in its advertising and literature lays no stress upon its own corporate name. It lays all stress upon its several trade names and brands. The purchasing public, therefore, buys complainant’s merchandise because the safety razors and blades manufactured under these several trade brands have been long and favorably known to the purchasing public.”

The defendants are likewise engaged in the manufacture and sale of safety razor frames and blades, their various trade-names being “Sha-ve-zee,” “Liberty,” “Mirak,” and “Bryford.” Of these four brands, their principal reliance is upon the two first named, “Sha-ve-zee” and “Liberty.”

While the safety razor in its entirety consists of a combination of frame and blade, and one member without the other is useless, the principal part of the business consists in the manufacture and vending of blades. This activity has attained almost unbelievable proportions, and the profit resulting therefrom in the complainant’s ease is sufficient to enable it to sell its razor frames at an actual loss.

The blades used in all the various makes of razor which are concerned in the present suit are the so-called single blades, having a shaving edge on one side of the blade only, as distinguished from a Gillette blade, for instance, which is designed with a shaving edge on each of its two sides. These single blades have been, to all intents and purposes, standardized as to size, and consequently are interchangeable, in the sense that any one of the various blades may be used upon any one of the various frames. This enables the owner of a single blade razor frame to use any make of single razor blade which may best suit *110 him, irrespective 'of its origin, a practice which has- attained large proportions in these days of home shaving.

In connection with the ever-increasing volume of the safety razor industry, there has come into being among certain manufacturers a practice somewhat akin to that which obtains at times in other lines of trade, where, standardized parts may be used interchangeably in connection with competing products, viz. publication of the fact that the advertiser’s blade will fit a competitor’s razor frame. It is indulgence in this practice which has brought the present suit into being; the complainant claiming that the methods of publication adopted by the defendants in appropriating the various trade names are not only calculated to, but actually do, deceive the purchasing public, and lead it to believe that, in buying a carton of defendants’ product, it is in reality purchasing complainant’s blades.

In one form or another this question has already been the subject of controversy, both in the Southern district of New York and in this district, where applications for preliminary injunctions were made by the complainant. In the Southern district of New York, Judge Learned Hand, to whom application had been made by complainant, looking to a restraint against F. W. Woolworth Company for selling cartons of defendants’ product which mentioned complainant’s blades in the matter printed thereon, made an injunction order forbidding defendants’ use of complainant’s trade-names as theretofore maintained, but permitting limited use thereof in a form specified and approved by him.

The complainant claims that the modification authorized and sanctioned by Judge Hand falls far short of the relief to which it is entitled, and contends that the defendants should be altogether forbidden to use complainant’s trade-names in connection with their own printed matter, or at least be compelled to make specific disavowal in such printed matter of any connection with the manufacture of complainant’s blades.

Both sides to this controversy have, properly qnough, emphasized the fact that the public is entitled to be protected in its purchases of various commodities. This protection, while assuming many forms, may be said to have as its general aim and purpose the keeping of faith with the public, to the end that representations made to it concerning commodities which it is asked to buy shall not be deceptive in any way, or be calculated to mislead the general purchaser regarding the true facts, especially where any representation actually made or failure to make proper disclosure affects harmfully a buying public in such important matters as those which have to do with the identity of the commodity and the price demanded therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 108, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-safety-razor-corp-v-international-safety-razor-corp-njd-1928.