Berger & Gorin, Inc. v. Gary Plastic Packaging Corp.

691 F. Supp. 740, 8 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1480, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7611, 1988 WL 74913
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 20, 1988
Docket84 Civ. 4164 (PNL)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 691 F. Supp. 740 (Berger & Gorin, Inc. v. Gary Plastic Packaging Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berger & Gorin, Inc. v. Gary Plastic Packaging Corp., 691 F. Supp. 740, 8 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1480, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7611, 1988 WL 74913 (S.D.N.Y. 1988).

Opinion

*742 OPINION AND ORDER

LEVAL, District Judge.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

This is an action for patent infringement. The two patents in question are for plastic belt hangers designed to display belts as merchandise in a store. Plaintiff Berger & Gorin, Inc. (“B & G”) and defendant Gary Plastic Packaging Corp. (“Gary”) both engage in the manufacture of plastic belt hangers.

Plaintiffs first patent No. 3,710,996 (the “ ’996” or “Snap-Tail” patent) was filed August 2, 1971 and issued January 16, 1973. It claims a belt-hanging device having a hook at the top (so as to hang the device from a merchandise display rod). (See Appendix I.) (On the hook portion are broad flat areas used to display size and brand names.) Hanging below the hook is a flexible strap (or tail) that bends at the middle (to engage the buckle of the belt). At the bottom of the tail is a mushroom-shaped projection and at the top is a hole slightly smaller than the head of the lower projection. After passing the tail through the buckle of the belt, the tail may be secured in the folded position by pushing the head of the projection at the bottom through the hole at the top. Halfway down the tail is a configuration of slits in the shape of an inverted T (whose bar is on the fold line of the tail). The prong of the belt buckle is secured to the hanger by rotating the hanger and pushing the tip of the prong into these slits.

The Snap-Tail hanger represented improvement in several respects over prior art. Earlier hangers were often made with a short tab, which had a similar hook at the top but which did not fold. The tab had a single hole or inverse T-slit, which was used to attach the belt buckle. (TE 24, 25.) The tab would be inserted into the belt buckle, whose prong would be pushed through the hole in the tab. Such devices were unreliably secured to the belt; the hangers easily became detached from the belt. Also the belt would hang at an angle which gave an unpleasing appearance and took extra space, diminishing the number of belts that could be displayed on the rod.

The ’996 Snap-Tail hanger improved these features. It was far more securely attached to the belt. In addition, the hanger and belt hung straight down in the same plane, perpendicular to the merchandise rod.

The second B & G patent (filed September 10, 1975, issued December 20, 1979) under No. 4,063,669 (the “ ’669” or “Stud-Belt patent) is identical to the Snap-Tail but with an additional feature designed for use with stud belts. {See Appendix II.)

A stud belt is designed differently and functions differently from a conventional prong-buckle belt. Prong-buckle belts are worn by passing the free end through the open portion of the buckle and inserting the prong into a hole in the belt. Stud-belt buckles, in contrast, do not have an opening or a pivoting prong. The buckle is generally solid and lays over the free end of the belt. On the underside of the buckle is a laterally protruding stud which is inserted into a hole in the other end of the belt. Sometimes such studs are designed with a ball tip and a narrow shank so as to close more securely.

Stud belts could be displayed on hook-topped belt hangers if the lower part of the hanger had a hole through which the belt stud could be pushed. However, one disadvantage of such a mechanism was that the tip of the stud would be free and would rub against the adjacent belt buckle on the rack, often marring the surface of the neighbor buckle. A second disadvantage was that if the hole in the hanger was wide enough to receive the stud or the ball at the end of the stud, it was also wide enough to slip off.

The ’669 patent was designed to overcome these two disadvantages. The device is identical to the ’996 Snap-Tail, but with one additional feature. In the lower half of the tail is a keyhole-shaped opening to receive the stud of the belt buckle. The keyhole has its smaller-diameter opening at the top (approximately the diameter of the narrow shank of the buckle stud) and an adjoining wider-diameter opening at the *743 bottom (approximately the diameter of the ball at the tip of the stud). On either side of the meeting line of the upper and lower openings are projections that narrow the opening.

The hanger is designed so that when the tail has been folded and snapped into its folded position, the relationship between its narrower and wider holes is reversed with the wider hole above and the narrower below. In this position the ball-ended stud of the belt buckle is pushed through the bigger upper hole; the stud shank is then forced downward between the projections until the shank is snugly wedged in the narrow, lower end of the keyhole. Because the hanger is in a folded position, the free end of the stud is enclosed between the front and back portions of the folded tail. It is therefore protected from contact with the buckle of the next belt on the rack and will not scratch its surface.

******

The history of dispute between the parties is eventful and is here stated in abbreviated fashion.

Plaintiff B & G, although a smaller company than defendant Gary, was throughout the leader in manufacture of belt hangers. Its principals during the 1970s were George Smilow and Samuel Kayen, the inventors of the patents at issue. Defendant Gary was a substantially larger company whose experience and volume, however, were primarily in the manufacture of commercial tie holders. During the 1970s and 1980s, defendant became increasingly interested in competing with plaintiff in the manufacture of belt holders.

Plaintiff developed the ’996 Snap-Tail design in 1971 in response to a request from a major customer, Swank, to design a hanger that would overcome the problems (discussed above) of the short-tail belt hanger. (TE 3; see also TE 23, 24, 25.) Swank requested of B & G a six-month exclusive on the newly designed hanger. (TE 6.) Plaintiff received from its customer Swank a letter addressed to Swank by an attorney for the owners of the Field patent No. 3,123,331 of March 3, 1964 (the “Field” or “331” patent) charging Swank with infringement in its use of plaintiff’s hanger. That was plaintiff’s first awareness of the Field patent. Plaintiff’s attorney communicated with Field and as of June 1, 1972, plaintiff purchased the exclusive license under the Field patent.

The Field patent has certain similarities and certain dissimilarities to the plaintiff’s ’996 patent. These are discussed below in connection with Gary’s defenses.

Meanwhile, during 1972, defendant Gary had begun to manufacture a long-tailed belt hanger of rather similar construction to plaintiff’s. (TE 9A/DX8, DX 33; see Appendix III.) Gary’s hanger came to plaintiff’s attention around January 1973. On January 9, 1973, plaintiff’s counsel wrote to Gary charging it with infringement of the Field patent, advising of the imminently expected issuance of its own Snap-Tail patent, and demanding that Gary cease and desist. On January 31, 1973, B & G followed up with advice of the issuance of the ’996 patent on January 16, 1973. Gary consulted its counsel and received a favorable opinion as to its liability exposure.

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691 F. Supp. 740, 8 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1480, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7611, 1988 WL 74913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berger-gorin-inc-v-gary-plastic-packaging-corp-nysd-1988.