Brennan v. Mr. Hanger, Inc.

479 F. Supp. 1215
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 1, 1980
Docket77 Civ. 3567 (WCC)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 479 F. Supp. 1215 (Brennan v. Mr. Hanger, Inc.) 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
Brennan v. Mr. Hanger, Inc., 479 F. Supp. 1215 (S.D.N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

CONNER, District Judge:

This is an action for alleged infringement of three United States patents relating to hanger bars which extend across the upper ends of garment shipping containers to support the garment hangers.

The three patents in suit were owned by plaintiff Francis P. Brennan (“Brennan”) at the time the action was filed. Before trial, they were assigned to Estad Products, Inc. (“ESTAD”) which was accordingly added as a party plaintiff.

The action was tried by the Court without a jury commencing January 16, 1979. This Opinion incorporates the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Rule 52(a), F.R.Civ.P.

The Parties

Plaintiff Brennan is an individual residing in Lisle, Illinois. During the conception, design and development of the devices covered by the patents in suit, he was President of Brennan Engineering Corporation (“Brennan Engineering”), an Illinois corporation engaged in the metal fabricating business. The company had no separate research and development department, these functions being performed in the tool and die department, with Brennan having primary design responsibilities.

Defendant Mr. Hanger, Inc. (“Mr. Hanger”) is a New York corporation having its principal office at 20 Jones Street, New Rochelle, New York. It employs approximately 400 persons in the business of manufacturing and selling molded plastic garment hangers, which are made at its plant in Ringtown, Pennsylvania. Lawrence Rosen is its Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and a minority stockholder. It employs a sales force of six persons headed by Arnold Dubin as Sales Manager.

Defendant Sal Grinding, Inc. (“Sal Grinding”) is a New York corporation also having its principal office at 20 Jones Street, New Rochelle, New York. It employs 10 to 15 persons in the business of manufacturing hanger bars and providing custom metal grinding services. Lawrence Rosen, who is Chairman of Mr. Hanger, is President and sole stockholder of Sal Grinding. Shortly after its formation in 1975, Sal Grinding purchased certain machinery and other assets of Sal Metal Products Co., Inc. (“Sal Metal”) which had been in the business of manufacturing and selling hanger bars since about 1950. Arnold Dubin, who is Sales Manager of Mr. Hanger, is the only salesman employed by Sal Grinding. His salary is paid two-thirds by Mr. Hanger and one-third by Sal Grinding, although at the present time the salary checks are issued by Mr. Hanger. He has separate business cards for the two employers and conducts correspondence for Sal Grinding on its own stationery.

Some of the same garment manufacturers buy garment hangers from Mr. Hanger and hanger bars from Sal Grinding. At trade shows where Mr. Hanger has a booth, the hanger bars made by Sal Grinding are displayed under a placard bearing the name of Sal Grinding, and the Mr. Hanger personnel manning the booth are authorized to receive orders therefor on behalf of Sal *1218 Grinding, although there was no evidence any such orders were actually received.

In other respects, the two companies are separate and distinct. Sal Grinding keeps its own books, does its own purchasing, pays its own payroll and payroll taxes, ships under its own bills of lading and invoices, issues its own monthly statements to customers, maintains its own bank account and its own accounts with factors.

On at least one occasion, an order for Sal Grinding’s hanger bars was erroneously addressed to Mr. Hanger. However, this was an understandable mistake, since Sal Grinding’s only salesman, Arnold Dubin, is known in the trade as the sales manager for Mr. Hanger.

The patents in suit

The three patents in suit are:

a. United States patent No. 3,306,465 (“the ’465 patent”) issued February 28,1967 to Brennan Engineering as assignee of Brennan on an application filed May 12, 1965 for an invention entitled “Wardrobe Hanger Bar with Cap Locking Means;” Brennan Engineering later reassigned the patent to Brennan;

b. United States patent No. 3,613,898 (“the ’898 patent”) issued October 19, 1971 to Brennan on an application filed January 14, 1970 for an invention entitled “Cap Locking Means for a Wardrobe Hanger Bar;” and

c. United States patent No. 3,519,139 (“the ’139 patent”) issued July 7, 1970 to Brennan on an application filed March 22, 1968 for an invention entitled “Wardrobe Hanger Bar.”

The ’465 Patent

The invention

The ’465 patent is directed to means for securing to the top of the hanger bar a hold-down bar or locking cap which prevents the hooks of the garment hangers from coming off the hanger bar during shipment and handling of the garment container.

The hanger bar includes an elongated, horizontal main bar portion made of sheet metal formed into the cross-sectional shape of an inverted U with a generally horizontal upper wall and generally vertical sidewalls depending from either side thereof, and end support members extending perpendicularly across the opposite ends of the main bar, the end support members being formed of sheet metal into the cross-sectional shape of a narrow and deep inverted J with the stem of the J secured to the ends of the main bar and the hook fitting over and gripping the upper edges of two opposed sidewalls of the container, which is made of corrugated paperboard or like material.

The locking cap is stamped from sheet metal into the cross-sectional shape of a wide and shallow inverted U, with a generally horizontal upper wall approximately the same width as the upper wall of the main bar and depending sidewalls lying in approximately the same planes as the sidewalls of the main bar. When garment hangers are in place on the main bar, the lower edges of the sidewalls of the locking cap engage the hooks of the hangers and hold them down against the main bar.

The locking cap is secured to the main bar by means of integral tongues struck out of the upper wall of the locking cap and extending downwardly through openings punched in the upper wall of the main bar and bent over against its under surface.

The significant contribution of the patented invention is asserted to be the provision of a locking means which is less expensive to produce, involving only integral tongues rather than the separately machined threaded studs of the principal prior device, which must be crimped, welded or otherwise secured to the main bar in a separate operation, and simpler to use, employing no separate wing nuts or other loose pieces which are likely to be mislaid or lost.

*1219 Infringement

Only Claim 1 of the ’465 patent is sued upon. It is set forth in full in the margin. 1

Sal Grinding has made and sold three types of hanger bars which are accused of infringement of the patents in suit: the New Yorker, the Philly and the Georgian. The New Yorker and the Philly are “three-piece” hanger bars — that is, the main bar and the end supports are made of separate pieces of sheet metal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
479 F. Supp. 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brennan-v-mr-hanger-inc-nysd-1980.