Donner v. Sheer Pharmacal Corporation

64 F.2d 217, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 117, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4053
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1933
Docket9613
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 217 (Donner v. Sheer Pharmacal Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donner v. Sheer Pharmacal Corporation, 64 F.2d 217, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 117, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4053 (8th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

The parties will be referred to as in the court below; the appellant as plaintiff, and the appellee as defendant. The suit is for infringement of letters patent No. 1,379',855, granted to the plaintiff May 31, 1921, upon an -application filed March 3, 1923, for a cream depilatory. The defenses are lack of invention, vagueness of description, and non-infringement. From the decree dismissing his complaint, the plaintiff appeals.

This patent was sustained by Judge Lindley in the case of Donner v. Walgreen Co. and Neet, Inc. (D. C. N. D. Ill.) 44 F.(2d) 637. It appears that after that decision Neet, Ine-., which had made and sold the cream depilatory known as “Neet,” which was held to infringe the patent, took a license- from Donner. The defendant in 1931 began to make and sell a cream depilatory in accordance with a process which it learned from a former employee of Neet, Inc., who had been in charge of the manufacture of “Neet.” The defendant’s product, of which the plaintiff complains, is called “Sheer,” and is the same thing as “Neet.”

In order to reach a conclusion as to- the proper disposition of this case, it is necessary to determine: (1) What Donner’s alleged invention is; (2-) the state of the prior art; (3) whether the alleged invention is sufficiently described in the patent; (4) whether the advance in the art made by Donner was the result of invention or mere mechanical skill; and (5) whether the defendant is an infringer.

The Donner Invention.

The claimed invention relates to- a depilatory for removing human hair. Its object is stated in the specifications to be the preparation of a depila tory in the form of a cream or paste by the incorporation of a depilating agent in an air-restraining base in *218 such manner that the finished depilatory or depilating cream or paste is permanent and stable and may be applied directly to the skin for the removal of hair with facility and safety. Donner points out that existing depilatories are in the form of powders, liquids, or lotions, and that their application is attended with inconvenience and waste. The powder depilatories must be mixed with water, are messy, and the material is likely to be wasted. Liquid depilatories are difficult to confine to a small area to be treated. Lotion depilatories, which are essentially imperfect suspensions of alkali and alkaline earth, sulfids, polysulfids, and sulfhydrates in water, are subject to the same objection. Dqnner states in his specifications: “My invention consists of a depilatory, the physical state of which is a plastic mass of tooth paste or cold cream like consistency, and thus overcomes all difficulties of application attendant upon the use of those mentioned above. It is permanent, complete, and handleable; it can be taken from the jar or tube in quantities as desired, and can be applied over an area such as is occupied by one or two hairs on a mole, or upon a surface as extensive as the entire face. Likewise it can be applied to surfaces such as the armpits, with grace and convenience. Furthermore, once placed in position upon the area to be depilated, the cream remains without danger of running or spreading until the hair is disintegrated.” He further states that he has found that the sulfid depilatories in common use have consisted of sulfids, polysulfids, and sulfhydrates of alkali, alkaline earth, and earth metals in solution or suspension in water alone or in admixture with one another in various proportions and strengths; that in all of these the dissolved sulfhydrates constitute the active depilating agent; that those which are undissolved have little or no depilating power; and that, when the depilating solutions are exposed to air, chemical changes take place which impair or destroy the usefulness and safety of the depilatory. He' also says: “In my invention I have overcome these difficulties by taking advantage of the air-restraining properties of colloids and colloid-like bodies, which are capable, when mixed with the depilating agent and any suitable vehicle, of producing a pasty or cream-like mass, in while the molecules of the depilating agent are permanently suspended, and which renders them proof against the substantial entrance of and interaction with air; thus guaranteeing their stability, and the permanence of the preparation. The colloids used, besides having the properties of adhesiveness and air-exelusion, are such that do not decompose the depilating sulfid or sulfhydrate solution.” He states that he has found that the objectionable odors of hydrogen sulfid which have attended the sulfid depilatories can be avoided by securing pure solution and by thus eliminating the presence of free hydrogen sulfid.

After thus disclosing the objects of his invention in his specifications and the invention itself in general terms, he states:

“As an instance of manufacture I place a. quantity of quicklime (CaO) in a large vessel, and slake it by pouring upon it approximately 4 times its weight of water. The interaction of the water and lime result in the formation of a mass of calcium hvdroxid (Ca(OH)2), thus: Ca0+H20=Ca‘(0H)2. To this calcium hydroxid mass I add sufficient water to bring it to the consistence of a thin magma; that is, about 10 parts of water to 1 of lime are used. This is strained through gauze or a wire sieve to remove extraneous or gritty matter, and then distributed in suitable vessels, preferably glass, preparatory to charging with hydrogen, sulfid. I then pass a current of hydrogen sulfid gas through this slaked lime cream until the whole assumes an even pale blue color, after which the current of hydrogen sulfid is removed. This pale blue magma, consisting of calcium sulfid (CaS), calcium hydroxid (Ca(OH)2), and a solution of calcium sulfhydrate (Ca(SH)2) and calcium hydroxy-sulfhvdrate (Ca(SH) OH) constitutes the depilating mixture, of which the calcium sulfhydrate solution is the principal depilating agent. When made in this manner the calcium sulfhydrate solution is generally saturated; that is, it contains approximately 7% of calcium sulfhydrate.
“In the process as above outlined the presence of an excess of hydrogen sulfid is carefully avoided. However, should the process of sulfuretization be carried too far and the product have a marked hydrogen sulfid odor, the excessive uneombined hydrogen sulfid may be removed by subjecting the sulfuret to the action of a low grade vacuum, or by the addition of a suitable excess of milk of lime (Ca(OH)2), as above stated.
“To any desired quantity of this depilat-ing magma light calcined magnesia (MgO) is added in sufficient quantity to malee a pasty mass of about the consistence of a cold cream or tooth paste. If the magnesium oxid is substantially pure approximately 1 part of it to 5 parts by weight of the depilating magma is required to bring the mixture to this consistence. A small quantity of oil of rose-ger- *219 ¡uiium is added to impart ¡m odor to the mixture, (usually 1 ec. to. 500 grams of the paste), and the whole is admixed until an even, homogenous paste is secured.
“The product is a smooth, velvety cream, of the density and consistence of a toothpaste, and is of a pale blue color. It is substantially free from sulfid odor, and Is possessed, instead, of the fragrant odor of oil of rose-geranium, and is essentially soluble in and miscible with water in all proportions.

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Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 217, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 117, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donner-v-sheer-pharmacal-corporation-ca8-1933.