E. Fredericks, Inc. v. Eugene

3 F.2d 543, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2468
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1924
DocketNo. 161
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 543 (E. Fredericks, Inc. v. Eugene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. Fredericks, Inc. v. Eugene, 3 F.2d 543, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2468 (2d Cir. 1924).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

These actions were tried together, and will be considered in one opinion.

The first patent, No. 1,313,232, was issued to Speekerman on August 12, 1919, on an application filed June 30, 1917, and relates to a flat double package made of paper and cloth containing powdered borax; the container is stitched longitudinally to hold the powdered borax in position within the coverings or envelopes. As thus made, the pad is used in permanent hair waving. The hair is first wrapped or twisted around a metal curler or rod, the package is wet or moistened, and then wrapped around the hair on the curler, and a pasteboard tube is then slid over the curler and moistened package, and then the cylindrical electric heater is placed over the parts thus arranged. Thereafter the electric current is allowed to pas3 through the heater until steam and borax vapor are produced by the heat generated, which, upon entering the hair wound on the metal curler, causes the same to produce the so-called permanent wave or curl. The heater and pasteboard tube are removed, the hair remains in a more or less curly condition, depending, of course, upon the skill of the operator and the appliance used. In thus applying the curlers and heaters to the human head the scalp is divided into a number of sections from which the hair is applied to separate curlers and treated with separate heaters so that in the course of this operation there are some 40 or 50 curlers and heaters in use at one time.

The claims in suit are:

“5. A device of the class described, comprising an envelop formed' of textile material having located therein, a hair treating substance in powdered form, said envelop being adapted to be shipped in flat form, and when moistened being adapted to be wrapped about a tress of hair so as to closely embrace the same. * * *
“7. A device of the class described comprising a flat envelop formed of absorbent material having located therein a hair treating substance in powered form, and said first named envelop being inclosed within an envelop of flexible material.”

Patent No. 1,425,956, the basis of the third suit, is designed to treat only the hair newly grown after previous treatment by the pad of the first patent. The need therefore is found in the fact that human hair grows half an inch per month after the permanent wave treatment, and it is intended by the use of this patent to accomplish the result of securing a permanent wave for the newly grown hair. This patent provides a small pad of borax, the rest of the package being felt or the like. There are slight variations in the matter of placing the borax [545]*545within the envelop and a block of flexible porous material, such as blotting paper or felt is added. The envelop or pad is used in the same manner as in the first patent, the purpose of the blotting paper or felt being to protect the portions of the hair which have been previously waved against both the steam and heat. The claims involved in this patent are:

“9. A device of the class described, comprising a casing, one portion of said easing having a hair treating substance therein and being penetrable by steam and another portion of casing being formed of material relatively impenetrable by steam.
“10. A device of the class described > comprising a casing, one portion of said casing containing a hair treating substance and being so formed as to permit steam to pass therethrough, and another portion of said easing being relatively impervious to the passage of steam and being also non-heat-condueting.”

The court below found both these patents valid and infringed, although the defense of anticipation by prior patents and uses, lack of invention, and noninfringement were interposed.

We will consider patent No. 1,313,232 first. There is an admission that it has been the practice to wind a lock of hair upon the curler and then wind about the curled hair a strip of absorbent material which has been impregnated with a fluid commonly used in the art of hair curling, whereupon the .curled hair and absorbent material are subjected to the action of heat. Also the tubes made of pasteboard or other materials have been used for locating therein hair-treating substances. But the contention of the appellee is that it has an improved pad which is more convenient to handle and more readily sale-able. The process is substantially the same as that used in the tube of the Aldworth patent, No. 1,186,533, or in the Nestle tube patent, No. 1,052,166, both of which were heretofore judicially considered. Nestle Patent Holding Co. v. E. Frederics, Inc. (D. C.) 258 F. 627; affd. (C. C. A.) 261 F. 780. The patent in suit states that the method of winding a strip of absorbent material about the hair is objectionable for several reasons, among them, the length of time required to wind the absorbent material on the curled hair; the fact that the absorbent material will not take up a sufficient quantity of hair-treating fluid to make its action effective; the fact that handling the wet strips of material makes the process distasteful to the subject, as well as inconvenient for the operator. It says of the tubes of the Aldworth patent, which have hair-treating substances located therein, that they are objectionable, in that during transportation the hair-treating substance is apt to be dislodged from the interior of the tube, and that, owing to the variations in the size of the carriers of hair-treating substance within the tube, it is sometimes difficult to position these tubes about the curled hair.

The patentee says that the objects of his invention are: (a) Shortening the length of time required to wind absorbent material on the, curled hair; (b) increased quantity of hair-treating fluid contained in the pad; (c) convenience in handling; (d) convenience in transportation; (e) even distribution of the hair-treating material. It was decided by the District Court, and affirmed by this court in the case referred to, that the Aldworth patent was valid and infringed. Thereupon the appellee, who was the defendant in that litigation, experimented, resulting in his securing the patent in suit. It is apparent that what he accomplishes in his new construction is a separation of the pad of the Aldsworth or Nestle tube from the rolled paper cover, and he placed cotton gauze around it to prevent the pad from tearing when handled or sold as a flat separate package. It is intended that when used it is to be combined with a pasteboard tube, giving the advantage of what Aldworth accomplished by the borax package being contained within the tube in cylindrical shape when sold and used. In other words, the patentee provides for the rolling and insertion of the pad into the tube at the time of use instead of before marketing. Thus the patentee kept his package separate from the tube and covered it with a gauze to make a more durable or a .thicker package. In order to hold the borax powder more firmly in position, he stitched the pad on a sewing machine as he illustrates, but this is not claimed in the claims in suit. The pasteboard tubes have to be used with a pad in any event, and also have to be shipped to the customer. What has been accomplished in making this flat package is pointed out in the prior art in so far as inclosing and shipping various kinds of powder and materials are concerned, even including borax Patent No. 56,353, dated July 17, 1866, to Bogia and Taylor. Although this was not of the same art as hair curling, this patent shows the method of forming a pad which is now introduced into the hair-waving art.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 543, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-fredericks-inc-v-eugene-ca2-1924.