Gillette Safety Razor Co. v. Standard Safety Razor Corp.

8 F. Supp. 251, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1350
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 28, 1934
DocketNo. 2321
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 F. Supp. 251 (Gillette Safety Razor Co. v. Standard Safety Razor Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillette Safety Razor Co. v. Standard Safety Razor Corp., 8 F. Supp. 251, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1350 (D. Conn. 1934).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

This is an infringement suit involving the Thompson patent, No. 1,924,262, for improvements in a safety razor blade, issued August 29, 1933, to the plaintiff as assignee on an application filed August 18,1932, which was a division of the original application filed April 25, 19291, Serial No. 358,114. The bill charges defendant with infringement as to certain safety razor blades made and sold by [252]*252the defendant, and seeks the usual injunction, accounting, and damages.

Infringement is charged of claims 1,3, and 4, of which 1 and 4 are typical, and they read:

“1. As a new artide of manufacture, an elastic, transversely-flexible safety razor blade adapted for use in existing Gillette-type safety razors, said bladei having unsharpened ends, being of uniform thickness, requiring external support on both sides for its cutting edge and being internally apertured to provide edges arranged to engage positioning and clamping means and hold the blade against angular displacement, and being also provided with reentrant recesses including a rounded portion at the inner angles thereof, located at the corner portions of the blade respectively and each extending both longitudinally and transversely of the blade to such an extent as to span the adjacent corner of the blade-clamping cap when assembled therewith, and to provide a clearance space of sufficient area to receive a cap corner if bent, whereby said blade while being flexed or when clamped cannot be subjected to pressure by a bent cap corner and danger of breaking said blade or distorting its cutting edge is eliminated.”

“4. As a new article of manufacture, an elastic transversely-flexible razor blade adapted for use in existing Gillette type safety razors, said blade being internally apertured to provide edges arranged to engage positioning means and hold the blade against angular displacement, and being of substantially uniform thickness and so thin as to require external support on both sides thereof for substantially its full length to give rigidity to its cutting edge, and being also provided with reentrant recesses located at its corner portions respectively and each extending both longitudinally and transversely of the blade to such an extent as to span the adjacent corners of the blade-clamping cap when assembled therewith and provide a clearance space of sufficient area to receive a cap corner if bent, whereby said blade while being flexed or when clamped is relieved of the possibility of pressure from a bent cap corner.”

The invention described and claimed in the patent in suit relates to safety razor blades for use in “Gillette-type” safety razors. In this type of razor a thin, flexible, and elastic blade of oblong contour with unsharpened ends, and internally apertured to receive positioning and clamping means, is removably secured in a holder which is made up of three parts, namely, a guard member, a cap, and a handle. The guard member is adapted to support the blade adjacent to its longitudinal cutting edges. The cap is provided on opposite sides with parallel straight edges which engage the blade adjacent to the cutting edges of the latter and flex it transversely on the guard member, as a fulcrum, during the process of clamping the blade, by means of the handle, between the guard member and cap, so that, when the parts are assembled, the blade is maintained in a transversely curved position and is externally supported adjacent its cutting edges to give it rigidity. A razor of this type is described in the original Gillette patent, No. 775,134, dated November 15>, 1904 (Defendant’s Exhibit 4). Its commercial form, as manufactured by plaintiff, is in evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5. This razor was the original Gillette and is referred to in the record as the “original type” Gillette razor.

The facts stated in the specification of the patent in suit with reference to the “original type” Gillette razor are established by the evidence. On page 1, line 27 et seq. of the specification, the patentee says:

“In the use of such a razor, satisfactory operation requires very accurate positioning of the blade edge with respect to the guard, and eojasequently it is extremely desirable that the parts which engage and flex the blade should retain, permanently, the precise shapes and dimensions imparted to them when manufactured. This is particularly true of the longitudinal straight edges of the blade-clamping cap, on which the. alignment and amount of exposure of the blade edges depend, but inasmuch as these cap edges are necessarily made thin, in order to enable the cutting edge of the blade to reaeh the skin when the razor is held at the proper shaving angle, they are very easily deformed, particularly at the cap comers, to such an extent as seriously to impair the efficiency of the razor.

“For example, the mere dropping of the razor, or of the cap alone, has frequently resulted in bending over a corner of the cap to an extent sufficient, when the clamping pressure is applied to the blade, to produce an uneven edge exposure or even to crack or break off a portion of the blade itself. Such a result may occur even when the bending of the cap comer is so slight that it is not likely to be noticed by 'the user, this being due to the fact that the pressure thereby applied to the blade tends to flex it locally in a different direction from that in which it has already been flexed by the cap as a whole, and according to a familiar geometrical principle the [253]*253blade can. not be so flexed, even slig-btly, without subjecting- it to a greatly increased stress. In such a case the user invariably considers the unsatisfactory operation of his razor to be due to a defective blade, and either continues to use the defective holder and to find fault with the blades, or else discards the razor in favor of one of another make.”

After a number of unsuccessful attempts to cure the inherent defects of the “original type” and its improved type were made, as will hereinafter appear, Thompson solved the problem as stated in the patent in suit. At page 1, lines 66 to 83, inclusive, he says: “To meet the difficulty above explained I have devised an improvement whieh is applicable to any razor of the construction hereinbefore described and may be embodied therein without making any change except in the outline of the blade itself, my improved blade being given such a contour that even if the blade-clamping cap is bent at one or more of its comers, the positioning of the blade edge under the flexing action of the holder will not be affected thereby, nor will the blade be broken or cracked. In consequence, it becomes possible not only to obtain efficient service from razors using such blades, even if the cap. comers become bent, but also to restore to satisfactory use a very large number of such razors which have been discarded or are now giving unsatisfactory service.”

The damaged cap comer problem was of long standing and the resulting defective operation of the razor impaired plaintiff’s business and good will. The “original type” Gillette razor (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5) and blade (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 33) were put on the market by plaintiff some time after 1900. In the “original type” Gillette razor the longitudinal edges of the cap were made thin to enable the cutting edges of the blade to perform their proper function. The comers of the cap were rectangular, and sharp.

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Related

Gillette Safety Razor Co. v. Essex Razor Blade Corp.
13 F. Supp. 505 (D. New Jersey, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Supp. 251, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillette-safety-razor-co-v-standard-safety-razor-corp-ctd-1934.