L. S. Donaldson Company and G. Barr and Company v. La Maur, Inc., La Maur, Inc. v. G. Barr and Company

299 F.2d 412
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 19, 1962
Docket16753, 16754
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 299 F.2d 412 (L. S. Donaldson Company and G. Barr and Company v. La Maur, Inc., La Maur, Inc. v. G. Barr and Company) 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
L. S. Donaldson Company and G. Barr and Company v. La Maur, Inc., La Maur, Inc. v. G. Barr and Company, 299 F.2d 412 (8th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

GRAVEN, Senior District Judge.

In the present action the plaintiff below, La Maur, Inc., charged the defendants below, L. S. Donaldson Companyand G. Barr and Company, with patent infringement. It also charged the latter defendant with the misappropriation of a trade secret. The subject matter of the controversy is an aerosol hair spray. The trial was to the Court without a jury. The trial court held that the patent involved was valid and that it had been infringed by both defendants. It also held that the plaintiff had not established its claim for the misappropriation of a trade secret. The memorandum opinion of the trial court in connection with its decision is reported at 190 F. Supp. 771. Both defendants appealed from the decision of the trial court as to the validity of the patent and as to the infringement by them. The plaintiff appealed from the decision of the trial court denying it relief for the misappropriation of the trade secret. Since there are two appeals involved, the parties will be referred to throughout as plaintiff and defendants rather than as appellants and appellees.

The plaintiff, La Maur, Inc., is a Minnesota corporation engaged in the manufacture of cosmetics at Minneapolis, Minnesota. The defendant, L. S. Donaldson Company, is a Minnesota corporation which operates a department store in the same city. The defendant, G. Barr and Company, is an Illinois corporation engaged in the manufacture and processing of cosmetic products at Chicago, Illinois. The defendant, L. S. Donaldson Company, is a customer of the defendant, G. Barr and Company, and the accused product handled by the former was supplied to it by the latter. The latter handled the entire defense of the action.

It seems that the purpose of a hair spray of the type in question is to provide hair with a brilliant or luster-like film. Experience in the industry has shown that to achieve the most satisfactory result a number of substances are required. A substance having a resin ingredient is generally used to provide brightness and luster. Such an ingredient tends to be hard and brittle. In order to avoid the cracking of the film made by that ingredient, it is necessary to modify its somewhat harsh and brittle characteristics. The film is made more flexible by the use of a plasticizer. It is desirable that the film dry quickly after application. Therefore, the ñlm ingredient should be carried in a liquid which *414 dissolves quickly upon . exposure to the air. It is also desirable that the film be readily removable by washing the hair in water. While perfume performs no particular function in a hair spray, it is frequently added for the purpose of customer appeal. The liquid carrier for the substances may be alcohol or water, or both. In the earlier years of the hair spray industry, hair sprays were contained in nonaerosol type containers. However, it was found that hair sprays are best applied by means of aerosol type containers. In aerosol type containers use is made of a chemical known as dichlorodifluoromethane, commonly called Freon. Freon has long been manufactured by a nationally known organization and widely used for many types of sprays. The composition of the accused product involves a scientific field known as polymer chemistry. This has to do with certain types of large molecules known as polymers. Polymers may be either of natural or synthetic origin. They are more commonly of synthetic origin. Synthetic polymers have been successfully used in the manufacture of synthetic rubber, plastics, nylon and other synthetic fibres.

The relevant facts and chronology in the present case are largely as follows. Prior to 1938 the I. G. Farben Industry in Germany had developed a synthetic polymeric resin known as polyvinylpyrrolidone. In polyvinylpyrrolidone there are two well-known types of chemical groups. One is the vinyl group and the other is the pyrrolidone group. The vinyl groups combine with each other in a linear form and may be compared to links connected to form a chain. Each link is a vinyl group so to speak and to each vinyl group is attached a pyrrolidone group. The ratio of vinyl groups to pyrrolidone is 1:1, so one unit of the big (polymer) structure is vinylpyrrolidone and as these units join they form a polymer. The polymer forms a rather hard, resinous material, the plasticity of which may be modified with plasticizers. Polyvinylpyrrolidone usually comes in the form of white powder. It is soluble in both water and alcohol.

The General Aniline & Film Corporation is a large company engaged in the manufacture and distribution of chemical products. Several years prior to 1951 it had secured the rights to manufacture and distribute polyvinylpyrrolidone, generally known and referred to as PYP. Prior to 1952 PVP had been sold for pharmaceutical uses, the most important of which was as a substitute for blood plasma. In April, 1951 M. L. Spiegel, the president of the plaintiff, acting for the plaintiff, ordered a sample of PVP iodine from the General Aniline & Film Corporation. Along with the sample requested, the company sent a sample of PVP as being of possible interest to the plaintiff. In making tests of the samples, Spiegel noticed that PVP when rubbed on the back of his hand left a very shiny surface. The thought occurred to Spiegel that PVP might be usable in a hair fixative.

In 1951 and prior thereto, the defendant, G. Barr and Company, had facilities which were especially adaptable for the filling, loading, or packaging of cosmetic products in containers. It is one of the largest companies in that field. On July 6th, 1951, the plaintiff wrote the defendant, G. Barr and Company, stating that it was making experiments in developing a hair lacquer formula. It further stated that it was sending samples of a formulation which it desired to have packaged in propellant cans. It stated that in the samples anhydrous alcohol was used as a solvent and inquired whether the use of such alcohol was an absolute requirement in connection with the packaging of the formula. Anhydrous alcohol is a water-free alcohol. On July 9th, 1951, the defendant, G. Barr and Company, informed the plaintiff that anhydrous alcohol and anhydrous materials throughout were absolutely necessary since the presence of water would cause corrosion in the cans. Sample aerosol cans containing the plaintiff’s formula were made up for the plaintiff by the defendant, G. *415 Barr and Company, on or about July 10th, 1951. Prior to 1952 the General Aniline & Film Corporation had been selling PVP for pharmaceutical use at $12.00 a pound, which made it too expensive for use in hair sprays. Early in 1952 the plaintiff made arrangements with the General Aniline & Film Corporation to purchase dry PVP of a nonpharmaeeutical grade for $6.00 a pound. The price was subsequently reduced to $3.00 a pound.

In March, 1952, the defendant, G. Barr and Company, packaged in aerosol cans a supply of plaintiff’s hair spray formula. The formula met with a favorable response on the part of customers selected by the plaintiff. Because of that recognition, the plaintiff proceeded to market its preparation with ever increasing success. It is marketed under the trade name of “Style.” On July 31st, 1952, Spiegel, acting in behalf of the plaintiff, filed an application in the United States Patent Office for a “Sprayable Water-Free Alcoholic Polyvinylpyrrolidone Hair Preparation.” On January 27th, 1959, the plaintjff was granted United States Patent Letters No. 2,871,161 for that preparation.

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Bluebook (online)
299 F.2d 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-s-donaldson-company-and-g-barr-and-company-v-la-maur-inc-la-maur-ca8-1962.