Lektro-Shave Corp. v. General Shaver Corp.

19 F. Supp. 843, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1752
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 7, 1937
DocketNo. 2628
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F. Supp. 843 (Lektro-Shave Corp. v. General Shaver 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
Lektro-Shave Corp. v. General Shaver Corp., 19 F. Supp. 843, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1752 (D. Conn. 1937).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

On June 2, 1937, plaintiff filed its bill of complaint against the defendant, praying for a preliminary and permanent injunction enjoining the defendant from manufacturing, distributing, advertising, exploiting, or selling, or offering to sell, its, electric shav-, ing device with its present round head, .or any shaving head similar thereto or similar to the shaving head of the plaintiff. 0’n the same day,' by rule nisi, the defendant was ordered to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue and hearing was held on the rule on June 16th.

The defendant, on June 11, 1937, filed a motion to dismiss the bill of complaint,, assigning, among others, the reason that the bill of complaint fails to allege facts which constitute a cause-of action against the defendant.

It is a general rule that a preliminary injunction will be granted only in cases where the evidence is clear and where no substantial doubt exists as. to the plaintiff’s rights to the injunction. In unfair competition cases evidence of unfáir conduct must be reasonably clear. On the other hand/ in some1 instances- the issuance of a preliminary injunction is most important, if"not [844]*844vital to the protection of industrial property-

Having these observations in mind and exercising that duty that is required of a court not to damage the business of a defendant nor unreasonably hesitate to give proper protection to a plaintiff’s business, the controversy between the parties, as it appears from the motion for preliminary injunction, may be briefly stated to be as follows :

Plaintiff, a New Jersey corporation, is now, and has been engaged since the latter part of 1935, in the business of manufacturing and selling an electric dry-shaver known as the Packard Lifetime Lektro-Shaver. It has expended large sums of money in developing, manufacturing, and selling the said shaver, and also in advertising its said product. It has sold upwards of 500,000 shavers in the United States and in foreign countries. In practically all of its advertising the plaintiff has featured its shaver as having a “round shaving head,” and it is alleged in the bill of complaint and in the motion papers that the said “round head” so advertised and distinguished has become a distinguishing feature of the plaintiff’s product and has become associated in the mind of the public with the plaintiff and its product.

The defendant, General Shaver Corporation, doing business in this district, is selling and distributing since May, 1937, an electric shaver under the trade-name “Remington Close-Shaver.” This shaver is provided with a head alleged by the plaintiff to be of a shape confusingly similar to the shaving head of its device.

Plaintiff charges the defendant with unfair competition, alleging that the latter deliberately and intentionally copied the plaintiff’s shaver head so that the two heads are to a casual observer substantially identical in appearance, and retail purchasers are likely to mistake one for the other.

It does not appear from the motion papers nor from the evidence whether the ■shaver of the plaintiff is protected by patents, so that, for the purpose of this pro-] ■ceeding, I must assume that it is an unpatented article. It is well settled in the law •of unfair competition that a manufacturer has good right- to make any unpatented article embodying therein necessary functional parts so that the whole will function; but, if he incorporates what is distinctive, ornamental, fanciful, or merely peculiar to another’s product, he may trespass. Le Mur Co. v. W. G. Shelton Co. (C.C.A.) 32 F.(2d) 79. To entitle a complainant to injunctive relief because of the imitation by defendant of nonfunctional features of his product, it must be shown that such features have become associated by the public with him as the manufacturer or source Crescent Tool Co. v. Kilborn & Bishop Co. (C.C.A) 247 F. 299. Therefore, the sole question in this controversy is as to whether or not some of the features of defendant’s shaver are nonfunctional and whether such nonfunctional elements have been embodied in defendant’s shaver head for the purpose and with the effect of misleading the public.

In order to deal intelligently with these questions, it is necessary to describe and compare the mechanical details of the plaintiff’s and defendant’s sliavers, exhibits of which have been introduced in evidence at the hearing before me.

Plaintiff’s shaver comprises a casing, within which is mounted an electric motor for actuating one of the two cutters présently to be described. The shaver head includes a cylindrical housing which is fixed to the casing. In this housing is formed an eccentrically located cylindrical bore that ex-' tends longitudinally of the housing and is so arranged in relation to the external cylindrical face of the housing that the latter is provided with an exceedingly thin portion at that area thereof at which it is to contact with the skin of the user in the process of shaving. At its thin portion the housing has cut therein a longitudinal slot, and at right angles to the said slot the thin portion of the housing is provided with teeth. The housing constitutes one of the cutters of the implement, and with its teeth co-operate those, of a cylindrical cutter, arranged in the said bore both for reciprocation and oscillation. Reciprocating and oscillating movement is imparted to the last-mentioned cutter by the electric motor in the casing of the device.

The defendant’s shaver differs from that of the plaintiff only in the following details :

1. It lacks the longitudinal slot in the housing within which the movable cutter operates.

2. Its cutter housing has a plurality of flattened surfaces which, however, are almost invisible to the naked eye.

3. Its cutter housing has two combing edges which, as I view it, do not change the [845]*845general cylindrical appearance of the said housing.

4. Its movable cutter has only a reciprocating motion, the oscillating motion of plaintiffs cutter being absent.

Defendant contends that all of the elements of plaintiffs shaver head are essential to the construction, in that they have a functional feature and that, therefore, it had full right to copy the same. With this I cannot agree. It appears to me that:

1, It is unnecessary for the proper operation of plaintiffs shaver head that the cutter housing be of cylindrical form. It is true that a substantial advantage may be had by making that portion of the housing which is to contact with the user’s skin part of a cylindrical surface or generally curved, but it is unnecessary to make the casing, as a whole, cylindrical. Such feature is not necessary to the practical operation of the device and can be changed without lessening the effectiveness of the appliance. For instance, the housing may be generally polygonal with a curved toothed portion without in the least impairing its proper function and efficiency.

2. The cylindrical shape of the movable cutter of plaintiffs device is necessary for the proper operation of its shaver for the reason that no other shape would permit the said movable cutter to move to and fro and at the same time have an oscillating movement. However, as far as defendant’s movable cutter is concerned, the cylindrical shape is unnecessary because the cutter has only a reciprocating motion.

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Related

Le Mur Co. v. W. G. Shelton Co.
32 F.2d 79 (Eighth Circuit, 1929)
Rushmorh v. Badger Brass Mfg. Co.
198 F. 379 (Second Circuit, 1912)
Crescent Tool Co. v. Kilborn & Bishop Co.
247 F. 299 (Second Circuit, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 843, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lektro-shave-corp-v-general-shaver-corp-ctd-1937.