Schick Service, Inc. v. Jones

173 F.2d 969, 81 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 60, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4578
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 1949
DocketNo. 11854
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 173 F.2d 969 (Schick Service, Inc. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schick Service, Inc. v. Jones, 173 F.2d 969, 81 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 60, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4578 (9th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

Schick Service, Inc., defendant, appeals from an interlocutory judgment of the district court holding valid and infringed certain claims1 under a United States Letters Patent No. 2,228,768 granted Janua-ry 14, 1941, to Ralph E. Jones, plaintiff, for- hair clipping and shaving device improvements, and from an injunction and an order of accounting. Jones brings a cross-appeal from that portion of the judgment holding certain of the claims to be invalid,2 and from the dismissal of the second cause of [971]*971action based on an oral contract of license. We will refer to defendant and plaintiff as Schick and Jones respectively.

The patent involved certain alleged improvement's in the Schick type electric shaver by adding “end-guards” or “flaps” hinged to a handle of the dry shaver at the ends of the cutting head thereof; and, secondly, by rounding the outer ends of the end-guards. The first objection to the original Schick razor, stated in the patent, is as follows : “Devices of this kind as placed upon the market are open to the objection that there are two relatively sharp corners on each side of the shaving head and two relatively sharp corners at the extremities of the shaving head. These corners, when the instrument is pressed against the face or other part, are annoying and uncomfortable, particularly inasmuch as the device must be pressed firmly against the face in order that it shall cut properly and make a ‘clean shave’.” To meet this objection the patent proposes: “Each of these guards at its outer end is rounded, * * *, so that its outer face extends longitudinally of the guard and inward towards and merges into the flat upper face of the channeled head * * The second objection set forth in the patent states that: “In devices of this kind, the channel-shaped head is held in place against accidental detachment by means of a set screw passing through a channel-shaped recess in the handle, which recess contains the head. Due to the very rapid vibrations given to the cutter within the head, this set screw often becomes loosened and in that case, the head is liable to fall out, carrying with it the cutter, and the cutter and head may drop against some very hard object as, for instance, a washstand, floor or the like, and damage the cutter head or the cutter itself, thus rendering the instrument impossible for use un[972]*972til these parts have been replaced or duplicated at considerable expense.” This objection, the patent explains, is overcome by-extending the guards “across both ends of the channel-shaped head, which will hold the channel-shaped head in position without the necessity of using a set screw.” Each of the guards or flaps has an opening so that a “blast of air will blow the hairs which may have collected in [the] channel * * * out through the opposite guard.”

The advantages of these improvements according to the patent are: “First, comfort for the person whose beard is being clipped or shaved; Second, security against interruption of the mechanical functioning of the clipping machine; Third, security against damage to fragile and expensive parts; Fourth, ease in disassembling the part's, and Fifth, neatness in construction and appearance.” A further advantageous result suggested, by the use of such rounded end-guards on a dry shaver, is that the user can obtain a much faster shave than would otherwise be possible.

The “end-guards” used by Schick are termed “whiskets” by the company and are allegedly used for whisker receptacles. The district court found that the “end-guards” and “whiskets” are used for the same purpose and accomplish the same result, i. e., shaving comfort and a faster shave and also permit .ready disassembly of the shaving head and fast cleaning of the device.

Schick argues that the court erred in holding valid claims numbered 22, 23, 31 and 32, because: ‘.‘(a) The invention or inventions purported to be patented had been described in printed publications prior to the supposed invention or discovery by the plaintiff; (b) That the plaintiff was not the original and first inventor of any material or substantial part of the thing claimed in said patent; (c) That the invention or inventions purported to be patented thereby did not constitute patentable novelty or invention within the meaning of the patent laws, in view of the prior state of the art, and in view of what was common knowledge on the part of those skilled in the art, prior to the date of the alleged invention or inventions of the plaintiff.” Schick asserts further that their “whiskets” do not infringe as they are hair receptacles which “are imperforate and of a shape enabling them to catch and store the hair or beard clippings. * * * They are not provided for the purpose of holding the channeled head to the handle nor to prevent scratching or cutting.”

Jones urges that the claims were properly held valid in that they are not for simply “rounding” or “hinging” an old element in an old combination of elements, but each is for a new combination of elements which have new attributes and features defined by the claims. He defends the lower court’s holding, arguing that this shaver structure, having end-guards hinged to the structure or handle adjacent to the ends of the cutting head, clearly defines invention and is valid over prior art. (Claim 31.) As to claims 22, 23, and 32, it is contended that the case is even stronger because these claims are limited not only to the provision of end-guards hinged to the handle, but are also limited to the end-guards being rounded. Claim 31 is not limited in terms to rounded end-guards but rather limited to a shaver structure as described. He states that “(a) It is novel and inventive in the ■art to provide separate end guards for the ends of the cutting head of a dry shaver, which are rounded and which conform to the general shape of the ends of the cutting head; and (b) It is novel and inventive in ■the art to provide separate end guards for the ends of the cutting head of a dry shaver, which are hinged to the handle of the dry shaver adjacent the ends of the head. * * * That claims 22, 23, 31, and 32 define true patentable combinations is self-evident. There can be no question that the end-guards of the patent in suit cooperate with both the cutting head and the handle of the dry shaver, being hinged to the handle and forming end extensions and bearing surfaces for the cutting head. By the provision of such end guards, the ends of the cutting head are protected against injury. By hinging the end guards to the handle, the dry shaver may be readily disassembled for cleaning and reassembled and unnecessary 'handling of the cutting head obviated. By rounding the end guards as described in the patent, shaving comfort is provided to the user. Thus, each of these features of construction modifies the gen[973]*973eral function of the end guards, and each feature modifies the other.”

Schick claims that the rounded guard member, a feature of the patent, is no.t patentable in that there is no invention. Claims 1, 11, 26, 27, 28, 29, and 30 (declared to be invalid by the trial court because of indefiniteness and because lacking in invention) he argues, describe a rounded guard member — so that this feature existing in the valid claims is not the necessary portion making for patentability. Further, the only additional feature in the valid claims was the hinging of the guard members to the handle of the razor.

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173 F.2d 969, 81 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 60, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schick-service-inc-v-jones-ca9-1949.