United States v. Relaxacizor, Inc.

340 F. Supp. 943, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12093
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedApril 14, 1970
DocketCiv. 66-1141
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 340 F. Supp. 943 (United States v. Relaxacizor, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Relaxacizor, Inc., 340 F. Supp. 943, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12093 (C.D. Cal. 1970).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

FINDINGS OF FACT

WILLIAM P. GRAY, District Judgfe.

1. Defendant Eastwood General Corporation is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of California. Its principal place of business is at 980 N. La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles, California. The name of this firm formerly was Relaxacizor, Inc., and this name will be used throughout these findings.

2. Defendant Relaxacizor Sales, Inc., is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware.

3. Defendant Burton Skiles is President of Relaxacizor, Inc., and Relaxacizor Sales, Inc., and has held these positions for over 20 years. He owns 100% of the stock of Relaxacizor, Inc., and 80% of the stock of Relaxacizor Sales, Inc.

4. From 1955 until the time she testified in 1969, defendant Márlys T. Aid-rich was Vice President of Relaxacizor, Inc., and Relaxacizor Sales, Inc. She became General Manager in 1965. She is no longer affiliated with Relaxacizor, Inc.

5. Defendant E. Ric Clark was Vice President and Director of Advertising of Relaxacizor, Inc., for many years. At the time of the trial he was no longer an officer or employee of Relaxacizor, Inc., but was a Director of Relaxacizor Sales, Inc. He owns 20% of the stock of Relaxacizor Sales, Inc.

6. Said defendants are now and have been engaged in the business of promoting, selling, and shipping in interstate commerce a device designated as Relaxacizor. Said device is manufactured in Chicago, Illinois, by Eastwood Industries, *944 Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Relaxacizor, Inc., and is then distributed throughout the country at the direction of Relaxacizor, Inc., or Relaxacizor Sales, Inc.

7. The labeling of Relaxacizor represents and suggests that the device, when used in accordance with the instruction booklet that accompanies it, is effective as a girth reducer and provides the user with a safe, comfortable, and pleasant mode of exercise.

8. The labeling of Relaxacizor further represents and suggests that the device is suitable and safe for use in the manner suggested in the instruction booklet, without medical supervision, on many areas of the body. The Relaxacizor is intended to affect the structure and functions of the body.

9. The Relaxacizor device provides electrical currents which cause intermittent contraction of the muscles beneath the skin area to which the pads of the device are applied. The device causes 40 muscular contractions per minute in the muscles affected by the motor nerve points in the area of each pad. The directions for use recommend use of the device at least 30 minutes daily for each figure placement area, and suggest that the user may use it for longer periods if he wishes. The device is offered in a number of different models which are powered either by battery or household current.

10. The Relaxacizors in evidence have from 1 to 6 channels. Two pads (or electrodes) are connected by wires to each channel. The user applies from 2 to 12 pads to various parts of his body. For each channel there is a dial which purports to control the intensity of the electrical current flowing into the body between the two pads connected to that channel.

11. The human body to which the Relaxacizor pads are applied provides the pathway for the flow of the electrical current emitted by the Relaxacizor. The human body thus completes the electrical circuit between each set of pads.

12. The quantity of current flowing through a circuit depends in part upon the electrical impedance which it encounters. The electrical impedance of the human body varies according to the pressure applied to the Relaxacizor pads, the manner of application, the moisture present beneath the pads, the quantity and kind of hair under the pads, the salt content of the skin, the smoothness of the skin, the thickness of the skin, the integrity of the skin, the tightness of the fit of the electrodes, the manner of pad placements on the body, the location of pad placements on the body, and the size and the condition of the body. These variables are independent of all other variables which can also affect the Relaxacizor current applied to the body.

13. All of the Relaxacizors are subject to variations in current output by reason, among others, of electrical design, interdependence of dials, non-linearity, newness of battery, and simultaneous use of other electrical appliances using the same power source.

14. Because of the many variables, the current outputs of the Relaxacizors are not constant. There is a substantial voltage and milliamperage range in the electrical output of each machine when measured at the body.

15. The involuntary muscle contractions caused by Relaxacizor are abnormal and cannot be equated with ordinary exercise. The Relaxacizor actuates small groups of muscles without body mechanisms that normally protect against stress. There may be a lack of the usual warning signs of fatigue and pain which signal the need to stop. The damage caused by Relaxacizor may occur before the warning of pain or fatigue. In the use of the machine, there is lacking the rhythmic coordination and balance of movement characteristic of ordinary exercise. The contractions caused by Relaxacizor are unnatural and spasm-like, tending to pull one side more than the other, and create a jerking sensation.

*945 16. There are four principal ways by which use of the Relaxacizor may adversely affect health:

(a) The electrical current produced by the machine exposes the user to repetitive electrical shocks and the possibility of pain and other harm especially to the heart if the pads and belts are applied where cardiovascular hazard may be involved.
(b) The mechanical effects of the machine — i. e., the unbalanced, asymmetrical, localized, tetanic, and spasm-like contractions — cause abnormal pulls, displacements, jerking, and strains which may result in pain and other harm.
(c) The emotional effects of the repetitive electrical shocks may generate nervousness, anxiety, and fear which in turn may produce abnormal physiological responses.
(d) The localized skin effects, which may be due to friction, pressure, heat, and perspiration under the pads and belts, include the triggering of dormant skin abnormalities and the rupture of blood vessels within the skin.

In some users, there may be a combination of two or more of these means of producing harmful effects. Moreover, in each instance of use, the possibility of harm is enhanced by the multiple, complex, and variable factors which come into play when the machine is applied to the human body; by the varying physical and emotional states of the user; and by the user’s ignorance of the electrical, mechanical, and physiological phenomena involved.

17. The firing of externally induced charges of electricity indiscriminately into the body, as is done by Relaxacizor, is inherently dangerous. Electrical current should not be introduced into the body unless there are compelling reasons to do so in the judgment of a skilled physician.

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Bluebook (online)
340 F. Supp. 943, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-relaxacizor-inc-cacd-1970.