Zinn v. Auto Strop Safety Razor Co.

170 F. 197, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5514

This text of 170 F. 197 (Zinn v. Auto Strop Safety Razor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zinn v. Auto Strop Safety Razor Co., 170 F. 197, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5514 (circtsdny 1909).

Opinion

PEATT, District Judge.

This is an equity suit, based upon an invention of August Wm. Sclieuber, shown in letters patent No. 679,-639, granted July 30, 1901, to the complainant as Scheuber’s assignee. The subject of the invention is the well-known safety razor, and it is for improvements therein. The claims involved are:

“1. A safety razor, comprising a casing or blade support and an automatic or self-adjusting guard, substantially as described.
“2. A safety razor, comprising a casing or blade support and a spring actuated or adjusted guard for the blade, substantially as described.
“3. A safety razor, comprising a blade support and a blade-adjusted movable guard, substantially as described.’’
“6. A safety razor, comprising a blade support and a guard normally moved inward ou the support and adapted for engagement by a blade, substantially as described.
“7. A safety razor, comprising a casing or blade support and an automatic or self-adjusting guard movable relatively to or independently of the casing, substantially as described.”
[198]*198“9. A safety razor casing combined with an automatic or self-setting guard having its opposite portions movable or adjustable independently of one another, substantially as described.
“10. A safety razor casing or blade support and a blade-adjustable guard provided with lugs or stops for securing the proper relative position of the guard to the blade or casing, substantially as described.
“11. A safety razor, comprising a blade support and a blade-adjustable guard provided with oppositely located blade-engaging stops, said guard having its opposite sides independently movable or adjustable, so that each end portion of the blade can set its respective portion of the guard, substantially as described.”

After cutting away the refinements of the case, the real defense is understood to be that, in view of the prior art and the specifications of the patent in suit, one is obliged to construe the claims of the patent so narrowly that the defendant’s device does not infringe. The alleged infringing safety razor is a cunningly arranged device. Among many operations needed to produce it are the following: The blade, it will be seen, is securely held by a frame which revolves upon a permanently located axis. At one point of its revolution it brings the blade to a place of rest which is nearly in line with the plane of movement of the safety guard, which is spring-actuated and provided with lugs. By pressing the spring the guard is pushed outwardly, and the rigidly held blade is permitted to fall into the plane of movement of the guard, and then, the pressure being released, the spring as it contracts brings the guard back, so that its lugs press against the blade and it remains there exerting a constant steady pressure. The razor is then ready for use.

The operations described offer an opening for the charge of infringement to come in and get a hearing. In this situation, if we confine our thoughts to the claims of the patent in suit, we might think that one element of the alleged infringing device is “an automatic or self-adjusting guard,” or “a spring actuated or adjusted guard for the blade,” or “a guard * * * adapted for engagement by a blade,” etc. It will be noticed, however, that claim 3 calls for “a blade-adjusted movable guard,” and that claims 10 and 11 correspond. Complainant’s expert says of claim 3:

“I understand this claim to cover * * * a movable guard which is adjusted by the blade. The blade performs the function in the adjustment of the guard.” '

He also says that it differs little, if any, from claim 1; and of the patented device he says:

“Tile stops on the guard are in position to be immediately engaged by the blade, which, as the blade slides into place, causes the guard to be moved outwardly or adjusted by the blade.”

It will be noticed that in the alleged infringement the blade takes no active part in the adjustment, but, on the contrary, bears simply and purely a passive, inactive relation to the adjustment. It prevents the guard from further spring retraction. It is merely an obstacle to further rearward progress by the guard. Is there so broad a thought as pure self-adjustment of the guard in the general disclosure and claimed monopoly of the patent? To my mind enough appears in the pat-[199]*199erl in suit, as explained by the expert, to warrant a negative answer without going further, although to make assurance doubly sure, the entire matter has been examined with more care than the brevity of these comments would indicate.

The problem presented in the art of safety razors was to effect such a combination between the blade of a razor and a safety guard that the unskilled user could by simple mechanical manipulation bring the two into such relation that the resulting device could be used upon the face in such a way as to leave it reasonably free from hair without culling the skin. Many difficulties were met and overcome, and gain was steady, until we come to Kample’s patent, No. 637,511; but in all cases, including this, the safety guard was immovable, and the blade, in a variety of ways, was adjusted to -the guard.

The Kampfe patent was granted November 31, 1899, and the most casual comparison of the patent in suit therewith shows that Scheuber took the Kampfe construction as the basis for his alleged improvement. The essence of the Kampfe invention seems to be that by the use of a spring which could be used upon different sizes of blades the blades could be brought into proper relationship with the immovable guard. The device protected by that patent met with large success in the market. Scheuber took the Kampfe construction, made the guard movable, and applied a spring adjustment to it, so that, when pushed down against the face of the spring by the contact of the blade with the lugs on the guard, it would, after the blade had been clamped in position by its own spring-, bear constantly against the blade. Thus the blade was being pressed by its spring against the guard, and the guard by its spring against the blade.

Kampfe had the old-time blade sprung toward an old-time immovable lugged guard, while Scheuber makes the old-time guard movable, and, after adjusting the blade to it, clamps his blade in the proper position and leaves the blade with the guard constantly pressing against it. This capacity for pushing the guard to the place where it would fit in properly with different sized blades, and then holding constant the proper relationship between the guard and blade by spring tension, is the new thing, if there is any patentably new thing, in Scheuber. To extend this to self-adjustment on the part of the guard, in and of itself, without any connecting thought, would obliterate patentable novelty from the Scheuber device.

Up to the time of Scheuber it had been necessary to adjust the blade to the guard. The spring above the blade bad been doing all the work. Now, in Scheuber, the guard being movable and spring actuated, the blade could adjust the guard to itself. I cannot see why the spring that pushed the guard up was not quite as likely to become weakened and inefficient as the spring of Kampfe, which had pushed the.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F. 197, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zinn-v-auto-strop-safety-razor-co-circtsdny-1909.