Ex Parte POINTEAU et al - Page 4




              Appeal No. 2004-0214                                                                  Page 4                
              Application No. 09/446,516                                                                                  


              respective positions articulated by the appellants and the examiner.  As a consequence                      
              of our review, we make the determinations which follow.                                                     


              The indefiniteness rejection                                                                                
                     We will not sustain the rejection of claims 1 to 20 and 34 under 35 U.S.C. § 112,                    
              second paragraph.                                                                                           


                     The second paragraph of 35 U.S.C. § 112 requires claims to set out and                               
              circumscribe a particular area with a reasonable degree of precision and particularity.                     
              In re Johnson, 558 F.2d 1008, 1015, 194 USPQ 187, 193 (CCPA 1977).  In making this                          
              determination, the definiteness of the language employed in the claims must be                              
              analyzed, not in a vacuum, but always in light of the teachings of the prior art and of the                 
              particular application disclosure as it would be interpreted by one possessing the                          
              ordinary level of skill in the pertinent art.  Id.                                                          


                     The examiner's focus during examination of claims for compliance with the                            
              requirement for definiteness of 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph, is whether the                           
              claims meet the threshold requirements of clarity and precision, not whether more                           
              suitable language or modes of expression are available.  Some latitude in the manner of                     
              expression and the aptness of terms is permitted even though the claim language is not                      








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