Ex Parte TREMBLAY et al - Page 3




              Appeal No. 2005-2557                                                                       3                                      
              Application No. 09/204,585                                                                                                        




                                                       OPINION                                                                                  
              We have carefully considered the subject matter on appeal, the rejections                                                         
              advanced by the examiner and the evidence of obviousness relied upon by the                                                       
              examiner as support for the rejections.  We have, likewise, reviewed and taken into                                               
              consideration, in reaching our decision, the appellants’ arguments set forth in the briefs                                        
              along with the examiner’s rationale in support of the rejections and arguments in                                                 
              rebuttal set forth in the examiner’s answer.                                                                                      
              It is our view, after consideration of the record before us, that the evidence relied                                             
              upon and the level of skill in the particular art would not have suggested to one of                                              
              ordinary skill in the art the obviousness of the invention as set forth in the claims on                                          
              appeal.  Accordingly, we reverse.                                                                                                 
              In rejecting claims under 35 U.S.C. § 103, it is incumbent upon the examiner to                                                   
              establish a factual basis to support the legal conclusion of obviousness.  See In re Fine,                                        
              837 F.2d 1071, 1073, 5 USPQ2d 1596, 1598 (Fed. Cir. 1988).  In so doing, the                                                      
              examiner is expected to make the factual determinations set forth in Graham v. John                                               
              Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 17, 148 USPQ 459, 467 (1966), and to provide a reason why                                                  
              one having ordinary skill in the pertinent art would have been led to modify the prior art                                        
              or to combine prior art references to arrive at the claimed invention.  Such reason must                                          
              stem from some teaching, suggestion or implication in the prior art as a whole or                                                 

















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