Oren Technologies, LLC v. Proppant Express Investments ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Case: 19-1778   Document: 64     Page: 1   Filed: 07/23/2021
    NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC,
    Appellant
    v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS LLC,
    PROPPANT EXPRESS SOLUTIONS LLC,
    Appellees
    ______________________
    2019-1778
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2017-
    01918.
    ______________________
    Decided: July 23, 2021
    ______________________
    JOHN C. O'QUINN, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, Washington,
    DC, for appellant. Also represented by CALVIN ALEXANDER
    SHANK, JASON M. WILCOX; GIANNI CUTRI, MEREDITH
    ZINANNI, Chicago, IL.
    MARK T. GARRETT, Norton Rose Fulbright US LLP,
    Austin, TX, for appellees. Also represented by STEPHANIE
    N. DEBROW; JONATHAN S. FRANKLIN, PETER B. SIEGAL,
    Washington, DC.
    Case: 19-1778     Document: 64      Page: 2    Filed: 07/23/2021
    2                                 OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    ______________________
    Before NEWMAN, O’MALLEY, and CHEN, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM.
    Oren Technologies, LLC (“Oren”) appeals the decision
    of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“PTAB” or “Board”),
    ruling on inter partes review (“IPR”) that claims 1–7, 9, 10,
    and 12–20 (all the challenged claims) of 
    U.S. Patent No. 9,403,626
     (“the ’626 patent”) are unpatentable on the
    ground of obviousness. 1 Oren had charged Proppant Ex-
    press Investments LLC (“PropX”) with infringement of the
    ’626 patent, together with continuation 
    U.S. Patent No. 9,511,929
     (“the ’929 patent”) and a third related patent,
    
    U.S. Patent No. 9,296,518
     (“the ’518 patent”) in the United
    States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
    While the district court case was pending, PropX filed this
    petition for IPR of the ’626 patent, and corollary petitions
    for the ’929 and ’518 patents. The PTAB found the ’626
    patent invalid for obviousness. Oren appealed. We con-
    clude that the PTAB erred in basing its obviousness finding
    on a ground of unpatentability not presented by petitioner
    and in its evidentiary analysis on the objective evidence of
    nonobviousness. We reverse-in-part, vacate-in-part, and
    remand.
    BACKGROUND
    The ’626 patent is for a “Proppant Storage Vessel and
    Assembly Thereof.” Proppant is particulate material, such
    as silica sand, used in the process of hydraulic fracturing
    that is commonly called “fracking.” Fracking is “the injec-
    tion of fluid into shale beds at high pressure in order to free
    up petroleum resources (such as oil or natural gas).”
    1 Proppant Express Inv., LLC v. Oren Techs., LLC,
    No. IPR2017-01918, Paper 83 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 14, 2019)
    (“Board Op.”).
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64     Page: 3    Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                 3
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    Fracking, MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY. Proppant is in-
    serted into the well and shale rock to preserve the pres-
    sure-induced fractures in the rock and thus to facilitate
    flow of oil and gas into the well. The record states that a
    fracking well may require several tons of proppant.
    The sources of proppant tend to be remote from well
    sites, and the proppant must be contained, transported,
    stored, and delivered to the well site. Oren states that
    methods previously used, such as proppant storage in rail-
    road cars and delivery by pneumatic trailers, were incon-
    venient, noisy, wasteful, dusty, and unsafe.
    The ’626 patent describes and claims a container struc-
    ture that Oren states enables containment, transportation,
    storage, and efficient release of large volumes of proppant.
    Figure 1 of the ’626 patent shows the containers stacked
    for transport, storage, and use:
    .
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64     Page: 4    Filed: 07/23/2021
    4                               OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    ’626 patent, Fig. 1.
    The containers are structured so that the proppant in
    each container can flow through hinged hatches, and is dis-
    charged at the well site through the outlet on the bottom
    container. The specification states that “the hatches 24
    and 28 will form a unique and guided flowpath whereby the
    proppant in the interior volume 18 of the second container
    16 can flow directly into the opening 24 and into the inte-
    rior volume 14 of the first container 12.” ’626 patent, col.
    5, ll. 38–42.
    Patent Figure 6 shows the structure of the individual
    container, with support members 102 and 104 and ramps
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64     Page: 5    Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                  5
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    82 and 84, described as providing support and strength for
    the heavy loads for which these containers are intended:
    ’626 patent, Fig. 6.
    Figure 6 also shows hatches 22 and 32 through which the
    proppant flows from stacked container to container.
    Claim 18 is representative:
    18. A container structurally strengthened to
    transport and store large volumes of proppant ef-
    fectively therein, the container comprising:
    a top; a bottom, having an outlet formed therein;
    sidewalls coupled to the top and bottom, so as to
    define an interior volume of the container thereby
    to store the proppant therein;
    a plurality of sidewall supports positioned to pro-
    vide structural support to the sidewalls when large
    volumes of proppant are positioned within the in-
    terior volume, the proppant having a substantially
    spherical shape and a tightly graded particle dis-
    tribution, the plurality of sidewall supports includ-
    ing a plurality of support braces extending in a
    substantially horizontal position, the container in-
    cluding a container frame structurally arranged to
    support another container when filled with large
    volumes of proppant and when positioned in a
    .
    Case: 19-1778      Document: 64       Page: 6   Filed: 07/23/2021
    6                                  OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    vertically stacked arrangement thereabove, and
    the large volumes are at least 30,000 pounds;
    ramps downwardly inclined and extending in-
    wardly from the sidewalls to direct the proppant to-
    ward the outlet when the proppant is stored
    therein, a plurality of support members attached to
    a bottom surface of the ramps and extending down-
    wardly toward the bottom, and at least one support
    brace of the plurality of support braces being posi-
    tioned vertically higher than the ramps;
    a plurality of support members attached to a bot-
    tom surface of the ramps and extending down-
    wardly toward the bottom; and
    a hatch positioned proximate the outlet, the hatch
    being moveable between open and closed positions.
    ’626 patent, col. 11, l. 52–col. 12, l. 16.
    Other independent claims are directed to the system of
    multiple containers, an additional conveyor, and the
    method of delivering large quantities of proppant to the
    fracking site. Dependent claims add additional limita-
    tions.
    I
    Procedural Issues -- Issue Preclusion
    PropX filed IPR petitions against the ’626 patent and
    its continuation, the ’929 patent, and the same panel of the
    PTAB conducted separate trials. The Board first consid-
    ered the ’626 patent, and in a Final Written Decision dated
    February 14, 2019, the Board held all the challenged
    claims of the ’626 patent unpatentable on the ground of ob-
    viousness. Board Op. at 52. Then, 27 days later, the PTAB
    issued a Final Written Decision on the continuation ’929
    patent and held that claims 4, 7, 10, 12, 15, 18, and 19,
    directed to the same claim limitations at issue in the ’626
    patent, were patentable. Proppant Express Invs., LLC v.
    Case: 19-1778     Document: 64     Page: 7    Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                   7
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    Oren Techs., LLC, No. IPR2017-02103, Paper 100 (P.T.A.B.
    Mar. 13, 2019) (“’929 Board Op.”). Both sides, in their
    briefs filed on this appeal, recognized that the ’626 and ’929
    patent decisions were in direct conflict and could not be rec-
    onciled. PropX advised the court that it had requested
    PTAB reconsideration of the ’929 decision.
    While the present appeal was awaiting decision, the
    PTAB reconsidered its ’929 holding. The PTAB then held
    all claims except claim 4 of the ’929 patent unpatentable.
    Proppant Express Invs., LLC v. Oren Techs., LLC, No.
    IPR2017-02103, 
    2020 WL 2562742
     (P.T.A.B. May 20, 2020)
    (“’929 Reconsideration Op.”). The PTAB stated that “we
    erred in our analysis of this limitation [of “at least 30,000
    pounds” in the ’929 patent] given our prior analysis in the
    -01918 Proceeding [for the ’626 patent].” ’929 Reconsider-
    ation Op. at *2.
    Meanwhile, two days before the PTAB issued the ’929
    Reconsideration Decision, this court affirmed the district
    court’s claim construction of certain claims terms, reported
    at Sandbox Logistics LLC v. Proppant Express Investment
    LLC, 813 F. App’x 548 (Fed. Cir. 2020). On that claim con-
    struction, the parties had stipulated to non-infringement of
    the ’626, ’929, and ’518 patents, and the district court had
    entered final judgment in favor of PropX. 
    Id. at 551
    . Fol-
    lowing our affirmance of claim construction and non-in-
    fringement, neither party appealed from the ’929
    Reconsideration Decision.
    Both sides filed supplemental briefs in this appeal on
    issue preclusion. PropX argues that “the Board’s final writ-
    ten decision in IPR2017-02103 . . . , as modified on rehear-
    ing, has dispositive, preclusive effect on this appeal,”
    because “[Oren] did not appeal.” PropX Suppl. Br. 1. Oren
    responds that preclusion does not arise because the basic
    requirements of issue preclusion are not met and, further,
    because Oren did not have a meaningful incentive to ap-
    peal the ’929 Reconsideration Decision.
    .
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64      Page: 8    Filed: 07/23/2021
    8                                OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    The Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 27
    states:
    When an issue of fact or law is actually litigated
    and determined by a valid and final judgment, and
    the determination is essential to the judgment, the
    determination is conclusive in a subsequent action
    between the parties, whether on the same or a dif-
    ferent claim.
    Issue preclusion requires not only identity of issues, but
    also adequacy of review and finality of decision. Id. This
    court has recognized that issue preclusion may apply to
    PTAB proceedings. For example, in Papst Licensing
    GMBH & Co. KG v. Samsung Electronics America, Inc.,
    
    924 F.3d 1243
     (Fed. Cir. 2019), this court applied issue pre-
    clusion to the meaning of a claim term that was “materially
    identical” to that construed by the Board for a related pa-
    tent; the court explained that the Board’s claim construc-
    tion “resolved [all the] issues now before us, and those
    resolutions were essential to the Board’s decision.” 
    Id. at 1252
    .
    PropX argues that the Board’s ’929 Reconsideration
    Decision precludes our review of the Board’s ’626 Decision,
    for the claims in both patents are the same or similar, and
    the “issues Oren raises here are identical to issues the
    Board resolved against Oren in the ’929 IPR final written
    decision.” PropX Suppl. Br. 2. PropX states that because
    Oren did not appeal the ’929 Reconsideration Decision,
    that decision became final for preclusion purposes.
    Oren responds that the Board’s unappealed ’929 Recon-
    sideration Decision does not preclude our review of the ’626
    decision, and refers to the recognized equitable exceptions
    to issue preclusion, as recited in the Restatement (Second)
    of Judgments § 28. Preclusion does not apply when:
    There is a clear and convincing need for a new de-
    termination of the issue . . . (b) because it was not
    Case: 19-1778     Document: 64      Page: 9     Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                      9
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    sufficiently foreseeable at the time of the initial ac-
    tion that the issue would arise in the context of a
    subsequent action, or (c) because the party sought
    to be precluded, as a result of the conduct of his ad-
    versary or other special circumstances, did not
    have an adequate opportunity or incentive to ob-
    tain a full and fair adjudication in the initial action.
    Id. § 28(5). The purpose of the equitable exceptions to issue
    preclusion is to “serve the twin goals of fairness and effi-
    cient use of private and public litigation resources.” Nat’l
    R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Pa. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 
    288 F.3d 519
    , 525 (3d Cir. 2002). The exceptions assure fairness and
    flexibility as circumstances warrant.
    Oren argues that it lacked incentive to litigate the
    PTAB’s invalidation of all but one of the ’929 claims for two
    reasons: first, that validity of claim 4 had been sustained
    and provides some protection for the ’929 subject matter;
    and second, that after stipulated judgment of non-infringe-
    ment, Oren “could not have obtained damages or an injunc-
    tion” for infringement of the ’929 patent by PropX. Oren
    Suppl. Br. 5.
    In Power Integrations, Inc. v. Semiconductor Compo-
    nents Industries, LLC, 
    926 F.3d 1306
    , 1312–13 (Fed. Cir.
    2019), this court explained that principles of fairness ne-
    gate imposing issue preclusion when the party sought to be
    precluded “had a considerably greater incentive to continue
    litigating” an issue in a second case than it had in a first
    case. 
    Id.
     (citing Papst, 924 F.3d at 1251–52). We conclude
    that issue preclusion does not apply here, because of Oren’s
    lack of incentive to litigate the ’929 patent given the timing
    of this court’s decision affirming the district court’s stipu-
    lated judgment of non-infringement and because of the sur-
    vival of a claim in the ’929 patent as compared to the
    invalidation of all challenged ’626 patent claims.
    We turn to the merits of the appeal of the PTAB’s ’626
    patent decision.
    .
    Case: 19-1778   Document: 64      Page: 10   Filed: 07/23/2021
    10                              OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    II
    The Prior Art
    The PTAB held all challenged claims of the ’626 patent
    unpatentable as obvious. The Board relied in its final de-
    cision on five references, Smith, Claussen, Hedrick,
    Krenek, and Racy, in various combinations. Oren raises
    challenges to the Board’s treatment of two of these refer-
    ences, Smith and Claussen. With respect to Smith, Oren
    argues that the Board improperly relied on a theory of mod-
    ifying Smith that was never presented by the petitioner for
    the relevant limitation. With respect to Claussen, Oren
    states that there is no teaching or suggestion in Claussen
    of a support member and of including support members in
    the ’626 container structure as claimed. Oren also argues
    that its container and system provide advantages that
    have been recognized in the industry and achieved signifi-
    cant commercial success.
    Of the prior art, we need only discuss the Smith refer-
    ence, U.S. Patent Publication No. 2008/0226434, to reach
    our decision. The Smith reference is the foundation of the
    Board’s analysis. Smith shows “an intermodal hopper con-
    tainer” having two compartments and “a structural frame
    defining a rectangular volume suitable for stacking with
    conventional intermodal containers.” Smith, Abstract.
    The Smith container has “plural compartments,” each of
    which “has a hopper formed at a bottom end.” Smith, Ab-
    stract. Figure 15 depicts the Smith two-compartment con-
    tainer:
    Case: 19-1778   Document: 64     Page: 11    Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                               11
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    Smith, Fig. 15.
    Smith states that its container has a “maximum payload of
    52,500 pounds,” with each compartment holding a maxi-
    mum of 26,250 pounds. Smith, ¶ 56.
    Smith was cited during examination of the ’626 appli-
    cation, and Oren argued that a significant distinction of
    Oren’s container was its ability to hold and manage a
    greater weight than the limit stated in Smith. Claims 1–
    6, 9, 15, and 18–20 of the ’626 patent recite that the con-
    tainer includes sidewall supports “to provide structural
    support to the sidewalls when large volumes of proppant
    are positioned within the interior volume” wherein “the
    large volumes are at least 30,000 pounds.” The examiner
    allowed the claims over Smith after Oren’s amendment
    adding the “at least 30,000 pounds,” limitation.
    In this IPR proceeding, PropX argued that despite an
    explicit limitation in Smith to a maximum capacity of
    26,250 pounds per compartment, the Smith container
    “would be capable of holding 30,000 pounds of proppant”
    because it “would have had to have been designed using a
    safety factor of 1.15 with respect to maximum payloads.”
    .
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64      Page: 12    Filed: 07/23/2021
    12                               OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    Board Op. at 34 (quoting Wooley Decl. ¶ 181). The Board
    observed, however, that Smith does not mention a “safety
    factor” that would allow Smith’s capacity beyond the re-
    cited maximum of 26,250 pounds. 2
    Nevertheless, the Board reasoned that the 30,000
    pounds limitation was met by the combined references be-
    cause the Board agreed with PropX that a skilled artisan
    would have been motivated to modify Smith to carry more
    proppant than the disclosed 26,250 pounds. The Board rea-
    soned:
    [E]ven if Smith’s 20-foot container is only capable
    of carrying 52,500 pounds, or 26,250 pounds per
    compartment, the claimed limitation is satisfied
    through the proposed modification of Smith, in
    which Petitioner proposes to modify and reinforce
    Smith’s container to carry more proppant, possibly
    above 80,000 pounds, or about 40,000 pounds per
    compartment.
    Board Op. at 34–35. The Board concluded that: “Because
    Petitioner proposes to modify Smith’s container to be capa-
    ble of holding about 80,000 pounds of proppant, or 40,000
    pounds per compartment, the claimed limitation is satis-
    fied.” Board Op. at 35.
    As Oren points out, this modification theory was not
    advanced to the Board by PropX in relation to the 30,000
    pound limitation. J.A. 141–42. The modification theory
    was presented in the context of providing a motivation to
    add Hedrick’s bracing structure to Smith’s container to
    meet the limitation of a “plurality of structural supports
    positioned to provide structural support to the first plural-
    ity of sidewalls.” ’626 patent, col. 9, ll. 4–5; Board Op. 18–
    2  We understand the Board to have thus rejected the
    safety factor theory, a conclusion that is supported by sub-
    stantial evidence.
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64      Page: 13    Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                  13
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    19, 22–24; J.A. 128–33. PropX’s expert calculated that the
    full volume of the Smith container of proppant would weigh
    around 79,000 to 84,000 pounds, which is greater than the
    maximum payload of 52,500 pounds disclosed by Smith.
    J.A. 1722, 1726–27 (¶¶ 130–31, 140–42). PropX argued,
    therefore, that a skilled artisan would have been motivated
    to increase the payload capacity beyond Smith’s disclosed
    maximum to take advantage of the unused volume. J.A
    129. But those arguments were not specifically directed to
    the 30,000 pound limitation. J.A. 141–42. It was error by
    the Board to rely on this unpresented theory for finding the
    30,000 pound limitation obvious.
    The “Board must base its decision on arguments that
    were advanced by a party, and to which the opposing party
    was given a chance to respond.” In re Magnum Oil Tools
    Int’l, Ltd., 
    829 F.3d 1364
    , 1381 (Fed. Cir. 2016); Emera-
    Chem Holdings, LLC v. Volkswagen Grp. of Am., Inc., 
    859 F.3d 1341
    , 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (noting that the APA im-
    poses particular procedural requirements on the USPTO
    regarding timely notice and the opportunity to respond to
    matters of fact and law asserted). We have held that the
    Board erred when it relied on a prior art reference that was
    unasserted for meeting a particular limitation, even
    though the passage from the reference that the Board re-
    lied on for disclosing the limitation had been block quoted
    in the petition and institution decision, in a different con-
    text. EmeraChem, 859 F.3d at 1350. Petitioner’s identifi-
    cation of the reference as a motivation to combine was also
    insufficient for the Board on its own to rely on the reference
    for teaching a missing limitation. Id. at 1352. In M & K
    Holdings, Inc. v. Samsung Elecs. Co., Ltd., we held that the
    Board erred in finding a claim was anticipated when the
    petitioner asserted only obviousness because the Board’s
    decision deprived the patent owner of an opportunity to re-
    spond to a claim interpretation that underlay the anticipa-
    tion theory. 
    985 F.3d 1376
    , 1385 (Fed. Cir. 2021).
    .
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64     Page: 14   Filed: 07/23/2021
    14                              OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    Likewise, here, the Board erred by repurposing the the-
    ory of a motivation to modify Smith to increase its capacity
    as a basis for finding the 30,000 pound limitation met.
    PropX did not assert this theory of obviousness in its peti-
    tion. See Magnum Oil Tools, 829 F.3d at 1381. Nor was
    the theory raised by the Board’s institution decision (or at
    any time before the final written decision). See Emera-
    Chem, 859 F.3d at 1348, 1352. Therefore, relying on this
    theory in finding claims obvious was reversible error be-
    cause the petitioner bears the burden of proving obvious-
    ness and Oren had no notice or opportunity to respond. See
    Magnum Oil Tools, 829 F.3d at 1380–81.
    Moreover, we do not think the theory of modifying
    Smith achieves the result stated by the Board. The Board
    found a skilled artisan would have been motivated to mod-
    ify Smith to increase its load capacity and would have
    found it obvious to accomplish the increased capacity by in-
    cluding Hedrick’s support braces in Smith’s container.
    Board Op. 19, 22–24. But that theory and the evidence
    supporting it do not address any specific capacity that
    Smith’s container, modified with Hedrick’s support braces,
    would have had, whether it would have been greater than
    30,000 pounds, or the obviousness of any specific increased
    capacity to a skilled artisan. Although the container could
    volumetrically hold more than 30,000 pounds of proppant,
    as argued in support of the motivation to modify, that does
    not necessarily mean Smith modified by Hedrick’s support
    braces would, without more, be enough to structurally sup-
    port the weight of 30,000 pounds. These gaps only further
    illustrate that the Board’s unilateral modification of Smith
    to purportedly meet the 30,000 pound limitation was an
    “unpatentability theor[y] never presented by petitioner
    and not supported by record evidence.” Magnum Oil Tools,
    829 F.3d at 1381.
    Claims 1–6, 9, 15, 18–20 recite the 30,000 pound limi-
    tation, and we reverse the Board’s decision on these claims.
    Although Oren also challenges the Board’s reliance on the
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64        Page: 15   Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                   15
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    Claussen reference for meeting the support members limi-
    tation, because all of the claims at issue that recite the sup-
    port members limitation also recite the 30,000 pound
    limitation, and given our reversal on the 30,000 pound lim-
    itation, we need not address Claussen. 3
    III
    Objective Indicia of Nonobviousness
    The remaining claims at issue, which do not recite the
    30,000 pound limitation, are claims 7 and 10–14. For these
    claims, the Board failed to properly analyze the objective
    indicia evidence and, therefore, we remand.
    As discussed in Graham v. John Deere Inc., 
    383 U.S. 1
    (1960), objective indicia are an integral part of the obvious-
    ness analysis. 
    Id.
     at 18–19. Commercial success and in-
    dustry praise are recognized evidence of nonobviousness,
    for the way persons in the field of an invention perceive its
    advantages “may often be the most probative and cogent
    evidence in the record.” Polaris Indus., Inc. v. Arctic Cat,
    Inc., 
    882 F.3d 1056
    , 1071 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Such evidence
    may establish that a new device having relatively small dif-
    ference in a crowded field was not obvious to persons of
    skill in that field. The objective indicia are part of the to-
    tality of evidence concerning obviousness. Stratoflex, Inc.
    v. Aeroquip Corp., 
    713 F.2d 1530
    , 1538–39 (Fed. Cir. 1983).
    “For objective evidence of secondary considerations to
    be accorded substantial weight, its proponent must estab-
    lish a nexus between the evidence and the merits of the
    claimed invention.” ClassCo, Inc. v. Apple, Inc., 
    838 F.3d 3
       Oren does not raise any arguments related to
    Hedrick, Krenek, or Racy, and whether it would have been
    obvious to modify Smith according to those prior art refer-
    ences. Therefore, we do not address those portions of the
    Board’s decision.
    .
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64      Page: 16     Filed: 07/23/2021
    16                                OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    1214, 1220 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (internal quotation marks omit-
    ted). That is, “objective evidence of non-obviousness must
    be commensurate in scope with the claims which the evi-
    dence is offered to support.” Polaris Indus., 882 F.3d at
    1072. There can be “a presumption of nexus for objective
    considerations when the patentee shows that the asserted
    objective evidence is tied to a specific product” and that
    product “is the invention disclosed and claimed in the pa-
    tent.” WBIP, LLC v. Kohler Co., 
    829 F.3d 1317
    , 1329 (Fed.
    Cir. 2016) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Fox
    Factory, Inc. v. SRAM, LLC, 
    944 F.3d 1366
    , 1374 (Fed. Cir.
    2019) (“[W]hat we do require is that the patentee demon-
    strate that the product is essentially the claimed inven-
    tion.”). The presumption can apply “even when the product
    has additional, unclaimed features.” PPC Broadband, Inc.
    v. Corning Optical Commc’ns RF, LLC, 
    815 F.3d 734
    , 747
    (Fed. Cir. 2016); see also Fox Factory, 944 F.3d at 1374–75.
    Once established, this presumption of nexus is rebuttable
    with evidence showing the objective evidence is “due to ex-
    traneous factors other than the patented invention.”
    WBIP, 829 F.3d at 1329 (quoting Demaco, 
    851 F.2d 1387
    ,
    1393 (Fed. Cir. 1988)).
    Oren presented evidence that mapped its commercial-
    ized SandBox container to the claimed container of the ’626
    patent, J.A. 6954–7010, and we conclude the Board’s find-
    ing that Oren had established a presumption of nexus is
    supported by substantial evidence. Board Op. 30. PropX’s
    arguments that the application of this presumption was
    unwarranted are not persuasive. SandBox is a commer-
    cialized product that Oren showed is the claimed container
    of the ’626 patent. See Fox Factory, 944 F.3d at 1373–74
    (holding that the patentee is required to “demonstrate that
    the product is essentially the claimed invention”); WBIP,
    829 F.3d at 1331 (“[Patentee] was entitled to the presump-
    tion of nexus for its objective evidence of non-obviousness
    because it established that the specific products . . . are em-
    bodiments of the invention in the asserted claims.”).
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64      Page: 17    Filed: 07/23/2021
    OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.                                  17
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    The Board next found that PropX rebutted the pre-
    sumption of nexus with evidence showing that aspects of a
    broader SandBox system other than the claimed container
    product were responsible for the system’s success. Board
    Op. 30–33. The Board credited the fact that Oren “leases
    an equipment set that includes boxes, a conveyor (as part
    of [Oren’s] cradle . . .), rig mats, a fork lift, a light-duty
    loader, and chassis (plural, which are trailers).” Board Op.
    30 (citing J.A. 691); see J.A. 691–92 (citing evidence that
    Oren leases or rents “an equipment set,” “the entire set,”
    and “the entire equipment set”). In addition, the Board
    found persuasive the testimony of Oren’s own witnesses re-
    garding the importance of the non-container aspects to the
    success of the overall system. The Board concluded that
    Oren’s commercial success and industry praise were
    “largely” a result of these non-container features “rather
    than the features of the challenged claims.” Board Op. 33.
    However, in doing so, the Board did not contend with
    and weigh any of the evidence potentially showing that the
    SandBox container itself is also an important contributor
    to the commercial success and praise of the system. Board
    Op. 30–33. Oren presented significant revenue numbers
    generated from the lease and license of the SandBox prod-
    uct. J.A. 557 n.3; J.A. 7572 ¶ 6; J.A. 7574 (“Equip lease/li-
    cense/other”). A PropX real-party-in-interest, Liberty
    Oilfield Services, LLC, (“Liberty”) entered into a 5-year
    contract with Oren’s operating subsidiary, SandBox Logis-
    tics, for the “patented sand delivery process and container-
    ization equipment.”       J.A. 557; J.A. 7575–76.       The
    containerized sand solution, specifically, was noted to be
    effective. J.A. 560; J.A. 7590. And a market analyst de-
    clared that the “sand in a big box” was a “disruptive tech-
    nology” for the fracking industry. J.A. 561–62; J.A. 6223–
    24.
    The Board should have addressed this evidence. Alt-
    hough the evidence the Board did consider showed that
    other features of Oren’s system are important to the
    .
    Case: 19-1778    Document: 64     Page: 18   Filed: 07/23/2021
    18                              OREN TECHNOLOGIES, LLC v.
    PROPPANT EXPRESS INVESTMENTS
    system’s success, and Oren has not disputed that finding,
    “[i]t is not necessary . . . that the patented invention be
    solely responsible for the commercial success, in order for
    this factor to be given weight appropriate to the evidence,
    along with other pertinent factors.” Continental Can Co. v.
    Monsanto Co., 
    948 F.2d 1264
    , 1273 (Fed. Cir. 1991). Thus,
    failure to address the Sandbox container-specific evidence
    was legal error by the Board. On remand, the Board must
    consider this evidence to properly decide the issue of obvi-
    ousness.
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse on claims 1–6, 9, 15, 18–20 the Board’s find-
    ing of obviousness because the Board impermissibly relied
    on a theory not raised by petitioner and which Oren had no
    notice of and opportunity for responding to, and remand on
    claims 7 and 10–14 for further analysis of the objective in-
    dicia consistent with this opinion.
    REVERSED-IN-PART, VACATED-IN-PART, AND
    REMANDED
    COSTS
    The parties shall bear their own costs.