Douglas M. Bruce appeals from a district court judgment which directed the tabloid Weekly World News (“World News”) to pay him $20,142.45 in damages and nondu-plicative profits due to its acknowledged copyright infringement. Bruce insists that he is entitled to additional damages amounting ' to between $359,000 and $406,000. With but one exception, the district court judgment is affirmed.
I
BACKGROUND
In March 1992, Bruce, a freelance photographer, photographed then-presidential-candidate William S. Clinton as he was shaking hands with an unidentified Secret Service agent. Later, Bruce consigned the photograph to The Picture Group, a photo stock agency. Thereafter, a World News photo editor contacted The Picture Group to obtain a photograph of Clinton while shaking hands. World News intended to alter any such photograph by superimposing, over the image of the person shaking Clinton’s hand, its own image of the “Space Mien.” The “Space Mien” is a fictional extra-terrestrial creature which World News had been featuring prominently in its political campaign coverage ever since 1990. World News then proceeded to manipulate the Clinton photograph without first obtaining authorization from Bruce. The Picture Group and World News were unable to reach agreement on an appropriate licensing fee.
On the cover of its August 11, 1992 issue, World News published the re *27 touched photograph, together with the banner “Alien Backs Clinton!” The Picture Group billed World News for $500, which it shared equally with Bruce pursuant to contract. Thereafter, on each occasion that the retouched photograph appeared in World News, The Picture Group sent World News a bill. Ultimately, Bruce realized a total of $1,775 in licensing fees. The Picture Group ceased its business operations in 1993.
Thereafter, in 1994, Bruce came upon a World News T-shirt advertisement utilizing the August 11, 1992 cover containing his retouched photograph. In due course, Bruce’s counsel transmitted a cease-and-desist letter to World News, claiming copyright infringement. World News responded with an offer to pay $500 for a general release of the Bruce copyright. The same retouched photograph later appeared on a different T-shirt featuring World News’ June 7, 1994 cover, containing photographs of twelve United States Senators, under the banner “12 U.S. Senators Are Space Aliens!” These T-shirt advertisements subsequently were repeated 188 times in World News, as well as numerous times on the World News Internet site. During this period, World News ordered 5,710 (and sold 1,817) of the “Alien Backs Clinton” T-shirts and ordered 4,767 (and sold 2,207) of the “Senators Are Aliens” T-shirts.
In an article entitled “Alien Endorses Dole,” appearing in the May 1996 issue, the World News cover included (1) another photograph of Clinton (not taken by Bruce) holding a copy of the August 11, 1992 issue of World News, together ivith Bruce’s retouched photograph; as well as (2) the cover of the August 11, 1992 issue, among a collage of earlier World News covers. In the May 2000 issue, the retouched photograph appeared both as a small inset on the cover, which prominently featured a photograph of George Bush shaking hands with the Space Alien, and adjacent to the related news story inside. In addition, beginning in July 1995, the August 11, 1992 World News cover, containing Bruce’s retouched photograph, appeared 48 times as part of a subscription advertisement placed inside the tabloid.
In June 1998, Bruce commenced the present action against World News for copyright infringement.
See
17 U.S.C. § 101
et seq.
(1996 & Supp. 2002). Following a bench trial, during which World News acknowledged its infringements, the district court awarded Bruce $20,142.45 in damages, plus interest.
Bruce v. Weekly World News, Inc.,
Actual Damages
Editorial use of retouched photo on 5/28/96 $ 300
Additional editorial uses on 5/28/96 and 5/9/00 $ 0
Uses on two promotional T-shirts $ 800
Uses in T-shirt ads $ 0
Uses in subscription ads $ 0
Uses on Internet site_$ 1,200
Subtotal $ 2,300
Multiplier for unauthorized use_x 5
Subtotal of actual damages $ 11,500.00
Nonduplicative Profits
Sales of T-shirts $ 8,642.45
Advertising revenues $ 0
New_stend/subseription. sales__$_.0_
Subtotal of nonduplicative profits $ 8,642.45
Total damages award $ 20,142.45
On appeal, Bruce challenges the amount of the damages award, contending that he is entitled to at least an additional $359,000.
II
DISCUSSION
We review
de novo
the legal determination as to the appropriate standard
*28
for calculating damages awarded as a consequence of copyright infringements, but will upset the underlying factual findings only upon a showing of clear error.
See Tamko Roofing Prods., Inc. v. Ideal Roofing Co.,
Actual Damages
A. Applicable Legal Standard
At the outset, Bruce asserts that it was reversible error for the district court to announce that the correct legal standard for calculating actual damages is “the
profits lost ...
resulting] ... [from] the infringement,”
Bruce,
B. Apportionment of Actual Damages
Next, Bruce contends that the district court erred by awarding only one. half of the $2,200 licensing fees, see supra Section I (chart), in order to reflect Bruce’s 1992 contractual agreement to share all fees equally with The Picture Group, the photo stock agency to which Bruce consigned the photograph. Since The Picture Group went out of business in 1993, Bruce posits that he was entitled to 100% of the fees thereafter, and, accordingly, that World News was unjustly enriched by virtue of the district court’s fifty-percent reduction in the $2,200 licensing fees.
Although considerable deference normally must be accorded the findings of fact made by the district court, as well as its balancing of the relevant equitable factors,
see Invest Almaz v. Temple-Inland Forest Prods.,
Bruce freely contracted away his right to the fifty-percent share, and thus would be “made whole” upon receipt of the fifty-percent discount. The unjust enrichment doctrine, however, requires that the fact-finder also consider whether World News, if permitted to retain The Picture Group’s share of the licensing fee, would realize an unfair windfall such that justice and equity mandate be disgorged.
See id.
at 64. As The Picture Group is presently defunct, its $1,100 share would either be retained by World News or remitted to Bruce. As World News is the copyright infringer, Bruce unquestionably is the more deserving recipient. Accordingly, we vacate the district court judgment insofar as it discounted the Bruce share of the licensing fee by fifty percent, and remand with directions to enter judgment for an additional $5,500 in damages in favor of Bruce
(viz.,
$1,100 times multiplier of 5).
See Nowaczyk v. Warden, N.H. State Prison,
C. The Limitation of the Licensing Fees to the Original Unauthorized Use by World News
Bruce next contends that the district court incorrectly ruled that he was entitled to licensing fees solely for World News’ first unauthorized editorial uses of his photograph in August 1992, but not for each ensuing unauthorized use, such as its reprinting of prior World News covers and its uses in T-shirt and subscription advertisements. Bruce conjectures instead that he may have been able to negotiate a more lucrative
per-use
licensing contract with World News.
See Iowa State Univ. Res. Found., Inc. v. Am. Broad. Cos.,
The present contention fails for several reasons. First, under the copyright statute Bruce may recover
actual
damages only.
See Data Gen. Corp.,
First and foremost, in the present case, proof of industry practice inarguably is crucial to the estimation of actual damages. 3 The record on appeal is replete *30 with expert testimony that, given the prevailing industry practice, there was no realistic prospect whatsoever that Bruce could negotiate a per-use licensing fee with World News. Rather, the record discloses ample evidence that such a practice is rarely, if ever, indulged.
All Bruce managed to muster in reply was the testimony of his own expert, Sheri Blaney, which included the eoneluso-ry and unsupported assertion that the licensing fee award “could be whatever we feel is fair.” On the other hand, Darryl Jacobson, the expert witness presented by World News, repeatedly and consistently testified that, under the prevailing industry practice, Bruce almost surely would not have been able to negotiate with World News for anything other than a single, lump-sum, up-front licensing fee, as distinguished from a per-use fee. As but one glaring example of the weaknesses in the Bruce proffer, Ms. Blaney was forced to concede that, in her experience, Bruce could not have recovered a separate fee each time the retouched photograph appeared in a T-shirt advertisement. Accordingly, the district court,
qua
factfinder, was entitled to make the crucial credibility determination as between the competing expert witnesses.
See, e.g., Den Norske Bank AS v. First Nat'l Bank of Boston,
D. Fees for T-Shirts Produced for World News But Not Sold
Further, Bruce argues that, in addition to the $800 in licensing fees awarded to him for World News’ use of his retouched photograph on the two T-shirts, and the $8,642 in World News’ revenues realized from these T-shirt sales, he and his expert, Ms. Blaney, testified that Bruce likely would have been able to negotiate for a royalty of somewhere between $1 and $8 on each T-shirt 'produced for World News, rather than merely those which World News actually sold. He contends that some T-shirts were produced, but never sold; for example, that World News allegedly gave some T-shirts away to customers purely for promotional purposes.
The present contention fails due to the fact that (i) Bruce provided no conclusive evidence that there has ever been any such continuing-royalty contract in the industry, and (ii) Ms. Blaney, his own expert witness, conceded that, in twenty-five years of experience, she had yet to encounter such a contractual arrangement. Similarly, the expert witness presented by World News testified that there was no prevailing industry practice for recovering per-use royalties for promotional items, such as the two T-shirts here involved, which have a relatively short lifespan and little enduring commercial viability. Accordingly, the district court decision declining the Bruce request for royalties did not constitute clear error.
See Den Norske Bank AS,
Nonduplicative Damages
A. World News’ Advertising Profits and Sales Revenues
Bruce next contends that the district court erred in refusing to award him
*31
a share of the net profits which World News realized from its advertising revenues and newstand or subscription sales attributable to its uses of the retouched photograph. Bruce asserts that due to World News’ failure to produce evidence of its gross revenues during discovery, he was forced to estimate those revenues, based on his own ad hoc formula.
See Blackman v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
In order to recover profits, Bruce need only have established World News’ gross revenues, at which point the burden would have shifted to World News to establish that all or part of the gross revenues were attributable to factors other than the copyrighted work.
See
17 U.S.C. § 504(b);
Data Gen. Corp.,
Bruce made no earnest attempt during discovery to obtain all the available evidence relating to World News’ gross .revenues. Instead, he merely .^requested that World News produce documents_xe-lating to the profits “derived in any way or realized from the use of Plaintiffs Photograph.” Although the_request_was arguably ambiguous, World News unambiguously responded that it had earned
no revenues
from its use of the Bruce photograph, except from the T-shirt sales. Bruce neither objected to the World News response to his interrogatories, nor moved to compel discovery of all World News documents relating to gross revenues realized during the infringement period. Thus, rather than diligently pursuing the most dependable and nonspecu-lative evidence as to World News’ gross revenues, Bruce deliberately elected to concoct a more lucrative calculation, based upon questionable estimates and samplings,
5
rather than internal documents in the possession of World News.
See, e.g., Worster v. U.S. Postal Serv.,
B. Apportionment of Profits
Finally, Bruce maintains that the district court erred in apportioning (on a 50-50 basis) between himself and World News, the profits generated. from, the'T-shirt sales, on the ground. that Bruce’s original photograph .was responsible, at most, for one..half.the,effectiyeness_Qf the retouched photograph. He contends that the repetitive use of-the-xetoudifiil-phofograph by World News turned it into a sort of icon, which resulte_d in a valuation which exceeded the sum of its two components,
see Bus. Trends Analysts Inc. v. Freedonia Group.
Inc.,
We review the issue of apportionment under the copyright statute for abuse of discretion only.
See Data Gen. Corp.,
The judgment is hereby vacated in part, and the case remanded to the district court, with directions to modify the final order and judgment so as to increase appellant’s damages award by $5,500, for a total award of $25,64.2.4.5. In all other respects, the district court judgment is affirmed. Each party shall bear its own costs. SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The copyright statute itself delimits the recoverable damages in the instant case to those sustained since June 1, 1995. See 17 U.S.C. § 507(b).
.
For instance, the district court stated: “I conclude that an inflation adjusted
fee
of $300 ... is a fair award ... [and] that a
fee
of $500 for the Clinton use and $300 for the Senators use is appropriate.”
Bruce,
.
See, e.g., de Graffenried v. United States,
. Appellant tries to rely on
Iowa State
which is wholly inapposite. That decision involved a different question under the Copyright Act of 1909: even where plaintiff had failed to prove actual damages, the court nonetheless was required by statute to award "in lieu” minimum damages for
each
infringement. Thus, unlike the instant case, there the court needed to determine how many discrete infringements were committed by the defendants.
See Iowa State Univ. Res. Found.,
. Nor did Bruce adduce expert evidence that his calculus was reasonable or fairly representative. Instead, for example, in estimating the World News newsstand sales, Bruce simply assumed that World News took in the full cover charge on each sale, even though it is obvious that others in the distribution chain would have received a share.
. Not surprisingly, Bruce submitted no reply brief on appeal in response to the waiver argument made by World News.
