In this copyright case, plaintiff Latin American Music Company (“LAMCO”) appeals from orders awarding attorneys’ fees incurred below in favor of prevailing defendant American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (“ASCAP”). We readily affirm.
I. BACKGROUND 1
We begin by briefly setting the stage. After successfully defending on appeal a jury verdict finding that it had not infringed, ASCAP moved for attorneys’ fees and costs in the district court. It requested slightly more than $82,000, incurred in pretrial and trial proceedings between 2005 and 2008. LAMCO opposed the motion. The district court carefully considered ASCAP’s request and agreed with the bulk of it. The court awarded ASCAP approximately $55,000 in attorneys’ fees and taxed $2,000 in costs.
LAMCO moved for reconsideration under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). The court denied LAMCO’s motion, but took the opportunity to modify the fee award. The court explained that, in its initial order, it had reduced the fees sought for one attorney by ten percent based on “the high percentage of tasks performed by this partner as compared with those performed by lower-priced associates.” On further reflection, however, the court decided against “second-guessing a firm’s allocation of tasks where the prevailing party was satisfied with counsel’s performance.” Accordingly, the court struck that particular reduction and increased the total award, including costs, to just under $62,000.
LAMCO appealed the fee award and the denial of reconsideration.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Timely Registration and Attorneys’ Fees
LAMCO’s lead argument on appeal is that attorneys’ fees are barred because *90 the copyright claim to the disputed song, “Caballo Viejo,” was not timely registered. 2 See 17 U.S.C. § 412 (2006). We disagree for two reasons: one of fact and the other of law. As a matter of fact, the copyright was timely registered. As a matter of law, the statute does not apply to a defendant who is successful in defending claims that it infringed.
Section 412 bars recovery of statutory damages under section 504 and attorneys’ fees under section 505 by copyright owners who failed to register the work before the alleged infringement began.
Id.
§ 412(2) (prohibiting certain remedies for “any infringement of copyright commenced after first publication of the work and before the effective date of its registration, unless such registration is made within three months after the first publication of the work”);
see also Johnson v. Gordon,
By its plain language, section 412 does not apply in this case. According to LAM-CO’s complaint, the alleged infringement began in 1994. “Caballo Viejo,” however, was registered with the Copyright Office in 1983, more than a decade earlier.
Besides, there is nothing in the statute that prohibits fee awards in cases, like this one, of
non
infringement. The reason is obvious: only copyright owners may register their copyright claims, the conduct incentivized by section 412. A defendant accused of infringing someone else’s copyright could not possibly comply with the statute’s registration criterion. Section 412 thus does not, logically, apply to alleged infringers.
See O’Well Novelty Co. v. Offenbacher, Inc., 225
F.3d 655,
B. Prevailing Party Status and Reasonableness
LAMCO also challenges ASCAP’s status as a prevailing party and the reasonableness of the fee award. Both challenges fail.
*91
Section 505 permits courts, in their discretion, to award reasonable attorneys’ fees to the prevailing party. 17 U.S.C. § 505 (2006);
Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc.,
Our review of a fee award to a prevailing party is “extremely deferential.”
Garcia-Goyco,
There is no question that ASCAP is a prevailing party. It initially obtained summary judgment on LAMCO’s infringement claims. We affirmed that ruling in significant part, but remanded because of disputed facts concerning one song. On remand ASCAP obtained a favorable jury verdict at trial and successfully defended that verdict in a later appeal. ASCAP then sought attorneys’ fees in the district court and submitted detailed billing records establishing the reasonableness of its request. Based on its discretion and the weakness of LAMCO’s claims, the court awarded ASCAP a majority of those fees. We have carefully reviewed ASCAP’s documentation and the court’s rescript, and are satisfied that all aspects of the fee award fall comfortably within the court’s discretion.
C. Motion for Reconsideration
As its final lament, LAMCO argues that its motion for reconsideration should have been granted. The hurdle is a high one,
see Palmer v. Champion Mortg.,
Affirmed. Costs to appellee.
Notes
. We assume familiarity with the history of this case, and direct the interested reader to
Latin Am. Music Co. v. Am. Soc'y of Composers, Authors and Publishers,
. This argument was not sufficiently articulated in the district court. As presented there, the argument consisted of only two sentences, no case citations, and precious little analysis. Arguments of this stock normally are considered waived on appeal.
In re Olympic Mills Corp.,
. LAMCO's reliance on
M & D Int’l Corp. v. Chan,
. LAMCO claims in passing that the district court’s decision
sua sponte
to increase the fee award was error. The argument is waived.
United States v. Zannino,
