MAGILL, Circuit Judge.
Metro Program Network, Inc., and Gerald Fitzgerald, president of Metro, appeal from the district court’s
order finding them liable for copyright infringement and for the pendant breach of contract state law claim. Appellants claim that the award for breach of contract damages was excessive, and make the somewhat novel argument that the award of both breach of contract and copyright infringement damages constituted an impermissible award of double damages under 17 U.S.C. § 504.
We affirm.
I.
Metro operates commercial television station KOCR-TV in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Fitzgerald is the president, general manager, secretary, registered agent and sole shareholder of Metro. During January 1988, Fitzgerald signed eight interim license agreements with Paramount to broadcast episodes of “Happy Days,” “Mork and Mindy,” “Taxi,” and packages of motion pictures or movies of the week entitled “Preview II,” “Preview III,” “Portfolio IX,” “Portfolio X,” and “Portfolio Special Edition II.” Paramount accepted Metro’s offers to license these products by letters
dated January 28 and March 1. Under the interim agreements, Metro was to pay Paramount 10% of the license fees on January 14, and the remainder in thirty-six equal monthly installments. Each of the agreements contained the following language: “The license arrangement is subject to those additional provisions as are contained in Paramount’s Standard Series Contract and Paramount’s Standard Terms and Conditions, copies of which are available on request, and will be fully set forth in a formal written contract.” The district court found that the Standard Terms and Conditions were properly considered part of the contracts between Paramount and
Metro even though appellants had not seen or read them and did not know what they contained when appellants signed the contracts.
See Joseph L. Wilmotte & Co. v. Rosenman Bros.,
258 N.W.2d 317, 323 (Iowa 1977) (“a party is usually bound by the documents he signs even though ... [he] has not expressly accepted all of the contract provisions or is even aware of them”).
Fitzgerald tendered a check to Paramount dated January 14 in the amount of $26,000.
This check was dishonored on March 19 because Metro’s account was closed. No other payment was made by Metro under the contracts. Prior to March 19, Paramount had delivered the episodes of “Happy Days,” “Mork and Mindy,” and “Taxi” to Metro and Metro began to broadcast them. In addition, Paramount delivered two movies from the “Preview III” package and one movie from the “Portfolio X” package. Metro broadcasted these movies.
On May 6, having not received any payments under any of the contracts, Paramount sent Metro a letter terminating the. contracts pursuant to the bankruptcy and default provision of the Standard Terms and Conditions
and reserving their rights to collect the sums due under the contracts. On May 20, Paramount sent a second letter, saying that it had been informed that Metro was broadcasting Paramount products “in direct contravention of the Notice of Termination of KOCR’s telecast rights dated May 6, 1988” and that the unauthorized broadcast of those products constituted a willful infringement of Paramount’s copyrights. Paramount demanded that Metro immediately cease any further broadcasts of Paramount products and return any and all products Metro might have in its possession.
Subsequently, Metro broadcast “Mork and Mindy” eighteen times, “Happy Days” fifteen times, and “Taxi” fourteen times. Fitzgerald testified that he believed he could fulfill the station’s published schedule before he stopped broadcasting Paramount’s shows, even though the license agreements had been terminated.
Paramount filed suit, alleging breach of contract and copyright infringement. The case was tried without a jury. The district court found that Metro and Fitzgerald were liable to Paramount for breach of contract in the amount of $217,760, the full contract price. It also found that Metro and Fitzgerald were liable for copyright infringement in the amount of $23,500. On appeal, appellants make two argüments. First, they argue that the breach of contract damages are excessive. Second, they argue that the award of both breach of contract damages and copyright infringement damages is an impermissible award of double damages to Paramount. We affirm the district court.
II.
The district court had jurisdiction over the copyright infringement claim pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and over the state law breach of contract claim pursuant to principles of pendant jurisdiction. We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We review the district court’s findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard,
Brown v. Wallace,
957 F.2d 564, 566 (8th Cir.1992), and conclusions of law de novo.
Id.; Salve Regina College v.
Russell,
— U.S. —, 111 S.Ct. 1217, 1221, 113 L.Ed.2d 190 (1991) (state law).
A. Breach of Contract Damages
Appellants admit that they breached the contracts with Paramount. They argue, however, that the district court erred in finding that they are liable for the full value of all the contracts. They contend that, because Paramount did not deliver all of the movies under the five movie contracts, they cannot be liable for the full amount.
Under Iowa law, when a contract is breached, the nonbreaching party is entitled to recover the contract price less the amount it would have cost the nonbreaching party to perform.
Ritam Corp. v. Applied Concepts, Inc.,
387 N.W.2d 619, 621 (Iowa App.1986). In this case, the cost of performance has not been shown by either party. There are, however, no apparent costs, other than overhead,
that Paramount would have incurred if the contract had been performed. The nonbreaching party’s overhead costs are counted as a part of the cost of performance only if the overhead costs would have increased due to performance of the contract.
Id.
The breaching party bears the burden of proving the nonbreaching party’s overhead costs would have increased had the contract been performed.
Id.
Appellants have not shown that those costs would have increased.
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MAGILL, Circuit Judge.
Metro Program Network, Inc., and Gerald Fitzgerald, president of Metro, appeal from the district court’s
order finding them liable for copyright infringement and for the pendant breach of contract state law claim. Appellants claim that the award for breach of contract damages was excessive, and make the somewhat novel argument that the award of both breach of contract and copyright infringement damages constituted an impermissible award of double damages under 17 U.S.C. § 504.
We affirm.
I.
Metro operates commercial television station KOCR-TV in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Fitzgerald is the president, general manager, secretary, registered agent and sole shareholder of Metro. During January 1988, Fitzgerald signed eight interim license agreements with Paramount to broadcast episodes of “Happy Days,” “Mork and Mindy,” “Taxi,” and packages of motion pictures or movies of the week entitled “Preview II,” “Preview III,” “Portfolio IX,” “Portfolio X,” and “Portfolio Special Edition II.” Paramount accepted Metro’s offers to license these products by letters
dated January 28 and March 1. Under the interim agreements, Metro was to pay Paramount 10% of the license fees on January 14, and the remainder in thirty-six equal monthly installments. Each of the agreements contained the following language: “The license arrangement is subject to those additional provisions as are contained in Paramount’s Standard Series Contract and Paramount’s Standard Terms and Conditions, copies of which are available on request, and will be fully set forth in a formal written contract.” The district court found that the Standard Terms and Conditions were properly considered part of the contracts between Paramount and
Metro even though appellants had not seen or read them and did not know what they contained when appellants signed the contracts.
See Joseph L. Wilmotte & Co. v. Rosenman Bros.,
258 N.W.2d 317, 323 (Iowa 1977) (“a party is usually bound by the documents he signs even though ... [he] has not expressly accepted all of the contract provisions or is even aware of them”).
Fitzgerald tendered a check to Paramount dated January 14 in the amount of $26,000.
This check was dishonored on March 19 because Metro’s account was closed. No other payment was made by Metro under the contracts. Prior to March 19, Paramount had delivered the episodes of “Happy Days,” “Mork and Mindy,” and “Taxi” to Metro and Metro began to broadcast them. In addition, Paramount delivered two movies from the “Preview III” package and one movie from the “Portfolio X” package. Metro broadcasted these movies.
On May 6, having not received any payments under any of the contracts, Paramount sent Metro a letter terminating the. contracts pursuant to the bankruptcy and default provision of the Standard Terms and Conditions
and reserving their rights to collect the sums due under the contracts. On May 20, Paramount sent a second letter, saying that it had been informed that Metro was broadcasting Paramount products “in direct contravention of the Notice of Termination of KOCR’s telecast rights dated May 6, 1988” and that the unauthorized broadcast of those products constituted a willful infringement of Paramount’s copyrights. Paramount demanded that Metro immediately cease any further broadcasts of Paramount products and return any and all products Metro might have in its possession.
Subsequently, Metro broadcast “Mork and Mindy” eighteen times, “Happy Days” fifteen times, and “Taxi” fourteen times. Fitzgerald testified that he believed he could fulfill the station’s published schedule before he stopped broadcasting Paramount’s shows, even though the license agreements had been terminated.
Paramount filed suit, alleging breach of contract and copyright infringement. The case was tried without a jury. The district court found that Metro and Fitzgerald were liable to Paramount for breach of contract in the amount of $217,760, the full contract price. It also found that Metro and Fitzgerald were liable for copyright infringement in the amount of $23,500. On appeal, appellants make two argüments. First, they argue that the breach of contract damages are excessive. Second, they argue that the award of both breach of contract damages and copyright infringement damages is an impermissible award of double damages to Paramount. We affirm the district court.
II.
The district court had jurisdiction over the copyright infringement claim pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and over the state law breach of contract claim pursuant to principles of pendant jurisdiction. We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We review the district court’s findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard,
Brown v. Wallace,
957 F.2d 564, 566 (8th Cir.1992), and conclusions of law de novo.
Id.; Salve Regina College v.
Russell,
— U.S. —, 111 S.Ct. 1217, 1221, 113 L.Ed.2d 190 (1991) (state law).
A. Breach of Contract Damages
Appellants admit that they breached the contracts with Paramount. They argue, however, that the district court erred in finding that they are liable for the full value of all the contracts. They contend that, because Paramount did not deliver all of the movies under the five movie contracts, they cannot be liable for the full amount.
Under Iowa law, when a contract is breached, the nonbreaching party is entitled to recover the contract price less the amount it would have cost the nonbreaching party to perform.
Ritam Corp. v. Applied Concepts, Inc.,
387 N.W.2d 619, 621 (Iowa App.1986). In this case, the cost of performance has not been shown by either party. There are, however, no apparent costs, other than overhead,
that Paramount would have incurred if the contract had been performed. The nonbreaching party’s overhead costs are counted as a part of the cost of performance only if the overhead costs would have increased due to performance of the contract.
Id.
The breaching party bears the burden of proving the nonbreaching party’s overhead costs would have increased had the contract been performed.
Id.
Appellants have not shown that those costs would have increased. Therefore, we cannot say that the district court’s finding that the appellants are liable for the full contract price was clearly erroneous.
Appellants’ argument appears to claim that the acceleration clause, in conjunction with the termination of the contracts, is essentially a liquidated damages clause that, under the circumstances of this case, is really a penalty. Under Iowa law, “[a] party who contends that a liquidation clause is in reality a penalty has the burden to plead that fact and prove the actual damages in the trial court.”
Gordon v. Pfab,
246 N.W.2d 283, 288 (Iowa 1976). While this may have been a viable argument at trial, especially in reference to the contracts where there was no performance by either party, appellants did not present this issue to the trial court. We are not required to address arguments that were not presented below.
Hall v. Gus Constr. Co.,
842 F.2d 1010, 1016 (8th Cir.1988). Appellants have waived this issue.
B. Double Damages
Appellants also claim that the district court erred in granting appellees both breach of contract damages and copyright infringement damages because this constitutes an impermissible award of double damages under 17 U.S.C. § 504 (1988).
Under the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. § 101
et seq.,
a copyright owner can only recover once for each infringement. 17 U.S.C. § 504.
The copyright owner su
ing an infringer is entitled to
either
actual damages under § 504(b)
or
statutory damages under § 504(c).
Id.
In this case, Paramount opted for statutory damages for the infringement. The district court found that appellants had broadcast forty-seven episodes of the three sitcoms owned by Paramount after May 20. The court awarded them $500 per infringement, total-ling $23,500 in statutory copyright infringement damages. Appellants claim that the breach of contract damages are really an award of actual damages under § 504(b) because the claimed infringements occurred during the time the licenses would have been in effect if they had not been terminated and, therefore, appellees are not entitled to both awards.
We must therefore look to see if the district court’s award of breach of contract damages is, substantively, an award of actual damages for copyright infringement. We find that the breach of contract damages award is not an award of actual damages for copyright infringement under § 504(b).
The breach of contract claim asserted by Paramount relates solely to events that occurred before May 6. The district court recognized this, and relied strictly on contract law and on the events that took place before May 6 in analyzing this claim. Because appellants did not pay Paramount any of the money owed under the license agreements, they were in default, or breach, of the contracts. Under the bankruptcy and default clause in the Standard Terms and Conditions, this occurred within ten days of the first missed payment, due January 14. Thus, at the time Paramount terminated the contracts on May 6, appellants had clearly breached the contracts and Paramount was entitled to damages for that breach. Appellants were liable for these damages even if they had not broadcast any Paramount products after the contracts were terminated.
In contrast, the copyright infringement claim relates to events that occurred after May 6. Once Paramount exercised its contractual right to terminate the licenses on May 6, appellants no longer had any right to broadcast Paramount products. The district court recognized this temporal distinction between Paramount’s two claims by relying on facts and events occurring after May 20
to make its determination on the copyright infringement claim.
Because the damage awards for breach of contract and copyright infringement were for completely separate injuries, the district court correctly awarded both breach of contract damages and copyright infringement damages to appellees.
See Joseph J. Legat Architects, P.C. v. United States Dev. Corp.,
No. 84-C-8803, 1991 WL 38714, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3358 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 20, 1991) (damages for copyright infringement not synonymous with damages for breach of contract; claims seek to redress two distinctly different injuries where breach of contract claim seeks to enforce rights under contract to receive monies due for preparation and use of plans while copyright claim seeks to recover for use of plans in way that exceeded rights under the contract);
see also Edwin K. Williams & Co. v. Edwin K. Williams, Etc.,
542 F.2d 1053, 1055 (9th Cir.1976) (tacitly approving district court award of separate damages for breach of contract and copyright infringement where awards based on different transactional facts).
III.
We hold that the district court did not err in awarding the full price of each contract as damages for appellants’ breach of contract in this case. We also hold that the district court did not erroneously award double damages to appellees. We affirm.