OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a final judgment of the district court awarding attorneys’ fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982). The fee award in question follows a judicial determination, in litigation initiated by plaintiffs-appellants (“appellants”), who in 1982 were the seven Republican members of Congress from New Jersey and seven citizens who resided in the districts represented by those members, that the congressional reapportionment plan adopted in 1982 by the New Jersey legislature was unconstitutional. The district court awarded appellants attorneys’ fees in the amount of $253,461, to be assessed against defendants-intervenorsappellees (“appellees”), who are New Jersey state legislators.
Since we will affirm the holdings of the district court on the other issues appealed,
I. Facts and History
As a result of the 1980 decennial census, the New Jersey General Assembly was required to reduce, from 15 to 14, and thereby to reapportion, that state’s federal congressional districts. Eventually, the legislature enacted Public Law 1982 c. 1 (the “Feldman Plan”), a reapportionment scheme that was signed into law by the Governor of New Jersey on January 19, 1982. Thereafter, individuals including the incumbent Republican members of Congress from New Jersey filed suit in federal court. These plaintiffs sought a declaration that the Feldman Plan violated article 1, section 2 of the United States Constitu
After conducting a hearing, a three-judge district court, by a two-to-one vote, issued an opinion and order on March 3, 1982 declaring the Feldman Plan unconstitutional. Daggett v. Kimmelman,
When the New Jersey General Assembly subsequently failed to enact a constitutional congressional redistricting plan by February 3, 1984, the three-judge district court held a hearing on the question of further relief, and it unanimously adopted the redistricting plan submitted by appellants, which achieved the lowest population deviation and most compact congressional districts. Daggett v. Kimmelman,
Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982), appellants on November 15, 1984, filed an application for an attorneys’ fee award of nearly $600,000. The district court received extensive affidavits from all parties and heard oral argument on January 15, 1985 and July 30, 1985. The district court denied as moot the state defendants’ motion to dismiss and considered the request for fees by appellants, the disclaimer of liability by appellees, and their challenge to the amount of fees requested. In determining the lodestar, the district court first reduced the number of hours billed by 10%. It then reduced the resulting, modified lodestar by an additional 20%. The district court also reduced Mr. Bernard Hellring’s hourly rate from $300 to $250. While the original request was for $577,787.01, the final fee awarded by the district court was thus $253,461 (both figures include costs).
We have carefully evaluated appellees’ vigorous challenge to the appropriateness of the fee award. We find no fundamental flaws in the district court’s fee award for counsel hours in the pre-remedy phase of this litigation.
Of the 1,886.40 hours counsel spent throughout this litigation, 1,004.62 were in the pre-remedy phase. Appellants were successful in an intensely contested case that explored, and thus helped to map, some of the more uncertain boundaries of our constitutional law. On the merits of this litigation, the district court panel divided two judges to one, and the Supreme Court split five justices to four. The district court found that the appellants’ total number of counsel hours, as billed, for the pre-remedy phase was justified. However, it reduced the 1,886.40 hourly total by 10 percent per attorney. It thus determined that 1,697.76 attorney hours were “reasonably expended” and therefore compensable under § 1988. The district court’s reason for so lowering the hourly component of the lodestar that appellants sought was that a portion of the work performed was duplicative.
In a series of opinions we have explicitly stated our standards for approving counsel fees for prevailing parties. See, e.g., In re Fine Paper Antitrust Litig.,
Although the question is a close one, we find that the district court provided adequate justification for the ten percent reduction in hours. It identified duplication in hours billed by the four attorneys for their work at four particular points in the pre-remedy phase: the drafting of the memorandum in opposition to the intervenors’ first stay application to Justice Brennan, the 1982 argument before the three-judge panel, the 1983 argument before the Supreme Court, and the time spent preparing for that argument. See Daggett,
the attorneys did not in every instance need to spend all of the hours each of them did on legal research, [that] three and four attorneys were not necessary in court, [that] not all of the time spent preparing for oral argument by all four attorneys was necessary, and [that] not every attorney should be compensated for time spent in conference.
Id.
In affirming the ten percent pro rata reduction in the hours requested, we conclude that the district court here made a
III. Pre-Remedy Phase Rates
A. Top-Heavy Staffing
Throughout this case, appellants employed only the most experienced lawyers, partners in the Newark law firm of Hellring, Lindeman, Goldstein, Siegal & Greenberg. The intervenors from New Jersey’s 202d General Assembly, who are the appellees/cross-appellants in this case, challenge appellants’ exclusive use of four partners (Messrs. Hellring, Goldstein, Ray-mar and Dreyfuss). Appellees assert that many matters in this litigation could have been handled by junior associates or paralegals, and that “reasonable” rates under § 1988 must therefore be lower than those billed. They assert that, according to the reasoning in Ursic v. Bethlehem Mines,
Like the district court, appellees rely on the District of Columbia Circuit en banc opinion in Copeland III to urge lodestar reductions for inefficient use of partner time. Copeland III, however, is factually distinguishable from this case. The Copeland III litigation on the merits was a protracted gender discrimination suit against the government, and the district court there made specific findings as to the general expenditure of nonproductive hours by counsel for the plaintiff. See
B. Hourly Rates
Appellees also challenge the hourly rates approved by the district court. This Court measures the appropriate hourly rate for an attorney’s services as that which has been historically charged in the community. See Cunningham,
The hourly rates approved were as follows: Mr. Goldstein, $200; Messrs. Dreyfuss and Raymar, $150. As to these amounts we can only say that, on the record of this case, they approach the highest limits that we could sanction upon review.
Appellants challenge the district court’s reduction of Mr. Hellring’s hourly rate from $300 to $250. While it may be appropriate for a lawyer of Mr. Hellring’s standing at the bar — his competence and
effectiveness as an adovcate is acknowledged by all parties and by this Court — to charge his private clients $300.00 or more per hour, there nevertheless comes a point where a lawyer’s historic rate, which private clients are willing to pay, cannot be imposed on his or her adversaries. Cf. Black Grievance Comm. v. Philadelphia Elec. Co.,
IV. Remedy Phase
According to the affidavits, the total number of attorney hours in the remedy phase
Appellees take two positions on their liability for the remedy phase. They first assert that appellants are not entitled to any compensation for the remedy phase. However, to accept this assertion requires one first to disregard Chief Justice Marshall’s admonition that where there is a right there must be a remedy. See Marbury v. Madison,
Secondly, appellees contest the award of fees for hours which may have been spent solely in partisan negotiations and proceedings. As Justice Frankfurter once noted, “there comes a point where [we] should not be ignorant as judges of what we know as [women and] men.” Watts v. Indiana,
Because of the magnitude of the amount sought and the possibility of confusing a lawyer’s role in getting a mathematically equitable distribution with a client’s preference for maximizing his or her political advantages, the complex record of this case requires closer inquiry into the nature of the services rendered and the time spent. In addition, we are mindful of the fact that it is the appellants’ burden to demonstrate the reasonable necessity of the hours charged. See, e.g., Hughes,
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court in regard to the preremedy phase hours will be affirmed, the hourly rates will be affirmed and applied to the lodestar without the twenty percent reduction, and the remedy phase determinations will be remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The three state defendants from the executive branch (the Governor of New Jersey, its Attorney General and its Secretary of State) initially advised this Court that they would not file a response brief in light of the fact that neither the appellants nor the appellees asserted positions in their original briefs adverse to these state defendants. In response to allegations raised for the first time in the appellants’ reply brief, however, a reply brief was filed by these state defendants on the issue of their liability. By failing to raise this issue in their original briefs, appellants simply did not appeal the district court’s conclusion that these state defendants are not liable for counsel fees, and thus we do not consider this issue here. Fed.R.App.P. 28(a)(2) & 28(a)(4). See also J.E.K. Indus., Inc. v. Shoemaker,
. In their cross-appeal, the state legislators raise the following issues: (1) legislative immunity; (2) the absence of the § 1983 action prerequisite to a § 1988 award; and (3) mootness. These contentions were considered thoroughly by the district court; we will affirm its holdings that these contentions lack merit.
. Article I, section 2 provides, in relevant part:
The House of Representatives shall be composed of Members chosen every second Year by the People of the several States____ Representatives ... shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers____
U.S. Const, art. I, § 2.
. The "pre-remedy phase” is the time from the initiation of the litigation until the Supreme Court’s affirmance in Karcher v. Daggett,
. In a footnote, the Copeland III court noted that "[t]he District Court believed that inadequate partner time had been spent in th[e] case. This seems indeed to have been the case. We do not, of course, intend to discourage the use of associates in litigation of this sort____ However, young associates’ efforts will be fully productive only if guided by proper supervision by experienced litigators.’’
. In other words, we do not believe that there would have been an abuse of the district court’s discretion if a somewhat smaller amount had been approved for each counsel.
. To offer one example that seemed to persuade the district court, Professor Laurence Tribe of Harvard Law School is one of today’s most effective advocates before the United States Supreme Court. Despite this established reputation and his particular success in vindicating one of the core protections of the first amendment, however, see Larkin v. Grendel's Den, Inc.,
. The remedy phase of this litigation began when the Supreme Court decided that the Feldman Plan was unconstitutional and continued through the district court’s acceptance of appellants’ proposed redistricting plan.
. These figures are taken from the unopposed affidavit of New Jersey Deputy Attorney General William Haría, who analyzed and recategorized appellants' fee submissions into the phases we refer to here. See Jt.App. at 1054a-55a. Mr. Haría represented the state defendants in the attorney fee application.
. See, e.g., Hensley v. Eckerhart,
