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What if equity could reach back through time to make right what was never done? In Episode 4 of Learning Out Loud, we break down the most foundational maxim in equity jurisprudence — "Equity regards that as done which ought to be done" — straight from Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence and Murray F. Tully's 1903 address to the bar. We walk through how courts use this principle to enforce intent over technicality, how trust law and vendor-vendee relationships actually operate in equity, and we dig into two Supreme Court cases that bring it all to life: Camp v. Boyd (1913), where equity resolved a DC land dispute spanning 119 years back to George Washington's commissioners, and Willard v. Taylor (1869), where the Court upheld original intent over Civil War-era legal tender. This isn't theory — it's the machinery behind equitable title, the doctrine of conversion, and the equity of redemption. Primary sources. No shortcuts. New episodes dropping now at truelifeproduction.com.
The first 10 episodes of The Foundations series are completely free — 20 hours of evidence-based equity research, primary sources, transcripts, and interactive show notes. Listen now, follow the show, and visit truelifeproduction.com for the full law library, resources, and membership access. Share Hour 1 with anyone ready to learn. Seek truth and honor the Creator above all — and let that be the whole of the law.
By learningoutloudpodcastWhat if equity could reach back through time to make right what was never done? In Episode 4 of Learning Out Loud, we break down the most foundational maxim in equity jurisprudence — "Equity regards that as done which ought to be done" — straight from Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence and Murray F. Tully's 1903 address to the bar. We walk through how courts use this principle to enforce intent over technicality, how trust law and vendor-vendee relationships actually operate in equity, and we dig into two Supreme Court cases that bring it all to life: Camp v. Boyd (1913), where equity resolved a DC land dispute spanning 119 years back to George Washington's commissioners, and Willard v. Taylor (1869), where the Court upheld original intent over Civil War-era legal tender. This isn't theory — it's the machinery behind equitable title, the doctrine of conversion, and the equity of redemption. Primary sources. No shortcuts. New episodes dropping now at truelifeproduction.com.
The first 10 episodes of The Foundations series are completely free — 20 hours of evidence-based equity research, primary sources, transcripts, and interactive show notes. Listen now, follow the show, and visit truelifeproduction.com for the full law library, resources, and membership access. Share Hour 1 with anyone ready to learn. Seek truth and honor the Creator above all — and let that be the whole of the law.