A recurring debate in this space holds that "equity" is a wrong turn and "litigation" is the only path to remedy. The framing collapses two different things into one. Equity and litigation are not competing methodologies. They sit at different levels of abstraction — and most real win-conditions in foreclosure defense, fraud rescission, and quiet title live precisely at their intersection.
Walk into any room of pro se litigants, foreclosure-defense practitioners, or sovereign-curious clients and you will hear the word "equity" deployed in five contradictory ways within the same hour. One person says equity is the path to remedy. Another says equity is a trap, and only litigation produces results. A third says equity acts in personam so the court can't reach them. A fourth files a UCC-1 against a judge "in equity" and expects the case to dissolve.
In the middle of this confusion, a recurring critique has emerged from practitioners watching movement-style "equity" invocations fail in real cases: reject equity, just litigate.
The critique is responding to something real. It is also building a framing that quietly misses the point. This Field Note is the explainer.
Equity and litigation are not competing methodologies. They sit at different levels of abstraction:
Saying "reject equity, only litigate" is structurally analogous to saying "reject the hammer, only use the toolbox." Equity is one of the things in the toolbox of litigation. You cannot reject one in favor of the other; they are at different levels.
You do not replace equity with litigation. You deliver equity through litigation.
The cleanest way to see this: imagine the courthouse has one judge, but two counters.
Descended from the common law. You walk up and say:
"Pay me money. Give me back my chattel. The other side breached a contract, committed a tort, or violated a statute, and I want compensatory damages, statutory damages, or possession by ejectment or replevin."
Descended from chancery — the conscience-based courts that arose in medieval England to fill the gaps the rigid common law could not reach. You walk up and say:
"Order the other side to do something — or stop doing it. Declare my title clean of this void deed. Cancel this fraudulent assignment. Stop this foreclosure sale. Recognize that this person holds property in constructive trust for me. Compel an accounting from this fiduciary. Force specific performance of this land contract. Redeem this mortgaged land before the sale becomes absolute."
In 1938, the federal courts merged the two counters procedurally. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 2 declares: "There is one form of action — the civil action." Most states followed. There are no longer separate "courts of law" and "courts of equity" in most jurisdictions. The same judge handles both. You file the same kind of lawsuit.
But the substance of what's available at each counter remained distinct. Equitable remedies still require equitable showings — clean hands, inadequacy of any legal remedy, irreparable harm, balancing of hardships. Equitable defenses — laches, estoppel, unconscionability — still gate them.
When you litigate, you walk into the courthouse. The question is what relief you ask for in the prayer for relief. Most real win-conditions live at Counter 2.
The clearest contemporary description of what equity does — and does not do — comes from a primary source most practitioners have never read: A Treatise on Suits in Chancery, by Henry R. Gibson, Chancellor of the Second Chancery Division of Tennessee, second edition published 1907. Gibson was not a treatise writer commenting from outside; he was the sitting Chancellor of the court he was describing, writing for solicitors and masters who appeared before him.
At §6 of his treatise, Gibson catalogues thirty-five things common law could not do that equity could. The list reads like a foreclosure-defense practitioner's wish list:
None of those existed at common law. Every one of them exists today because chancery — equity — invented them. Strip equity from the toolbox and you lose all of them.
The position rejecting "equity" makes sense as a reaction against recurring misuses. Practitioners who watch the following sequences fail in court are right to be frustrated:
All of those are real. All of them fail. Practitioners who watch movement-style "equity" invocations skip the lawsuit and then come back complaining when the foreclosure went through anyway have legitimate grounds for frustration.
The reaction "stop invoking equity, just litigate" is doctrinally imprecise but operationally sound: do not pursue equity as a substitute for litigation; do not pursue it through paper invocations.
If that were the whole reform, the framing would be fine. The problem is what gets lost when "stop invoking equity as a magic word" hardens into "reject equity as a category."
Walk through what equity-skeptical foreclosure-defense practitioners actually invoke in the cases they win. The pattern shows the category error in operation:
| Tool invoked | Counter |
|---|---|
| FDCPA § 1692g damages | Legal |
| FCRA / TILA / RESPA statutory damages | Legal |
| UCC § 3-305 fraud-in-the-factum, used defensively against enforcement | Legal (defensive) |
| Quiet title to clear the cloud on the homeowner's title after a void foreclosure | Equity |
| Rescission of a fraudulent assignment of mortgage | Equity |
| Cancellation of a trustee's deed under a satisfied note | Equity |
| Injunction to stop the foreclosure sale | Equity |
| Constructive trust over property held by the wrongful foreclosure-deed holder | Equity |
| Equitable accounting from a servicer holding funds in suspense | Equity |
| Redemption of mortgaged property pre- or post-sale | Equity |
Almost all of the actual win-condition relief — what the court has to order to put the homeowner back in possession with clear title — is at Counter 2. The practitioner is operating in equity whether they label it that way or not.
Gibson §6 is explicit: "title to land could not be effectually quieted" at common law. Quiet title is an equity remedy. Period. Strip equity and you lose it.
So the equity-skeptical position, charitably translated, is something like this: "Don't pursue equity in lieu of litigation, and don't pursue it through paper invocations. Pursue it the right way — by filing a lawsuit and asking for the right remedies."
That is correct. That is also not "rejecting equity." That is requiring equity to be delivered through proper litigation. Which is exactly what equity has always required, going back to Gibson and beyond. The chancery bill is a lawsuit.
The framing that holds up under pressure — for clients, members, and anyone trying to think clearly about this — is three doors, not two.
Write a paper. Invoke equitable language. Skip the courthouse. Expect the obligation to discharge itself. Rejected. This is what equity skeptics correctly reject. It is also what gets clients sanctioned, jailed, and dispossessed.
Sue under FDCPA, FCRA, TILA, RESPA, and UCC. Get money damages. Hope it forces a settlement. Real but limited. Damages will not unwind a void foreclosure or clear a cloud on title. Damages will not stop a sale already noticed. Damages will not give the homeowner back possession with clear title to record.
File the same lawsuit as Door 2 — but in the prayer for relief, ask for both legal damages and equitable remedies. Quiet title. Cancellation of the void assignment. Injunction against the sale. Constructive trust over the foreclosure deed. Equitable accounting from the servicer. This is where the actual win-conditions live for foreclosure clients.
Door 1 is what skeptics correctly reject. Door 2 is what they advocate. Door 3 is what actually works, and it requires both equity and litigation, not one or the other.
Equity is not a magic word. It is not a workaround. It is a doctrinal framework with gatekeeping requirements. Gibson catalogued the gates as maxims of equity — the underlying principles every equitable claim must satisfy:
| Gate | What it requires |
|---|---|
| Clean hands (Gibson §42) | Complainant's conduct in the matter must not be fraudulent, illegal, or unconscientious |
| Do equity (Gibson §39) | Complainant must be willing to perform his own equitable duties — tender, perform, account |
| Vigilance / no laches (Gibson §49) | Complainant cannot have slept on rights to the prejudice of the defendant |
| Inadequate legal remedy | If money damages would suffice, equity defers to law |
| Identifiable parties (Gibson §117, §125) | Necessary parties joined; rights identifiable on the record |
| Substance over form (Gibson §43) | Equity looks through form to substance — disciplines movement-style "form-creates-substance" arguments |
A litigation strategy that asks for equity remedies must satisfy these gates. Practitioners who invoke equity language without delivering an actual equitable case — clean hands, inadequate legal remedy, identifiable beneficial interest, identifiable fiduciary relationship, identifiable trust property — lose. This is the discipline equity imposes. It is also why magic-word invocations of equity fail.
Equity disciplines the framework in two directions simultaneously. It supplies the doctrinal authority for calibrated practitioners to obtain real remedies. It denies the same authority to anyone trying to use it as a shortcut.
Equity and litigation are not sword and shield against each other. They are sword and shield against the client's adversary.
Litigation is the courtroom procedure that delivers the remedy. Equity is half of what's available as remedy when you get there.
The skeptical correction "litigate, don't paper-magic" is right. The collapse "litigate, don't equity" loses half the toolbox.
The Gibson framing makes this cleaner than it has been in this space: equity is not magic, it is not movement, it is not a workaround. It is the conscience-based gap-filler that fills the thirty-five holes Gibson §6 documents common law could not reach. You access it through litigation. You discipline yourself with the maxims. You ask for it in your prayer for relief. And then the court — which you reached through litigation — delivers the equitable remedy.
The intertwining is not a contradiction. It is the entire architecture.
Equity without litigation is fantasy. Litigation without equity is half a toolbox. The path to remedy runs through both.
One-off Field Note · Companion to Credit River and Scalia