EP 2, Agere in Personam
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概要
"When you go to law, you get the law as it is. When you go into equity, you get justice." In Episode 2 of Learning Out Loud, we break down the most fundamental maxim of equity jurisprudence — agere in personam, equity acts on the person. Drawing directly from Murray F. Tully's 1903 address to the Illinois State Bar Association, Joseph Story's Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence, and Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence (3rd ed., 1905), we walk through how equity operates on conscience rather than property, the critical distinction between in personam and in rem jurisdiction, and why this thousand-year-old principle still governs how justice is administered today. In Hour 2, we apply the maxim through landmark case law — Massey v. Watts (1810) and Fall v. Easton (1909) — and explore its modern implications, from concurrent jurisdiction to waiver and consent. This is foundations-level research you won't find anywhere else, built source by source.
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.