“Remedy is not given; it is claimed.”
In both law and equity, remedy is not a gift—it is an act of assertion. The universe of law is built on motion, and remedy exists only for those who move in honor to claim it. A right without action is like a seed never planted; it has potential but bears no fruit. Courts, administrators, and trustees do not “give” remedy—they respond to those who know how to demand it in proper form, with precision, evidence, and notice.
To claim remedy means to know your standing and to act in good faith, aligning your claim with truth, documentation, and the maxims of equity. “He who seeks equity must do equity.” One must show diligence not delay; honor, not hostility. The moment you put your claim into lawful motion—through notice, affidavit, or performance—you invoke the power of remedy already present in law.
Equity operates on conscience. It responds to the one who acts with clean hands, who brings forth the truth in good order. Remedy isn’t hidden; it waits for the rightful claimant.
🧭 Reflection for Students: Where in your life have you been waiting for remedy instead of claiming it? What is one step you can take today—through knowledge, notice, or assertion—to move from expectation to execution?
1
0 comments
Keenan RealReal
3
“Remedy is not given; it is claimed.”
powered by
LEGACY LAW ACADEMY
skool.com/legacy-law-academy-7998
“Welcome to Legacy Law Academy, where great minds gather together to explore the deepest truths of law, equity, commerce, and wealth mastery.”
-RR-
Build your own community
Bring people together around your passion and get paid.
Powered by