Tuesday, June 11, 2024
What is Equity, Anyway?
I just came back on Sunday from the 2024 Law and Society Association Annual Meeting in Denver. It was, as always, a stimulating few days. A number of us business law profs were in attendance. The corporate and securities law collaborative research network (CRN46) habitually organizes several programs. This year was no exception. I was privileged to be featured in two. But I will say more on my participation in the conference later.
Today, I want to highlight an interesting piece that was presented at the conference during one of the CRN46 paper panels: "The Original Meaning of Equity " by Asaf Raz (forthcoming in the Washington University Law Review). The SSRN abstract follows:
Equity is seeing a new wave of attention in scholarship and practice. Yet, as this Article argues, our current understanding of equity is divided between two distinct meanings: on one side, the federal courts, guided by the Supreme Court, tend to discuss equity as the precise set of remedies known at a fixed point in the past (static equity). On the other, state courts—most prominently, in Delaware—administer equity to preserve the correct operation of law in unforeseeable situations (substantive equity). Only the latter interpretation complies with the historical and functional idea of equity.
This Article makes the first detailed argument for resolving the problem of static equity, and reinvigorating substantive equity in the federal judiciary and the broader legal community. To do so, this Article takes a highly innovative step, by connecting the federal discussion with an in-depth analysis of the legal scene where equity is employed most systematically (and most faithfully to its historical roots): Delaware law, including its corporate law. As this Article demonstrates, substantive equity is fully compatible with originalism and textualism; the "equity" mentioned in the Constitution and later federal texts is substantive, not static, equity. Federal law has always operated within the sphere of the common law, and this Article offers a new bridge between the two, exposing the members of each community to insights from the other, in a manner that promotes both the original understanding of the legal text, justice, and the rule of law.
Asaf's presentation of the piece at the conference generated several questions and an interesting extended discussion. The term "equity" has many meanings in law that we must be conversant with in our work. We also need to help students define "equity" in context and sort out its varied meanings as they learn about law in its multifarious manifestations. These factors alone make the article a valuable read. However, more centrally, I applaud Asaf for taking on the task of adding some clarity to the term and on connecting his research to both federal (including constitutional) and Delaware law in novel ways. I look forward to spending more time with this piece. And I know Asaf welcomes your comments!
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/business_law/2024/06/what-is-equity-anyway.html