Main Types of Equity

Exclusive Equity


1. Legal Equity (Equity in Law)

Refers to fairness-based legal principles developed historically in the English Court of Chancery, meant to complement strict common law.

Types:

  • Equitable Title: The right to benefit from property, even if legal title is held by another (e.g., trustee).
  • Equitable Relief: Remedies such as injunctions, specific performance, and rescission—used when monetary damages (legal remedies) are insufficient.
  • Equity of Redemption: The right of a mortgagor to reclaim their property once the debt is paid.
  • Constructive Trust: Imposed by a court to prevent unjust enrichment.
  • Equitable Estoppel: Prevents a party from going back on their word if another relied on it to their detriment.
  • Beneficial Interest: A right to benefit from assets held in trust.

2. Financial Equity (Accounting & Ownership)

Refers to ownership interest in an asset or entity after liabilities are subtracted.

Types:

  • Owner’s Equity: In sole proprietorships or partnerships—assets minus liabilities.
  • Shareholders’ Equity: For corporations, including common stock, retained earnings, and additional paid-in capital.
  • Home Equity: The difference between a home’s market value and outstanding mortgage debt.
  • Private Equity: Investment in private companies, not listed on public exchanges.
  • Venture Equity: A form of private equity, investing in early-stage startups.
  • Brand Equity: The value of a brand name beyond its physical assets.

3. Social and Ethical Equity

Focused on fairness and justice within societal systems.

Types:

  • Educational Equity: Fair access to education regardless of background.
  • Health Equity: Equal opportunity for health and healthcare.
  • Racial or Gender Equity: Fair treatment regardless of race, gender, or other identity factors.
  • Economic Equity: Fair distribution of wealth and economic opportunity.
  • Environmental Equity: Fair treatment regarding environmental laws and protections.

4. Ecclesiastical or Spiritual Equity

Used in spiritual governance, PMAs, or trust-based systems aligned with higher moral laws.

Types:

  • Divine Equity: The principle that higher law governs over man-made law—used in some ecclesiastical trusts and faith-based PMAs.
  • Ecclesiastical Equity: Found in canon law or spiritual law systems—governing roles, duties, and justice within a spiritual jurisdiction.
  • Equity of Grace: The concept that mercy and fairness transcend strict legal rules.

Bonus Category: Equity in Strategy or Philosophy

Used in frameworks such as your Trust Fortress Curriculum, where equity is treated as a spiritual bridge and a governing principle of private trust law.


Equity in Strategy or Philosophy refers to the higher-order use of equity as a guiding principle for decision-making, governance, wealth, and justice—not merely as a legal remedy, but as a universal force or strategic compass for creating order, restoring balance, and reclaiming authority.

Below is a structured breakdown of Equity in Strategy or Philosophy, especially relevant for trust governance, sovereignty, and spiritual frameworks like the Trust Fortress Curriculum or ecclesiastical PMAs.


1. Strategic Equity

Equity as a strategic framework for organizing systems of governance, private wealth, and remedy.

Core Applications:

  • Governance Design: Trust networks, private ministries, family offices—all based on equitable delegation of authority.
  • Conflict Resolution: Equity becomes the superior forum over adversarial litigation—handled via affidavits, notices, and private administration.
  • Power Reversal: Restores the position of the Beneficiary as the one holding true value and authority.
  • Non-Adversarial Control: Equity removes the need to “fight” and instead provides remedy through declaration, standing, and notice.
  • Trust Language Mastery: Knowing when and how to speak, ask, and stand rather than plead or argue.

2. Philosophical Equity

Equity as a principle of divine order, inner alignment, and natural law.

Core Understandings:

  • Life Force Alignment: Equity is the bridge between form and spirit—between public constructs and private reality.
  • Universal Justice: It operates under the maxim, “He who comes into equity must come with clean hands.” It demands inner purity and balance.
  • Non-Duality: Equity dissolves the illusion of opposition. There is no “win” or “lose”—there is only correction and restoration.
  • Harmony Over Victory: Rather than conquering, equity integrates and reconciles.
  • Private Right as Sacred Trust: You are not the owner—you are the steward, the custodian of value on behalf of a higher estate or divine mission.

3. Living Equity Framework

This applies to your curriculum or PMA structure as a living embodiment of equity in action.

ElementStrategic EquityPhilosophical Equity
RoleBeneficiary / ExecutorLiving Soul / Witness of Truth
LanguageAffidavit, Declaration, StandingReflection, Silence, Invocation
Remedy ToolTrust Law, UCC Notices, Administrative Due ProcessSacred Texts, Maxims, Inner Knowing
GoalAdministrative Control & Wealth FlowSpiritual Fulfillment & Divine Balance
Seal of AuthorityTrust Seal, Fiduciary SealEcclesiastical or Divine Seal of Presence
Conflict MethodConditional Acceptance, Non-AssentStillness, Clarity, Higher Frequency Command
Maxim“Equity regards as done what ought to be done.”“I am the source of value.”

4. The Divine Equity Bridge

The Divine Equity Bridge connects:

  • The public mind with the private soul
  • The debtor persona with the divine beneficiary
  • The legal fiction with living jurisdiction
  • The birth certificate estate with the spiritual trust estate

Its Purpose:

  • To redeem your time, energy, and inheritance.
  • To re-member the truth of your standing and identity.
  • To govern your estate not from reaction, but from right-use (righteousness).

“Exclusive Equity”

When we take into account equity as strategy, philosophy, and divine jurisdiction, exclusive equity refers to a realm of remedy and jurisdiction that is completely separate from civil or common law—and which recognizes no higher authority than conscience, contract, and trust.


Definition of Exclusive Equity (Full Scope)

Exclusive Equity is a jurisdiction and remedy that operates entirely under equity principles, without recourse to common law or statutory systems. It belongs solely to the Court of Conscience—expressed through trusts, fiduciaries, and divine appointment—and is triggered when legal remedies are inadequate or irrelevant.


Key Features of Exclusive Equity

FeatureDescription
Private JurisdictionExists only in the private, often through express trusts or PMAs.
No Legal Remedy AvailableTriggered when statutes or contracts fail to resolve harm justly.
Court of ConscienceGoverned by equity maxims, intent, fairness—not legal procedures.
Non-Adversarial RemedySolutions come through administration, standing, and trust—not litigation.
Custom ReliefEquitable orders like specific performance, constructive trusts, rescission, etc.
Spiritual SovereigntyRooted in higher law—such as divine law, ecclesiastical law, or natural law.
Beneficiary StandingThe trust Beneficiary is the highest interest-holder and cannot be compelled.
Remedy through DeclarationsRelief is often achieved through affidavits, notices, trust language, and default processes—not motions or pleadings.

In Trhttps://trustsentities.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/selective-focus-of-notebooks-with-pen-diploma-and-3K7P2RQ.jpgional Legal Theory

In jurisprudence, exclusive equity arises when:

  • There’s no adequate remedy at law (e.g., damages won’t fix the harm).
  • Only a court of equity (like a chancery court) can grant the relief.
  • Equitable rights (not legal rights) are in dispute—e.g., who deserves control based on trust, not title.

In the Trust Fortress or Divine Equity Framework

Exclusive Equity refers to the realm of remedy and authority where:

  • Your Living Trust Estate governs all acts and intentions.
  • You operate as Beneficiary of a Divine Trust, not a debtor to public law.
  • The system cannot reach you because it has no standing in your jurisdiction unless you consent or contract.
  • You engage only through ecclesiastical law, divine contract, or private declaration.

Analogy:

Public law is a battlefield.
Common law is a contract.
Exclusive equity is a temple.

You don’t fight.
You don’t plead.
You stand.


How to Access Exclusive Equity

  • Establish a private express trust with clear declarations.
  • Remove yourself from public jurisdiction through non-assent and status correction.
  • Administrate, don’t litigate.
  • Operate using equity maxims, affidavits, and trust instruments, not motions or petitions.
  • Maintain the posture of the beneficiary, not the agent or trustee of a public estate.

Operating in Exclusive Equity:

This means you govern your affairs privately, resolve disputes non-adversarially, and exercise your rights as a Beneficiary using tools rooted in divine contract and private trust law — not statutes, codes, or public courts.

Here’s how it works, element by element:


1. Equity Maxims — The Spiritual Constitution of Equity

These are timeless principles that govern behavior in the Court of Conscience. They’re not laws; they are truths that govern remedy.

Key Maxims:

  • “Equity regards as done what ought to be done.”
  • “He who comes into equity must come with clean hands.”
  • “Equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy.”
  • “Equity acts in personam (upon the person).”
  • “Equity follows the law (when law does not conflict with conscience).”

Application:
You use these maxims to justify or defend your standing. They are embedded in your affidavits, trust provisions, and administrative remedies.


2. Affidavits — Declarations That Establish Truth and Standing

An affidavit is your testimony on record, under penalty of perjury, and forms the backbone of your administrative process.

Common Affidavit Tools:

  • Affidavit of Trust Standing
  • Affidavit of Status, Capacity, and Agency
  • Affidavit of Non-Assent to Public Jurisdiction
  • Affidavit of Tender of Lawful Money (12 USC §411)
  • Notice of Conditional Acceptance
  • Affidavit of Harm or Trespass (fee schedule attached)

Application:
Use affidavits to put others on notice, establish jurisdiction, or rebut presumption. They are your evidence and claim of right, not requests for permission.


3. Trust Instruments — The Infrastructure of Authority

Trusts are equity in action. They are the vehicles that express your private law.

Essential Instruments:

  • Declaration of Trust
  • Master Charter or Constitution of the Trust Estate
  • Fiduciary Appointments & Seals
  • Trust Minutes & Resolutions
  • Trust Asset Assignment Instruments
  • Trustee Instructions & Oaths
  • Private Membership Contracts

Application:
Trust instruments allow you to administer property, settle disputes, and operate commerce privately. They form the legal basis for your remedy, outside the reach of statutory jurisdiction.


Operating Flow Example:

  1. Maxim Invoked: “Equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy.”
  2. Affidavit Filed: You issue an Affidavit of Trespass with a fee schedule for harm.
  3. Trust Invoked: The matter is addressed through your Trust Estate — not in court, but via administrative process.
  4. Notice to Agent is Notice to Principal: You use maxims, not motions. The record stands if not rebutted.
  5. Remedy Secured: Default judgment or equitable relief is established via silence, honor, or private settlement.

Summary:

To operate in Exclusive Equity, you:

  • Stand on maxims (not codes)
  • Declare through affidavit (not pleadings)
  • Govern through trust (not corporate identity)

This method builds private jurisdiction, preserves divine standing, and positions you as the author and administrator of your affairs — not a subject of the public system.