TJOFLAT, Chief Judge:
This action for money damages is presently pending in the district corut.1 In order to ensure that the plaintiff will be able to satisfy any money judgment that it might ultimately obtain in this litigation, the district court, on the plaintiffs application for preliminary in-[1511]*1511junetive relief, imposed a constructive trust upon the assets of the defendants. The court also appointed a receiver to manage the assets of two groups of defendants.
The appeals before us, which we have consolidated for decision, are from orders of the district court modifying the constructive trust to permit some of the defendants to pay their lawyers for representation in this litigation. The plaintiff contends that the district court abused its discretion in allowing such payments from assets subject to the trust. Because we conclude that the district court had no lawful authority to impose the constructive trust or otherwise to attach the defendants’ assets — and thus to prevent the defendants from using their assets to pay counsel — we affirm.
I.
A.
This case arises out of a series of transactions involving carpet yam that began in 1989.2 The transactions were structured by a small circle of individuals: Joseph L. Smith, the owner of Sun-Fibres, Inc. (“SFI”); Charles W. Jones and Robert E. Lee, the owners and operators of Cardinal Textile Sales, Inc. (“Cardinal”) and General Sales & Leasing Co. (“General”), respectively; and two employees of Mitsubishi International Corporation (“Mitsubishi”), Raymond B. Lippincott, III, and Mary Ellen Lee, who managed the textile trading department in the company’s Atlanta branch.
At the outset, the transactions were arranged as follows. Mitsubishi (from its Atlanta, Georgia, office) purchased carpet yarn from SFI and sold it on open account to Cardinal and General, two textile brokerage companies located in Dalton, Georgia.3 Cardinal and General, in turn, sold the yarn to SFI’s supplier, Purvis Sikkelee International, Ltd.4 Apparently unknown to Mitsubishi management, but with the assistance of Mitsubishi employees Lippincott and Lee, the defendants thus established a circular series of yam transfers that was repeated numerous times over the ensuing two years.5
Mitsubishi paid SFI for the yam it purchased through accounts established at Mitsubishi’s bank. Payment was made on each transaction when SFI presented the bank with a set of documents, including a Mitsubishi purchase order and a packing list/bill of lading indicating that the yarn had been [1512]*1512shipped to Mitsubishi’s customer. Meanwhile, as was noted above, Cardinal and General were to pay Mitsubishi for the textiles on open account, the terms of which are not important here. In effect, through this financing arrangement, Mitsubishi extended credit for these transactions to its carpet yarn customers.
In 1990, SFI stopped shipping yarn altogether.6 The transactions, however, continued on paper; SFI used false bills of lading to obtain payment from Mitsubishi’s bank. SFI, Mitsubishi’s customers (Cardinal and General), and the other defendants who were participating with them in the scheme all shared in the money made available by Mitsubishi under the financing arrangement established for the yarn transactions. For a time, while the yarn was still being shipped, Cardinal and General paid for some of the textiles.7 By the time Mitsubishi brought this suit, however, the Cardinal and General accounts with Mitsubishi were several million dollars in arrears.
B.
In an attempt to recover the arrearage, Mitsubishi brought this suit on July 3, 1991, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia against Cardinal, General, SFI, and several other parties whom it alleged had collaborated with those defendants in the scheme described above. As amended, Mitsubishi’s complaint states causes of action in contract and tort. The complaint’s terminology, however, is somewhat confused because it labels both bases for recovery and alternative remedies as “counts.”8 When examined closely, the complaint presents the following claims for relief: claims against Cardinal and General for breaching their respective promises to pay for the yarn Mitsubishi sold them and for accounts stated; claims against Lippincott and Ellen Lee for breaching their “duty of loyalty” as employees to Mitsubishi; claims against Cardinal and General, and against SFI, for fraud (the allegation being that those defendants fraudulently induced Mitsubishi to sell yarn to Cardinal and General by falsely representing that they would pay for the goods); and claims against all of the defendants under the federal and state RICO statutes based essentially upon such fraudulent misrepresentations.
In addition to these theories of recovery, the complaint also seeks, as equitable remedies but not as independent grounds of liability, the imposition of a constructive trust, an equitable accounting, and the appointment of a receiver. Taken collectively, the application in the complaint for this equitable relief asks the district court to impose a constructive trust on the defendants’ assets so that funds will be available with which to satisfy any money judgment that might ultimately be rendered against one or more of the defendants; the appointment of a receiver would facilitate that process.
[1513]*1513On the same day it filed its complaint, Mitsubishi petitioned the district court for a temporary restraining order to protect the assets of the defendants that Mitsubishi alleged it owned by operation of a constructive trust. The district court granted Mitsubishi’s motion after a short hearing, concluding that:
It appears to the Court that Plaintiff Mitsubishi ... has a substantial likelihood of prevailing on the merits of one or more of its claims against Defendants; that immediate and irreparable injury, loss or damage will result to Plaintiff unless a restraining order is issued against Defendants; that the threat and injury to Plaintiff substantially outweigh any threat and harm the injunctive relief may do the Defendants; and granting injunctive relief will serve the public interest.
The court then froze a significant portion, albeit perhaps not all, of the assets of the defendants in an apparent attempt to ensure that any unlawfully obtained funds would be secured. The temporary restraining order provided as follows:
[P]ending a hearing on Plaintiffs Motion for Preliminary Injunction, or further Order of the Court, the Defendants ... are temporarily restrained from dissipating, transferring, pledging, encumbering, selling, disposing of, or making any other use of any and all monies received, directly or indirectly, from Joseph L. Smith or [SFI]; any and all monies received, directly or indirectly, as a result of yam or fiber transactions involving Mitsubishi or Mitsubishi funds; and any and all real or personal properties purchased in whole or in part with such monies. This Order extends to all such monies wherever they may be traced and whether kept separate or commingled with other monies.
The district court’s order also required an immediate equitable accounting of the relevant funds and granted Mitsubishi’s request for expedited discovery. The temporary restraining order subsequently was extended several times by consent of the parties so that they could prepare for a later preliminary injunction hearing.9
On August 6, 1991, Mitsubishi petitioned the court for the immediate appointment of a receiver “to take control, custody and management of the business and assets” of General and Cardinal “for the purposes of preserving the assets of said Defendants, in which Mitsubishi has an equitable interest pursuant to a constructive trust or an equitable lien_” Following a two-day evidentia-ry hearing held on August 13-14, 1991, the district court granted Mitsubishi’s motion on August 22, finding that “plaintiff ha[d] shown a substantial likelihood of prevailing on its claims that assets in the possession or control of defendants ... should be impressed with a constructive trust in favor of plaintiff, and in order to marshal, protect, and preserve such assets.” A receiver was appointed with broad authority to manage the assets and businesses of Cardinal and General under the direction of the court.
These appeals arise out of the district court’s decision to allow the appellees to pay their attorneys with funds that had been subjected to thé temporary restraining order. On August 9, 1991, before the receiver was [1514]*1514appointed, General filed an Application for Allowance of Reasonable Compensation and Disbursements to their counsel for the period commencing with the issuance of the temporary restraining order on July 3. Cardinal filed a similar request several days later. Both petitions asked the district court to modify its temporary restraining order to allow reasonable compensation to counsel for the defendants.
In its August 22 receivership order, the district court granted the requests of Cardinal and General that payment of interim attorneys’ fees be allowed from the funds subject to the original temporary restraining order. Over Mitsubishi’s objections, the court ordered that “[General and Cardinal] shall be permitted to pay reasonable counsel fees and expenses for their defense of this action,” subject to review of the attorneys’ invoices by the receiver as well as approval by the court. More importantly, the order purported to preclude Mitsubishi from ever seeking disgorgement of these interim attorneys’ fees once they were paid. The court decreed that “any funds paid to the attorneys for the Receiver Entities pursuant to this order shall be released from any restraint or constructive trust and plaintiff shall not seek to have them disgorged, repaid, or refunded at any time....”10
In appeal number 91-8775, Mitsubishi appeals that portion of the receivership order that governs attorneys’ fees. Specifically, Mitsubishi appeals the section that “(i) authorizes payment of attorneys’ fees to counsel for certain defendants [Cardinal and General], (ii) releases funds paid to these attorneys from ‘any restraint or constructive trust,’ and (iii) forbids [Mitsubishi] from seeking disgorgement, repayment, or a refund of those released funds at any time.” In appeals number 91-8900 and 92-8192, Mitsubishi challenges two virtually identical orders entered on October 1, 1991, and February 14, 1992; these orders preclude Mitsubishi from recovering counsel fees paid by PSI and Fibertex Textile Supplies, respectively. We consolidated all three appeals for decision because each underlying order is identical in substance — awarding interim attorneys’ fees and exempting the funds paid by the appel-lees from the operation of the court’s temporary restraining order — and differing only insofar as they apply to different sets of appellees.11 By the time of oral argument, substantial amounts of money had been paid to defense counsel under these orders.12
[1515]*1515In these appeals, we must decide whether the district court erred when it awarded attorneys’ fees to counsel for the appellees and exempted such fees from the provisions of the temporary restraining order as well as the operation of any constructive trust that might be impressed on final judgment.
II.
Because Mitsubishi seeks interlocutory appellate review of pretrial district court orders, we initially must decide whether we have jurisdiction over these consolidated appeals. Under the final judgment rule, a preliminary determination during the course of trial court proceedings ordinarily is not reviewable by an appellate court until an ultimate judgment has been rendered in the case. However, “[a]n order involving injunctive relief issued prior to the entry of a final judgment generally may be appealed under the statutory exception to the final judgment rule embodied in § 1292(a)(1) of the Judicial Code.” 11 Charles Allan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2962, at 612 (West 1973).13 Accordingly, we must examine the nature of the orders from which Mitsubishi appeals to determine whether they constitute appealable orders involving injunctive relief.
Although it is not always an easy task properly to characterize a district court’s interlocutory orders, such a determination is crucial under the relevant statutory and decisional law defining appellate court jurisdiction. Final judgments and collateral orders are appealable, for example, but non-final orders are not; preliminary injunctions are appealable but temporary restraining orders are not.14 Indeed, it may not always be clear that the court has rendered a decision relating to an injunction at all. It is well-established, however, that:
[A] district court may not avoid immediate review of its determination simply by failing to characterize or label its decision as one denying or granting injunctive relief. For example, when a court declines to make a formal ruling on a motion for a preliminary injunction, but its action has the effect of denying the requested relief, its refusal to issue a specific order will be treated as equivalent to the denial of a preliminary injunction and will be appeal-able.
11 Wright & Miller, supra, § 2962, at 614. See also Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Ma-yacamas Corp., 485 U.S. 271, 287-88, 108 S.Ct. 1133, 1142-43, 99 L.Ed.2d 296 (1988) (explaining that section 1292(a)(1) “provide[s] appellate jurisdiction over orders that grant or deny injunctions and orders that have the practical effect of granting or denying injunctions and have ‘serious, perhaps irreparable, consequence’” (citation omitted)).
Several decisions illustrate the operation of this principle that appellate courts evaluating their jurisdiction should examine the effect, and not merely the letter, of interlocutory district court orders to be reviewed. In Carson v. American Brands, Inc., 450 U.S. 79, 101 S.Ct. 993, 67 L.Ed.2d 59 (1981), for example, the district court denied a joint motion of the parties for entry of a consent decree that included provisions for injunctive relief. The Supreme Court held that the lower court’s ruling was appealable under section 1292(a)(1) because, “[although the District Court’s order declining to enter the proposed consent decree did not in terms ‘refuse’ an ‘injunction,’ it nonetheless had the practical effect of doing so.” Id. at 83, 101 S.Ct. at 996. See also Rolo v. General Dev. [1516]*1516Corp., 949 F.2d 695, 70S (3d Cir.1991) (reviewing district court’s order that, although not labelled as such, had “practical effect” of refusing preliminary injunction). Appellate courts have even identified appealable denials of preliminary injunctions in rare eases in which the district court in fact issued no order at all. In United States v. Lynd, 301 F.2d 818, 822 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 371 U.S. 893, 83 S.Ct. 187, 9 L.Ed.2d 125 (1962),15 the trial court had failed to enter a temporary injunction for months, despite repeated applications by the government. The court of appeals concluded that “[t]he movant, under such circumstances, was clearly entitled to have a ruling from the trial judge, and since he did not grant the order his action in declining to do so was in all respects a ‘refusal,’ so as to satisfy the requirements of Section 1292.... ” Id.
Under the foregoing set of principles, this court is vested with flexibility in characterizing the orders from which Mitsubishi appeals; we are not cabined by the district court’s terminology. The precedents cited above demonstrate that a reviewing court will look at the actual effect of an order that was issued by a district court when determining whether an appeal should be allowed under section 1292(a)(1).
As noted above, the parties in this case consented to the extension of the court’s July 3, 1991, temporary restraining order that, through its broad wording, essentially froze the assets of the defendants pending trial. Thus, no controversy exists over the terms of that order. For the court’s purposes, the parties had agreed to freeze those assets for a period of time. The practical effect of the appellees’ applications for rear sonable counsel fees, however, was to withdraw their consent to at least part of the restraining order; when the district court issued the appealed-from orders concerning counsel fees, it modified the consent order at the application of several of the enjoined parties. Mitsubishi had originally sought a preliminary injunction governing all assets of the defendants that were connected in any way to the money spent by Mitsubishi in the textile transactions. In opposing the appel-lees’ counsel fee applications, Mitsubishi continued to urge this position on the district court. Hence, the attorneys’ fee orders at issue here constitute denials, in part, of Mitsubishi’s requests for injunctive relief. As such, they are appealable under section 1292(a)(1).16
The circumstances surrounding the district court’s rulings on the counsel fee applications support our conclusion that the appealed-from orders constitute denials of Mitsubishi’s request for a preliminary injunction. First, the court’s orders are not transitory or effective merely for a period of time too brief to allow an appeal. Rather, they governed the conduct of .the parties for months. More importantly, the district court issued its orders only after hearing from all parties. The attorneys’ fee issue was briefed extensively [1517]*1517and the court had the benefit of several hearings on related issues when it made its decision; the district court had the opportunity fully to examine the merits of the parties’ claims on this issue. Accordingly, it is appropriate to treat the district court’s orders as denials of a preliminary injunction. See, e.g., Sampson v. Murray, 415 U.S. 61, 86-87 & n.58, 94 S.Ct. 937, 951 & n.58, 39 L.Ed.2d 166 (1974) (classifying court’s order as preliminary injunction “where an adversary hearing has been held, and the court’s basis for issuing the order strongly challenged”); Haitian Refugee Center, 950 F.2d at 686 (treating , an order denominated as temporary restraining order as, “in effect,” preliminary injunction after court had heard from all parties and issue had been briefed).
III.
We review a district court’s denial of a preliminary injunction under an .abuse of discretion standard. Cafe 207, Inc. v. St. Johns County, 989 F.2d, 1136, 1137 (11th Cir.1993); Lucero v. Operation Rescue of Birmingham, 954 F.2d 624, 627 (11th Cir.1992). Appellate review of such a decision is justifiably limited because “the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction is almost always based on an abbreviated set of facts, requiring a delicate balancing of the probabilities of ultimate success ... with the consequences of immediate irreparable injury which could possibly flow from the denial of preliminary relief.” Revette v. Int’l Ass’n of Bridge Works, 740 F.2d 892, 893 (11th Cir. 1984) (citation omitted). As we review the denial of the preliminary injunction, “no attention is paid to the merits of the controversy beyond that necessary to determine the presence or absence of an abuse of discretion.” Cafe 207, 989 F.2d at 1137 (citation omitted).
This court “may affirm the district court’s judgment on any ground that appears in the record, whether or not that ground was relied upon or even considered by the court below.” Powers v. United States, 996 F.2d 1121, 1123-24 (11th Cir.1993); see also United States v. Arthur Young & Co., 465 U.S. 805, 814 n.12, 104 S.Ct. 1495, 1501 n.12, 79 L.Ed.2d 826 (1984). Accordingly, we must examine all possible legal theories that properly could support the pretrial injunctive relief requested by the appellant and implicitly denied in the three challenged counsel fee orders issued by the district court.
Mitsubishi contends that the district court erred in awarding interim attorneys’ fees to counsel for the appellees, and in exempting those fees from its temporary restraining order (as well as from any constructive trust that might ultimately be imposed after final resolution of the merits of the case). We first consider and reject the argument that the district court could have prevented the appellees from using their assets to pay their counsel fees under constructive trust law. We then turn to an alternative rationale that might be used to justify Mitsubishi’s request: pretrial attachment.17 [1518]*1518Because we find that the defendants’ assets could not have been restrained under either of these theories on the facts now before us, we affirm the district court’s orders.
Mitsubishi’s argument on appeal is premised upon a mistaken and overly rigid view of constructive trusts: that Mitsubishi has an absolute and immediate right under Georgia constructive trust law to trace and recover any assets that were derived from Mitsubishi funds involved in the textile transactions described in part I.18 Because a constructive trust is deemed to arise at the time of a fraudulent misappropriation, Mitsubishi contends that it was entitled to an immediate injunction preventing the dissipation of those assets — including payment of appellees’ counsel fees — as well as the opportunity to seek disgorgement of any transferred funds. This position, however, fails to recognize that constructive trusts are not automatically impressed whenever one party owes another money, and it apparently overlooks the essence of the remedy — that constructive trusts are inherently equitable in nature and that equitable relief is available only in the absence of an adequate remedy at law.
The constructive trust, a creature of equity, is the “formula through which the conscience of equity finds expression.” 5 Austin W. Scott, The Law of Trusts § 462, at 3413 (3d ed. 1967) (citation omitted). Indeed, a widely accepted definition holds that “[a] constructive trust arises where a person who holds title to property is subject to an equitable duty to convey it to another on the ground that he would be unjustly enriched if he were permitted to retain it.” Id. Georgia law provides that “[a] constructive trust is a trust implied whenever the circumstances are such that the person holding legal title to property, either from fraud or otherwise, cannot enjoy the beneficial interest in the property without violating some established principle of equity.” O.C.G.A. § 53-12-93 (Michie Supp.1993).
It is axiomatic that equitable relief is only available where there is no adequate remedy at law, and there is nothing in the Georgia statutory or decisional law to indicate that ordinary maxims of equity jurisprudence do not apply.19 Indeed, the Georgia Code specifically provides that “[e]quity will not take cognizance of a plain legal right where an adequate and complete remedy is provided by law.” O.C.G.A. § 23-1-4 (Michie 1982). The Georgia Supreme Court has concluded that “equitable relief is improper if the complainant has a remedy at law which is ‘adequate,’ i.e., as practical and as efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration as the remedy in equity.” Mayor of Wadley v. Hall, 261 Ga. 681, 410 S.E.2d 105, 106 (1991); see also Stewart v. Walton, 254 Ga. 81, 326 S.E.2d 738, 739 (1985) (“Equity will grant relief only where there is no available adequate and complete remedy at law.”).
Cases in which the remedy sought is the recovery of money (whether as collection on a debt or as damages) do not fall within the jurisdiction of equity, 1 Pomeroy, supra, § 178, at 229, and the imposition of a constructive trust generally will not be the appropriate remedy. This principle holds even when the cause of action implicates fraud or some other characteristic that would other[1519]*1519wise trigger equity jurisdiction. As Professor Pomeroy explains:
Even when the cause of action, based upon a legal right, does involve or present, or is connected with, some particular feature or incident of the same kind as those over which [equity] jurisdiction ordinarily extends, such as fraud, accounting, and the like, still, if the legal remedy by action and pecuniary judgment for debt or damages would be complete, sufficient, and certain — that is, would do full justice to the litigant parties — in the particular case, the concurrent jurisdiction of equity does not extend to such a case.
Id. at 230-31. See also 5 Scott, supra, § 462.3, at 3419 (explaining that “where money is obtained by fraud, it is held upon a constructive trust for the defrauded person; but if the remedy at law is adequate a suit in equity cannot be maintained against the fraudulent person”).
In spite of this authority, Mitsubishi construes the Georgia constructive trust provision to mean that it equitably owns all assets fraudulently taken by the defendants and transferred to any third party, unless the third party paid value for the assets and lacked notice of the fraud at the time it accepted the assets.20 None of the Georgia cases upon which Mitsubishi relies, however, involve the sort of contractual, commercial transactions for the sale of goods at issue in this case.21 Furthermore, the Georgia Supreme Court has suggested in one case, Bank of Dade v. Reeves, 257 Ga. 51, 354 S.E.2d 131 (1987), that a constructive trust cannot be imposed for failure to keep implied promises when the parties’ conduct is regulated by a contractual relationship. In that case, a mutual exchange of promises provided consideration for the contract between a bank (which held a lien on the debtor’s business assets and home to secure the debtor’s business loans), a debtor, and a trustee (who was appointed to sell the debtor’s assets and to use the proceeds to retire his indebtedness). The court held that the bank’s failure to fulfill its contractual obligations (namely, to monitor the sales \by the trustee for fairness to the debtor) could not support the imposition of a constructive trust; “[a]t most, there was a breach of contract by the bank,” the court concluded. Id. at 133.
An examination of the record in this ease reveals that Mitsubishi is not entitled to the equitable remedy of a constructive trust because it has an adequate remedy at law.22 Although the facts as stated by Mitsubishi indicate possible fraud in this case, such fraud arose in the context of a contractual, commercial relationship between Mitsubishi and Cardinal and General, as well as between Mitsubishi and SFI. In the principal transactions, Cardinal and General misrepresented their own creditworthiness (their intent to pay for the yarn they purchased). As such, the remedy Mitsubishi should have sought is the recovery of money for breach of [1520]*1520a promise to pay or for an account stated (and not the imposition of a constructive trust). There is no indication in this case that a legal remedy would not be sufficient to vindicate Mitsubishi’s rights since it seeks the payment of a debt (along with the statutory damages provided by the federal and state RICO laws). Moreover, if any defendant is held liable in this case, Mitsubishi will have all of the rights of a judgment creditor in Georgia. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 69.
The law is clear as to the remedies available to a party who has been fraudulently induced to enter into a contract: the defrauded party may either rescind the contract or stand on the agreement and seek to recover damages. See generally 12 Samuel Williston & Walter H.E. Jaeger, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts §§ 1526-28 (3d ed. 1970). That is, as Georgia courts have held, “[t]wo actions are available to one who was fraudulently induced by misrepresentations into entering a contract: he can affirm the contract and sue for breach or seek to rescind and sue in tort for fraud and deceit.” Carpenter v. Curtis, 196 Ga.App. 234, 395 S.E.2d 653, 655 (1990). Courts ordinarily insist that a party seeking to avoid a fraudulently induced contract tender the consideration it has received (here, the evidence of indebtedness provided by the purchasers of the yarn) and demand restitution of the consideration it has given (here, the yarn itself); absent such an election, the contract is deemed to remain. As Professor Williston has explained: 12 Williston, supra, § 1526, at 622. Furthermore, “[t]he retention or use of the subject matter of the fraud is generally considered a conclusive choice of the substantive right of affirmance,” id., § 1528, at 632; see also Brown v. Techdata Corp., 238 Ga. 622, 234 S.E.2d 787, 791 (1977). Here, Mitsubishi has attempted to sue on the debt owed it by Cardinal and General (in its accounts receivable action, count VIII of the amended complaint) and has not pursued a proper action for rescission.
It is generally said that a defrauded party must elect whether he will affirm the fraudulent transaction or rescind it. But a transaction although induced by fraud is not on that account void; it is only voidable. Consequently, if nothing is done, the transaction is not avoided, and the rights of the parties will be fixed by the agreement which they made without any manifestation of election.
We therefore conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion by allowing the appellees to use their assets to pay their attorneys’ fees. Mitsubishi’s claims in this case are essentially contractual in nature. Since Mitsubishi possesses an adequate remedy at law, the equitable remedy of a constructive trust is not available to it.
When stripped of the rhetoric of misappropriated assets and constructive trusts, Mitsubishi’s complaint essentially seeks the payment of a debt and damages for fraud. Cardinal and General are indebted to Mitsubishi because they failed to pay for the yarn they purchased; in addition, they and the remaining defendants may be liable to Mitsubishi for any fraud they may have committed. Based upon these facts, Mitsubishi states a claim for a money judgment in the form of liquidated damages for breach of the promises to pay or for accounts stated, and in the form of unliquidated damages for any injury caused by fraud. In opposing the counsel fee orders at issue in these appeals, Mitsubishi seeks to tie up the appellees’ assets in order to ensure that they will be able to satisfy such a judgment. The temporary restraining order to which the parties consented at the outset of this case was akin to a prejudgment writ of attachment, presented in the form of an injunction against the defendants.23
In reality, therefore, Mitsubishi is appealing the district court’s refusal to extend the [1521]*1521reasoning of that consent order by granting prejudgment attachment of the money paid to counsel for the appellees. Mitsubishi’s strategy in this case is to tie up all of the debtors’ assets while the parties litigate the issues of indebtedness, breach of promises to pay, potential RICO violations, and the other claims for damages outlined in the complaint. Accordingly, we believe that the proper inquiry before us is whether the district court abused its discretion in declining to issue orders (as requested by Mitsubishi) that would have operated, in effect, to attach the assets used by the defendants to pay their attorneys’ fees. As is so often the case, “[w]hen the right point of view is discovered, the problem is more than half solved.” Ellison v. Georgia R.R. Co., 87 Ga. 691, 13 S.E. 809 (1891) (Bleckley, C.J.).
Under the circumstances of this case, the remedy implicitly sought by Mitsubishi when it opposed the applications for counsel fees by various defendants was equivalent to a writ of attachment. When faced with motions appearing to call for an attachment but labelled something else, federal courts again look past the terminology to the actual nature of the relief requested. See, e.g., Lechman v. Ashkenazy Enter., Inc., 712 F.2d 327, 329-30 (7th Cir.1983); Ashland Oil Co. v. Gleave, 540 F.Supp. 81, 83 (W.D.N.Y.1982) (“It is plain that attachment is the relief sought by plaintiff notwithstanding its labelling as a preliminary injunction; moreover, were it not simply improperly la-belled it would be no less necessary to treat plaintiffs motion as one for attachment because the preliminary injunction would be equivalent to an attachment order and thus subject to state law under rule 64’s last sentence.”). As is the case when we evaluate our jurisdiction, we will call a duck a duck when characterizing district court rulings in this context.
Attachment is an ancillary remedy by which a plaintiff acquires a lien upon the property of a defendant in order to obtain satisfaction of a judgment that the plaintiff may ultimately obtain at the conclusion of the litigation. In general, “the writ of attachment is used primarily to seize the debt- or’s property in order to secure the debt or claim of the creditor in the event that a judgment is rendered.” Black’s Law Dictionary 115 (5th ed. 1979). Ordinarily, “[t]he general federal rule of equity is that a court may not reach a defendant’s assets unrelated to the underlying litigation and freeze them so that they may be preserved to satisfy a potential money judgment.” In re Fredeman Litig., 843 F.2d 821, 824 (5th Cir.1988) (relying upon the Supreme Court’s decision in DeBeers Consol. Mines Ltd. v. United States, 325 U.S. 212, 65 S.Ct. 1130, 89 L.Ed. 1566 (1945)).
Rule 64 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, however, authorizes the prejudgment attachment of property for the benefit of a plaintiff in certain situations. Rule 64 makes available to district courts “all remedies providing for seizure of person or property for the purpose of securing satisfaction of the judgment ultimately to be entered in the action” and provides that, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution or an applicable federal statute, such remedies “are available under the circumstances and in the manner provided by the law of the state in which the district court is held.” The rule expressly lists attachment as one such available remedy, along with “other corresponding or equivalent remedies, however designated.” See generally 7 James W. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 64.04[1] (2d ed. 1993); 11 Wright & Miller, supra, § 2932.
Hence, as the Supreme Court has explained, “long-settled federal law provide[s] that in all eases in federal court, ... state law is incorporated to determine the availability of prejudgment remedies for the seizure of person or property to secure satisfaction of the judgment ultimately entered.” Granny Goose Foods, Inc. v. Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local No. 70, 415 U.S. 423, 437 n.10, 94 S.Ct. 1113, 1123 n.10, 39 L.Ed.2d 435 (1974). We conclude that Rule 64, and not Rule 65 (which governs injunctions generally), provides the standard for evaluating a request for preliminary injunctive relief that is, in reality, no more than a request for [1522]*1522prejudgment attachment; Rule 64 thus properly controls our disposition of these cases.24
Mitsubishi did not invoke, and the district court did not at any time address, the Georgia attachment statute. Nor did the court make any findings of fact concerning whether the appellees would fall within the statute’s restrictive grounds for prejudgment seizure of assets. In Georgia, prejudgment attachment is subject to the same conditions as postjudgment attachment in cases making demands in contract or in tort. Those conditions are found in the statutes of Georgia: Attachments may issue when the debtor:
(1) Resides out of the state;
(2) Moves or is about to move his domicile outside the limits of the county;
(3) Absconds;
(4) Conceals himself;
(5) Resists legal arrest; or
(6) Is causing his property to be removed beyond the limits of the state.
O.C.G.A. § 18-3-1 (Michie 1991).25 Based on the facts now before us, it does not appear that Mitsubishi is entitled to prejudgment attachment of the assets used by the appel-lees to pay counsel fees under the orders challenged in these appeals. The appellant has not demonstrated that any of the statutory grounds for attachment apply to the ap-pellees in this case. Moreover, the Georgia statute speaks in permissive and not mandatory terms when granting courts the authority to order prejudgment attachment when these circumstances are present. Therefore, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Mitsubishi’s request for attachment of the assets used by the appellees to pay their attorneys when it issued the counsel fee orders.
IV.
The unusual procedural posture of these appeals, and the foundational questions of judicial authority that they present, has led us to discuss broad principles of equity jurisprudence and federal jurisdiction — most of which are not new to this court or even to this century, having been well-established when Lord Eldon sat on the woolsack. In conclusion, and in the spirit of this opinion’s return to the old books, we echo the language used by the Supreme Court nearly a half-century ago:
To sustain the challenged order[s] would create a precedent of sweeping effect. This suit, as we have said, is not to be distinguished from any other suit in equity. What applies to it applies to all such. Every suitor who resorts to chancery for any sort of relief by injunction may, on a mere statement of belief that the defendant can easily make away with or transport his [1523]*1523money or goods, impose an injunction on him, indefinite in duration, disabling him to use so much of his funds or property as the court deems necessary for security or compliance with its possible decree. And, if so, it is difficult to see why a plaintiff in any action for a personal judgment in tort or contract may not, also, apply to the chancellor for a so-called injunction sequestrating his opponent’s assets pending recovery and satisfaction of a judgment in such a law action. No relief of this character has been thought justified in the long history of equity jurisprudence.
DeBeers, 325 U.S. at 222-23, 65 S.Ct. at 1135 (invalidating preliminary injunction freezing defendants’ assets in antitrust case in order to satisfy a potential contempt judgment). Prejudgment attachment of the type sought by Mitsubishi is simply not appropriate on the facts presently before us. Mitsubishi does not discuss or “distinguish DeBeers or the cases following it, but contend[s] primarily that the defendants are scoundrels who will try to escape judgment, an allegation that, even if true, would not justify the preliminary injunction.” Fredeman, 843 F.2d at 826.
Because the district court had no authority to prevent the appellees from using their assets to pay their attorneys’ fees, we hold that the court did not abuse its discretion in issuing the challenged orders.
AFFIRMED.