Section 1-4, Rule 59 Rules of Court
Section 1-4, Rule 59 Rules of Court
Section 1-4, Rule 59 Rules of Court
Receivership
Section 1 to Section 4
Receiver
Provisional remedy to preserve a property subject of litigation from further loss, wastage, damage,
dissipation for the protection of another person.
An indifferent person, neutral between the parties, appointed by the court to receive and preserve
the property in litigation pendent lite when it is not seem reasonable to the court that either party
will hold it.
Is a representative of the court appointed for the purpose of preserving and conserving the
property in litigation and prevent its possible destruction or dissipation if it were left in the
possession of any of the parties.
Q: Who among the parties does the receiver represent?
A: Neither the plantiff nor the defendant. He is an Agent of the Court.
Example: The ownership of a piece of land is in controversy. To be fair both parties claiming the land,
especially when both of them are in possession of it, the court will manage it. The court will appoint a
receiver and the income will be deposited. So it is the as an administrator.
Nature of Receivership
The purpose of a receivership as a provisional remedy is to protect and preserve the rights of the
parties during the pendency of the main action. It also aimed at preservation of, and at making
more secure, existing rights.
o It cannot be used as an instrument for the destruction of those rights.
The receivership provided in Rule 59 refers to the property, which is the subject of the action.
o It does not refer to the receivership authorized under banking laws and other rules of laws.
Who is a receiver?
A person appointed by the court on behalf of all the parties to the action.
For the purpose of preserving and conserving the property in litigation and preventing its possible
destruction or dissipation if it were left in the possession of any of the parties.
Illustration
Bar Question: Anna filed a complaint against Jose for the foreclosure of a mortgage of a furniture factory
with a large number of machinery and equipment. During the pendency of the foreclosure suit, Anna
learned from reliable sources that Jose was also engaged in furniture manufacturing such that from
confirmed reports Anna gathered, the machinery and equipment left with Jose were no longer sufficient to
answer for the latter’s mortgage indebtedness. In the meantime, judgment was rendered by the court in
favour of Anna but the same is not final yet.
Knowing what Jose has been doing. If you were Anna’s Lawyer, what action would you take to preserve
whatever remaining machinery and equipment left with Jose?
Suggested Answer: To preserve whatever remaining machinery and equipment are left with Jose, Anna’s
Lawyer should file a verified application for the appointment by the court of one or more receivers.
The rules provide that receivership is proper in an action by the mortgagee for the foreclosure of a
mortgage when it appears that the property is in danger of being wasted or dissipated or materially injured
and that its value is probably insufficient to discharge the mortgage debt (Section 1, Rule 59).