Section 19(1)(iii) of the Conveyancing Act and Section 123(1) of the PCL provide for the power of the mortgagee, when the mortgage money has become due, to appoint a receiver of the income of the mortgaged property or any part of it.This statutory right is implied in every mortgage, legal or equitable, created by a deed where the circumstances would allow the mortgagee to exercise a power of sale.
The mortgage money must have become due before a receiver can be appointed.In other words, the legal due date must have expired. The remedy for the appointment of a receiver is open to both legal and equitable mortgages. The legal mortgagee himself may appoint a receiver if he has such power under the mortgage deed. If that power does not exist in the mortgage deed, he can apply to court for the appointment of a receiver. An equitable mortgagee, whose is not by deed, must apply to the court for the appointment of a receiver. The receiver though appointed by the mortgagee, is the agent of the mortgagor hence the mortgagee is not liable to account to the mortagor.
The duty of the receiver is to