Press v. Geo. Woodley, Smith & Leverenz Union Foundry Works

Mr. Justice Gary

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 10th day of July, 1894, the Circuit Court in a certain cause on the chancery docket, which was commenced by Woodley to enforce a mechanic’s lien, and to which a Mrs. Cobb was principal defendant, made a decree in which among many others is a finding as follows :

“ And the court further finds that the notes secured by the trust deed from the defendant, Imogene L. Hanchett Cobb, to the defendant, Whiting G. Press, trustee, dated March 14,1892, and recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook county, as document Ho. 1,627,190, on the 14th day of March, A. D. 1892, in book 3735 of records, on page 132, are held and owned by the defendants, the Lemont State Bank and the Calumet State Bank, and that there is due to the defendants, the Lament State Bank and the Calumet State Bank, from the defendant, Imogene L. Hanchett Cobb, upon the notes and trust deeds sued upon and set forth in the answer of Whiting G. Press herein, and by them adopted as and for their own answer, the sum of §16,578.55, for which amount the said defendant banks are entitled to a lien upon the said premises.” The decree directs that Mrs. Cobb pay to those banks the sum so found due to them, and with great detail to follow directions as to priorities among the parties to whom relief is given out of the proceeds of the property, if sold as the decree provides if she does not pay.

From that decree Press has appealed.

Those banks are not parties here, neither appellants nor appellees. It is true that the record shows that Press prayed the appeal at the time the decree was entered, and that the appeal bond, both in the obligatory part and in the condition, describes him as trustee for the banks; yet, while our confidence in the counsel who appear for him here forbids the supposition, it is consistent with the record that those banks are content, have no notice of this appeal, and are quite averse to that decree being disturbed.

It is familiar law that an appellant can rely only on such errors as affect himself; not those that affect only other persons. Lagger v. Mutual Un. L. & B. Ass’n, 146 Ill. 283.

A naked trustee, without any actual beneficial interest, has no standing as complainant in a court of equity, and no title to any affirmative relief. Chisholm v. McDonald, 30 Ill. App. 176.

This suit is governed by chancery rules, and the appellant here occupies a position similar to that of a complainant in an original suit; he can ask only for such relief as he is equitably entitled to. There 'is no decree for or against him below, not even as to costs.

We can, therefore, only affirm the decree, which is accordingly done. Should the banks ever come here it will be time enough to inquire whether they have any cause to complain. Affirmed.