A necessary amendment of the complainant’s bill was allowed after the cause had been heard and submitted for a decree. The chancellor prescribed certain conditions precedent to the allowance of the amendment, to which the complainant formally assented. We decline to revise the action of the chancellor in imposing those conditions, and proceed to submit our reasons.
The third section of an act approved February 8th, 1858, *212directs the allowance of amendments for certain purposes, at any time before final decree, “upon such terms as the chancellor shall deem júst and equitable ” — Pamphlet Acts, 1857-8, p. 230. This act, under which the amendment here was allowed, very clearly refers the question of terms to the chancellor’s discretion. Many acts, done under discretionary powers, are revisable. Thus, decrees in suits for specific performance, and decrees fixing the amount of temporary alimony, are revisable, notwithstanding they are referred to a discretionary authority. — Pulliam v. Owen, 25 Ala. 492; Jeter v. Jeter, 36 Ala. 391. But, as a general, if not a universal rule, that discretionary authority, which a court, having original cognizance of a cause, exercises over the questions arising during its progress, and pertaining to its conduct, is not revisable. Examples of such questions occur in applications for continuances, filing pleas, amendments of pleadings, extensions of time to' answer interrogatories, changes of venue,' new trial, &c.—Banks v. State, 28 Ala. 28; Starr v. State, 25 Ala. 449; Evans v. Bolling, 5 Ala. 550; P. & M. Bank v. Walker, 8 Ala. 926; Pool v. Harrison, 18 Ala. 514; Hill v. Bishop, 2 Ala. 320; Goldsmith v. Picard, 27 Ala. 142; Zeigler v. Hall, 23 Ala. 127; Prater v. Miller, 25 Ala. 320 ; Brister v. State, 26 Ala. 107; Gayle v. Bancroft, 22 Ala. 316; Goodwin v. Harrison, 6 Ala. 438 ; Franklin v. State, 29 Ala. 14; Walker v. Blassingame, 17 Ala. 810; Tate v. Gilbert, 2 Porter, 386; Martin v. Dortch, 1 Stew. 479 ; Clason v. Shotwell, 12 John. R. 49; Marine Ins. Co. v. Hodgson, 6 Cranch, 206.
The discretionary authority of prescribing the terms of an amendment falls within the general rule above stated, and within the principle and reason of the decisions above cited. The chancellor, in prescribing the terms of an amendment, may properly be influenced by considerations referring to the conduct of the parties as observed by him, and not clearly patent on the record; and, besides, the terms themselves are, with great propriety, generally made to relate to the prosecution of the suit, and are usually executed, so that the parties could not, after a reversal, be placed in statu quo. It is true, .that the power may be abused; but the same thing is true of many other powers *213which, are universally conceded not to be revisable. No power is more susceptible of abuse, than that of deciding whether new trials shall be granted, or prescribing the terms of their allowance. The same thing may be said of the power, in criminal cases, to fix the period of imprisonment within the prescribed limits. Appellate courts must act upon the presumption, that those who preside below exercise their great powers for the promotion of justice and right.
[2.] As a condition precedent to the allowance of the amendment, the plaintiff was required to give a written consent to certain specified terms, which he gave, and thereby procured leave to amend. He is bound by the consent so given.— Waller v. Sultzbacher & Paige, 38 Ala. 318. The consideration of the questions arising upon the demurrer to the cross bill, is unnecessary. So much of the relief asked by the cross bill as the chancellor granted, was within the terms of the complainant’s consent. All the relief so granted may be attributed to the consent; and the decree, so far as it grants that relief, must be approved, upon the authority of the maxim, “consensus tollit erro» rem.”
[3 ] A material question in the case is, whether the purchasers are affected by declarations proved to have been made by Williams, who sold to them by virtue of a power of sale conferred by the mortgage to him. It is very clear that the declarations made after the sale would not be evidence against the purchasers.' — See the cases collected in Shepherd’s Digest, 586, §§ 37, 38, 42. The declarations of a vendor, in disparagement of his title, made before the sale, are admissible as against the purchaser.—Pearce v. Nix, 34 Ala. 185; Grayson v. Glover, 33 Ala. 182 ; Lide v. Lide, 32 Ala. 449; Cole v. Varner, 31 Ala. 250; Miller v. Jones, 29 Ala. 174 ; Gillespie v. Burleson, 28 Ala. 551; Jennings v. Blocker, 25 Ala. 415 ; Mobley v. Barnes, 26 Ala. 218; S. C., 21 Ala. 239; Brewer v. Brewer, 19 Ala. 481; Fontaine & Dent v. Beers, ib. 722 ; Horton v. Smith, 8 Ala. 73; Nelson v. Iverson, 17 Ala. 221; Weaver v. Yeatman, 15 Ala. 539; Sally v. Gooden, 5 Ala. 78. These declarations must be against the declarant’s interest, and there must be an iden*214tity of interest with the person against whom they are offered in evidence,
’The declarations made by Williams before the sale, relate alone to his intentions as to the manner of conducting the sale, and the ulterior purposes contemplated by him. They indicated a design to become, through the agency of others, the purchaser at his own sale, to restore the property to the mortgagor or his wife, and to prevent the mortgagor’s creditors from reaching it. These declarations do not disparage the mortgagee’s title, in the validity of which the purchasers have an identity of interest with him, and could not be said to be against-the interest of himself, as he stood at the time of making the declaration, the holder of a mortgage title. There are cases which hold such declarations admissible. — See 1 Phillipps on Evidence, C., H. & E.’s Notes, 318. We can not so regard them. They seem to us not to be within the rule, or the reason of it. They do not concern the estate, but merely announce the declarant’s intention as to a future sale of it. At all events, the question is settled in this State, by that class of decisions which hold, that where there is a question of fraud, a purchaser is not affected by his vendor’s declarations, unless -under special circumstances which exempt them from the operation of the general rule. — Smith v. Rogers, 1 S. & P. 317-322; Borland v. Mayo, 8 Ala. 104-112; Abney v. Kingsland, 10 Ala. 355; Newcombe v. Leavitt, 22 Ala. 631-641. In determining the rights of the purchasers at the sale, the antecedent declarations of the mortgagee must be excluded from view.
In the absence of the mortgagee’s declarations, there is nothing to impeach the fairness of the sale of the negroes bought by Scott. The chancellor committed no error in dismissing the bill as to him. Besides, the complainant’s relief has not been impaired by the dismissal as to Scott, if Williams is responsible for the decree against him; for Scott conveyed the negroes purchased by him to Williams, and the chancellor, after dismissing the bill as to him, set aside his purchase upon the evidence of Williams’ declarations, which were allowed full effect against the declarant himself. .No greater or .different relief could have been granted, if Scott had remained a party.
*215[4.] Tbe sales of property by tbe mortgagee were, pursuant to tbe power, for casb. Tbe arrangement of tbe mortgagee with a purchaser of tbe property, to allow bim time on tbe sums due for bis purchases, whether made before or after tbe sale, could not injure tbe mortgagor. Its tendency was rather to increase tbe number of bidders, and to enhance tbe price. We find, therefore, in that arrangement, no ground for vacating tbe sale.
[5.] We now proceed to consider tbe material questions which concern tbe sale of tbe real estate. Two mortgages were given by tbe complainant to tbe defendant Williams : tbe first to secure a debt for $6,281 25 ; tbe second to secure tbe re-payment of $1,000 loaned, which is enlarged to $1,200, tbe amount specified in tbe note, by tbe addition of usurious interest. Each of the mortgages embraced land and negroes. Some of tbe negroes conveyed by tbe mortgages were sold before tbe land. Tbe land described in tbe first mortgage, consisting of a bouse and lot contiguous to tbe town of Auburn, was sold to tbe defendant Dillard. That sale is assailed, first, upon tbe ground, that tbe sale of tbe slaves discharged tbe mortgage debt, and that there was no debt remaining when tbe land was sold. Tbe sale of the negroes embraced in tbe first mortgage discharged all tbe debt secured by it, except about $231 57. Tbe sale of slaves embraced in tbe second mortgage produced an excess of $211 80 above the amount of the debt secured by it, with legal interest. It is thus shown that tbe property sold under tbe first mortgage did not discharge it. But it may be said, that tbe excess produced by tbe sale under tbe second mortgage should have been appropriated to tbe payment of tbe balance which remained on tbe first mortgage. If that bad been done, there would still have remained due on tbe first mortgage, $19 77. Therefore, even upon tbe hypothesis of such an appropriation, tbe first mortgage was not discharged by tbe sale of tbe slaves.
But tbe concession, that it was tbe duty of tbe mortgagee to make tbe appropriation, leaves bim in tbe attitude of having sold a valuable lot of ten acres to satisfy a paltry debt of less than twenty dollars. Tbe property embraced in tbe two mortgages was distinct. Tbe first mortgage did *216not embrace the property conveyed by the second. Tbe mortgagee bad, therefore, no authority over the property in the second mortgage, or the proceeds of it, except such as was bestowed by the instrument itself. That authority was to sell, appropriate the proceeds to the payment of the debt secured by it, and pay over the excess to the mortgagor. He bad no power to appropriate the excess to the payment of another debt, secured by another mortgage. Bor the excess in bis bands, be was the debtor of the mortgagor, and the existence of such counter claim did not discharge the debt secured by the first mortgage. There is a broad distinction between a set-off and a payment. While the mortgagor would have a right of set-off, against that, or any other debt due to the mortgagee, the law did not appropriate the counter claim, or require the mortgagee to appropriate it, to the payment of the mortgage debt. — See Green v. Stone, 3 Sandf. Ch. R. 305, where the point is decided. There was, therefore, left due on the first mortgage, after the sale of the negroes, the sum , of $231 57. This sum the mortgagee bad a right to raise out of the real estate.
[6.] To satisfy tbe balance of $231 57, tbe mortgagee sold a bouse, and tbe lot upon which it was situated, containing ten acres. This bouse and lot, which were sold for two thousand one hundred dollars, are alleged by tbe complainant to have been worth five thousand dollars, are admitted to have been worth three thousand dollars, and are variously estimated by tbe witnesses at $4,500, $4,400, $4,000, and $3,000. Perhaps, a larger number of witnesses concur in tbe estimate of $3,000 than any other, and perhaps there is a preponderance of evidence in favor of that sum. Upon these facts, objections are made to tbe sale, because tbe whole lot was sold to satisfy a small sum, which tbe sale of a small portion would have sufficed to discharge; because tbe sale was made for an inadequate_price; because all tbe negroes conveyed by tbe mortgage were not sold before resort was bad to tbe land; because tbe sale was made, to tbe complainant’s detriment, in bis absence; and because tbe purchase was made for tbe benefit of tbe mortgagee.
*217The power of sale in tbe mortgage bestows authority to sell tbe property, and with tbe proceeds of tbe sale discharge tbe debt, pay the expenses' of sale, and pay oyer tbe balance to tbe mortgagor. Tbe disposition of tbe excess after paying tbe debt and expenses shows that a realization of a sum above tbe amount required to pay tbe debt was contemplated. It differs, therefore, from powers to sell so much land as will pay a given sum of money, where tbe quantity to be sold is governed by tbe sum to be raised; and tbe decisions in reference to such powers afford but little, if any, illustration of tbe question in band.— Stead v. Course, 4 Cranch’s R. 403 ; Wakefield v. Campbell, 20 Maine, 393. Tbe land was more than sufficient to pay tbe debt in this case ; and it differs from tbe case where tbe power is to sell so much as would pay a debt, and there has been a sale of a parcel inadequate to pay tbe debt. — Quarles v. Lacy, 4 Munf. 251. Tbe point here is as to tbe sale of an entire tract, to pay an amount much less than its value, where there is a power to sell tbe tract in general terms, and to pay over tbe proceeds to satisfy tbe debt and expenses, and tbe excess to tbe mortgagor.
Chancellor Kent lays down tbe rule, that where a tract of land is in parcels, distinctly marked for separate and distinct’ enjoyment, it should be sold by parcels.— Wood v. Monell 1 Johns. Ch. R. 502; Woodhull v. Osborne, 2 Edw. Ch. 614 Rowley v. Brown, 1 Binney, 61. This general rule rests upon tbe reasonable presumption, sanctioned by observation and experience, that such property will produce more when sold in parcels, because tbe sale is thus accommodated to tbe probable wants of purchasers. If there is no division of tbe tract into parcels, adapted for separate and distinct enjoyment, it is generally a reasonable requisition, that tbe party interested should show to tbe trustee, or officer selbng, by a map or diagram, or in some other intelligible manner, tbe distinct parcels into which tbe land might be profitably divided for sale. Accordingly we find that, in some cases, stress is laid upon an omission in this respect, where tbe regularity of a sale is questioned.— Wood v. Monell, supra; Woodhull v. Osborne, supra.
It is tbe primary duty of one charged with making a sale, *218to adopt the mode which will probably command the best price, and to exercise Ms best judgment in determining what is the mode likely to accomplish that end; and a sale in a manner variant from that which was known to be most likely to produce the largest price, would be sufficient reason for avoiding the sale. So, also, a failure to sell in the mode which a reasonable exercise of the seller’s judgment would have shown to be the most probable means of bringing the largest price, would be a good ground of objection to a sale, where the price was altogether inadequate.—Hewson v. Daggert, 8 Johns. R. 257; Stall v. Macalaster, 9 Ohio, (Ham.) 19-24; Gray & Howard v. Shaw, 14 Missouri, 341; Ord v. Noel, 5 Madd. R. 438. A mere error of judgment in the selection of the mode of sale, whereby some injury may probably have resulted, ought not to be any ground for the avoidance of a sale. If it were, all certainty and stability would be stripped from such sales,' and their validity would depend upon mere vague speculation. The rule which we have deduced from Chancellor Kent’s opinion is a general one, adopted because it will lead usually to a correct solution of the question whether a sale should be by parcels,.and designed to aid in determining whether a sale should be avoided because it was not made in that manner.
We may now look at the facts, and, in'the light of the principles which we have announced, decide whether the sale of the land ought to be avoided. The lot, having an area of ten acres, was in a rectangular form, and, being contiguous to town, was used as a place- of family residence. Its chief value resulted from its suitableness for a family residence. The dwelling-house was situated upon the western part of the lot; and the stable and cattle lot appurtenant to it, with a steep hill, and a branch or swamp, were upon the eastern part of the lot. _ The witnesses testify, that the lot might have been bisected into parcels of five acres. This would have separated the dwelling from the stable and cattle lot, and cut off for distinct sale a lot of five acres, with stable, steep hill side, and branch or swamp. No line of division was drawn across the lot. All its parts were in their use, tributary in common to the single purpose of a *219residence. It was in a condition precisely the opposite of a tract “ in parcels, distinctly marked for separate and distinct enjoyment/' and, therefore, does not present the circumstances under which the general rule above stated requires a sale to be made in parcels.-
The mortgagor afforded no information, by diagram, or map, or otherwise, of any separation, or susceptibility of separation, into parcels; nor does it seem that he indicated any wish for a sale in parcels, nor any opinion that such a mode of sale would be advantageous. It is, however, alleged as an excuse for his failure to do so, and also as an independent objection to the sale, that he was absent, and that the sale was made in violation of an agreement for its postponement until his return. The complainant was absent in another State at the time of the sale; but he was notified of the appointment of the day of sale before he left, and his allegation of an agreement to postpone the sale until he returned is denied by the answer, and not sustained by any proof. So he stands before us as inexcusably absent from the sale, and failing to inform the mortgagee of his desire for a sale by parcels, and to show that such sale could be advantageously made. The testimony is conflicting as to the susceptibility of an advantageous division of the lot for the purposes of the sale. A number of witnesses testify in favor of the affirmative of the question. Quite a number testify to the contrary, and give reasons which very strongly persuade us of their correctness. Seasoning from the nature of the lot, and of the . uses to which it was appropriated, and for which it was fitted, and weighing the conflicting testimony bearing directly upon the point, we are made to doubt strongly, whether injury would not have resulted from a division of the lot and a Sale of a part of it. We certainly are far from being affirmatively convinced, that any advantage would have resulted from such a course. We must decide, that the sale was not voidable because the entire lot was sold. The land was sold for $2,100, while it was worth certainly $3,000, perhaps more. We think it altogether probable that the injury to the complainant would have be'en still greater, if a part of the lot had been sold. There is *220nothing in tbe testimony wbicb shows that any depreciation of price resulted from the mode of sale adopted.
[7.] Inadequacy of price is not, of itself, a ground for the vacation of ' a sale, unless it is so gross as to shock the sense of justice.— Williamson v. Dale, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 290; Livingstone v. Byrne, 11 Johns. Rep. 555; American Ins. Co. v. Oakley, 9 Paige, 259 ; Judge v. Wilkins, 19 Ala. 765. The inadequacy of consideration here does ñot justify a vacation of the sale.
The purchaser of the land, Dillard, cannot be affected by the declarations of Williams. This results from a principle hereinbefore settled.
[8.] The mortgagee’s failure to sell all the negroes, before resorting to the land, is urged as an objection to the sale. There is no merit in the objection. The mortgagee sold all the negroes of which he had possession; and the others were either dead, or adversely claimed; and the latter could not have been sold for a reasonable price, even if they belonged to the complainant, and could have been gotten into possession by the mortgagee.
[9.] An attorney, controlling an execution on the mortgagor, proposed to sell the land under the execution, and to discharge the balance due on the mortgage, after the sale of the negroes, out of the proceeds of the sale of the land, This proposition, Williams, the mortgagee, rejected; and his rejection of it, in our opinion, is no evidence of fraud, nor ground of objection to the sale. He had no right, by an arrangement with a third person, to substitute a sale under execution for the sale under mortgage, as the means of collecting his debt.
We do not deem it necessary to notice other points in the argument, in favor of vacating the sale of the land. We find, neither in them, nor in those we "have noticed, sufficient reason for setting aside the sale of the land.
We concur in the chancellor’s conclusion, that the proof does not sustain the charge of fraud in the sale of cotton, in consideration of which sale the complainant’s note was given.
[10.] The chancellor, in his decree settling the principles upon which the account should be taken, directed the regis*221ter to charge the mortgagee with the hire of the slaves from the commencement of his possession, and to make annual rests, and appropriate the annual hire, first, to the discharge of the interest, and then to the reduction of the principal. There are authorities which hold, that the mortgagee should not be charged with interest on the annual profits. — Morrow v. Turney, 35 Ala. 139 ; Hogan v. Stone, 1 Ala. 496; Walton v. Witherington, 9 Missouri, 545. The chancellor has followed the general rule, which governs in taking an account between mortgagor and mortgagee, and which is consistent with our statutory mode of computing interest; and he certainly committed no error. — Code, § 1522; 3 Powell on Mortgages, 956, 957, 958, and notes; 1 Hill on Mortgages, 424, 420; Shephard v. Elliott, 4 Mad. R. 254; Quarrel v. Beckford, 1 Mad. R. 269, 274. The question has been between allowing no interest on the annual profits, and computing interest upon the plan adopted by the chancellor. It seems never to have been supposed that a mortgagor had any cause of complaint, where the chancellor’s mode of computation was adopted.
[11.] The complainant excepted to the value of the hires of the slaves, as determined by the register; the chancellor overruled the exception, and we are now called upon to revise the register’s decision. The rule is to indulge all reasonable presumptions in favor of the register’s decision upon questions of fact, such as those now under consideration, and not to reverse it unless clearly satisfied that it is wrong. Judge Story goes so far as to say, “that the court must be clearly satisfied that there has been an unquestionable error.” — Donnell v. Col. Ins. Co., 2 Sumner, 366, 371; Kinsey v. Kinsey, 37 Ala. The testimony as to the annual value of the slaves is conflicting, and voluminous. We have made an examinat ion of it. No two minds would ever draw the same conclusion from it. As the result of our examination, we feel no full conviction that the register’s conclusion is wrong. His conclusions are not unreasonable. It does not appear to us that they are plainly wrong; and, therefore, we will not reverse the chancellor’s decree confirming the report.
[12-13.] We have taken upon ourselves the labor of *222investigating, as well as we could, tbe vast number of questions of fact supposed to be presented by tbe complainant’s exceptions. We do not tbinb, however, tbat tbe evidence and tbe exceptions were brought before tbe chancellor in such a manner as to make it bis duty to revise tbe report, so far as tbe register’s decisions on tbe question of hire are concerned; nor do we tbinb it is our duty to revise those decisions. For tbe purpose of establishing and preserving a correct practice, it is proper for us to announce tbe rules which are disregarded in tbe register’s proceedings, and by tbe party excepting.
Tbe register states in bis report tbe aggregate of tbe Mre of all tbe negroes, some fourteen or fifteen in number, for each one of tbe several .years through which tbe account runs, without affording any means of ascertaining what was bis decision as to tbe distinct value of tbe several negroes. He reports testimony; but it does not appear whether tbat which be reports is all tbat was before him; and we suspect tbat be reports only so much of tbe evidence as was taken on oral examination before him, omitting tbe depositions bearing on tbe subject of tbe report, which bad been taken before tbe bearing, and which are found in tbe transcript. Tbe complainant excepts to tbe report, on tbe ground tbat tbe amount allowed on account of hire by tbe register was less than tbe proof authorized. It was improper for tbe register to report tbe evidence at all. Tbe decree did not require him to report tbe evidence; and tbat being tbe case, it was bis duty, according to tbe general rule, which prevailed in English practice, simply to state tbe facts found by him, as is done in a special verdict, and it was irregular for him to report tbe evidence. Tbat practice has been recognized and pointed out as tbe correct mode of proceeding, by our decisions. — 1 Hoffman’s Ch. Pr. 545; 2 Dan. Ch. Pl. & Pr. 1480, 1481, n.; 2 Smith’s Ch. Pr. 162 ; In the matter of Hemiup, 3 Paige’s Ch. R. 305; Mott v. Harrington, 15 Verm. 185, 197; Darrington v. Borland, 3 Porter, 9, 39; Kirkman v. Vanlier, 7 Ala. 217, 227; Alexander v. Alexander, 8 Ala. 796, 805; Kinsey v. Kinsey, 37 Ala. 393.
It is tbe duty of tbe register, upon tbe application of *223tbe parties, to furnish the evidence appertaining to the matter of exception.- — -See the authorities last cited; also, Donnell v. Col. Ins. Co., 2 Sum. 371; 2 Smith’s Ch. P. 376 ; Harding v. Handy, 11 Wheaton, 126. The respective parties should specify the .testimony,' upon which they rely to support and resist the exception. — See same authorities, also, 2 Dan. Ch. Pl. & Pr. 1497, n. 2; Pearson v. Darrington, 32 Ala. 227. The register could, under the English practice, always have the means of furnishing the evidence; for, originally, the examination in the register’s office was upon written interrogatories, and the rule adopted in 1828, which allowed viva-voce examinations, required that the testimony should be taken down. — -2 Dan. Pl. & Pr. 1387; Remsen v. Remsen, 2 Johns. Ch. R. 495-499 ; Kirkman v. Vanlier, 7 Ala. 228. Our statute (Code, § 2934), which authorizes viva-voce examinations, has omitted to require that the testimony be taken down in writing. But we must take the “ analogy ” of the English rules of practice adopted as late as 1845. — See 7th Rule of Practice, 24 Ala. VII. By analogy to the English practice, prevailing long before 1845, it must be held to be the duty of the register, in this State, to take down the examinations in his office in writing.
The chancellor seems to have been of opinion, that the only mode of revising the register’s decisions upon questions is by reserving “in writing the points arising on a reference,” as authorized by section 2937 of the Code. The chancellor expressed the same opinion in Kinsey v. Kinsey, (supra,) where we adopted a different view of the subject. We did not then, and do not now, think the Code was designed to abolish the established mode of revising the decisions of the register upon questions of fact referred to him. The proper practice is, for the register to take down in writing the testimony taken before him, and, upon exceptions made, furnish all the evidence-in reference to the exception for which the parties may apply, and that the parties shall specify the evidence upon which they respectively rely. Each exception itself should designate the objectionable item, and point to the evidence by which it is designed to support it. — Harding v. Handy, 11 Wheaton, 126; Darrington v. Borland, 3 Porter, 39; Story v. Livingston, *22413 Peters, 366. No testimony can be considered upon exceptions to the register’s report, unlessit was given in before him. Not even the answer ean be considered, unless it was read in evidence before the register. — 2 Daniell’s Ch. Pl. & Pr. 1498. It is, therefore, necessary for the parties to give in evidence such parts of the pleadings and proofs taken before the hearing, 'as they may deem material. Neither the register, nor the chancellor, is to be required to search through the entire file, for the evidence pertaining to the questions arising on the reference. The register must make a statement as to what evidence was given in before him, in order that he may be able to furnish copies to the parties on their application.
The register in this case very properly reports the results of his inquiry, without going into detail. But he should have appended a schedule of the particular items in the account as settled, and in it refer to the testimony on each item, and refer to that schedule in his report. In omitting to do this, and in affording the chancellor no means of ascertaining his decisions upon the different items of hire, he has committed an error. — 2 Dan. Ch. Pl. & Pr. 1481. The complainant should have objected to the report, for that error, in the court below, if he sustains any injury from it; and there a remedy might have been afforded. What is the effect of the violation of the rules of practice in this case? The court is to revise the register’s several decisions upon a number of questions of fact, equal to the number of negroes multiplied by six, the number of years for which, the hire was to be ascertained. These questions are to be considered and decided as original propositions, without any knowledge of the decision of the register upon any one of them. The court is not informed, with any degree of certainty, as to what evidence was read before the register. If the chancellor indulges the conjecture that the register decided in reference to all the evidence pertaining to the matters of inquiry, which was taken before the hearing, and which was taken upon the reference before him, then he must take up, one by one, the vast number of questions, and look through the transcript, and select from the numerous depositions the different parcels of testimony bearing *225upon tbe different questions as be takes tbem up, and make up tbe best decision be can. And wben be bas done tbis, be does not know wbetber bis decision upon any particular item is concurrent with that of tbe officer whose judgments be is re-vising. Tbe object of a reference to tbe register is to aid tbe chancellor. But tbe reference certainly can neither enlighten him, nor facilitate bis labors, if be is left as in tbis case, to consider all tbe questions as original propositions, and search through tbe file for tbe evidence bearing upon tbem. Indeed, it would have been obviously better for him to have bad no reference, and to have required tbe parties to come before him and produce tbe testimony bearing upon tbe different items.
In order still further to illustrate tbis subject, we extract some strong expressions relating to it from the opinions of distinguished judges. Chief-Justice Marshall says: “ It is not the province of a court to investigate items of an account. The report of a master is received as true, wben no exception is taken; and the exceptions are to be regarded only so far as they are supported by special statements of the master, or by evidence which ought to be brought before the court by reference to the particular testimony on which the exceptor relies. Were it otherwise — were the court to look into the immense mass of testimony laid before the commissioner, the reference to him would be of little avail. Such testimony, indeed, need not be reported, farther than it is relied on to support, explain, or oppose a particular exception.”- — Harding v. Handy, supra. Judge Story, in Donnell v. Col. Ins. Co., (supra,) remarked: “Wben exceptions are taken, the evidence, which furnishes the ground of the exception, should be required by the party excepting to be stated by the master; for, otherwise, the court will not wander at large into the evidence, in order to ascertain wbether by possibility the master was wrong in bis conclusion or not.” And it is held in Story v. Livingston, (13 Peters, 366,) that “exceptions to a master’s report must state, article by article, the parts of the report which are intended to be excepted to.”
We have more than once overlooked tbe grossest irregularities in tbe proceedings in reference to matters of account *226before the register, and in his report of those proceedings, and in the exceptions to it. We observe with regret there is a growing inattention to the rules which govern in such matters, and that there is imminent danger that the administration of substantial justice by the chancellors, or in this court upon appeal, will be rendered utterly impracticable, unless the increasing evil can be remedied. We have therefore endeavored in this case to set forth, with more than usual particularity, some leading rules and principles, an attention to which will simplify the practice, facilitate and aid in the administration of justice, alleviate the labors of the court, and enable the chancellor and this court on appeal to give to each assailed decision of the register an intelligent and satisfactory revision. If the registers and solicitors in the court below are held to a strict observance of the rules, it will lead to a salutary reform of the present careless practice, and be productive of much good. It would be peculiarly gratifying to us if this should be the last case in which we shall be precluded from making a satisfactory revision of each decision of the register, which is the subject of an unsustained exception.
We do not perceive any evidence in the record that the register refused to permit the examination of Ousley; or, if he had done so, that an error was committed by the register to the appellant’s prejudice; or that there was any objection to the ruling of the register in reference to it.— Kinsey v. Kinsey, supra; Pearson v. Darrington, 32 Ala. 263.
If any error was committed in the rulings against the complainant upon the evidence, the result has not been thereby affected.
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.