delivered the opinion'of the court.
One, W. H. C. Shultz, died the owner of several tracts of land, among which is one designated as the Greene *499land, containing 350 acres, one rood and twenty poles. A creditors’ suit was instituted and the tract offered for sale by special commissioners, under a decree in that suit. At this sale, which appears to have been properly conducted, the highest bid was made by the appellee, Hughson, and it was knocked down to him at $17 per acre. He complied with all of the terms of the sale and insists upon confirmation.
The widow of the decedent, Lucy Dabney Shultz, who subsequently married one G. G. Rogers, was present at the sale. She considered the bid inadequate, but was not in a position to make any better 'offer for the property. Thereafter and before the confirmation of the sale, she induced one R. C. Scott, who was not present at the sale, to offer an upset bid of $20 per acre. This upset bid was submitted to the court, and upon inquiry it appeared that the widow had written letters claiming the upset bid to be her own, though she testified that her understanding with Scott was that he could either take the property or let her have it at his bid. Thereafter and before the question raised had been decided, Scott made a further advance in his bid of $7 per acre— that is to say, $27 per acre for the property — and complied with the prescribed terms of the sale on this basis. Upon the hearing the trial court rejected both the original and the subsequent bid of Scott, and confirmed the sale to Hughson at $17 per aeré. The reason for this refusal to consider the Scott bid was doubtless because it was adjudged to be in effect the bid of the widow herself, and under many precedents in this State one who has been present at the auction sale and there had an opportunity to bid for the property is not thereafter permitted by the court to make an upset bid therefor.
This court has gone far in the protection of bidders at judicial sales, and generally confirms such sales, *500notwithstanding an upset bid, if it appears that the sale was fair and the price adequate under all of the circumstances. Lillard v. Graves, 123 Va. 193, 96 S. E. 169.
This is said in Coles v. Coles, 83 Va. 525, 5 S. E. 673: “From this review of the cases, taking into consideration the resolution of this court in this case on the former appeal, we think it may be seen that while no test of adequacy can be found which will apply to all cases, and while it is apparent that this court is averse to refusing a confirmation of a sale merely on the ground of adequacy of price, yet that it will always do so where the inadequacy‘is so gross that a confirmation of the sale will result in a sacrifice of the property. ■ And we think it equally clear that it will ordinarily set aside the sale and open the biddings, at any time before confirmation, upon the offer of a substantial bid.
“These principles are decisive of the case; for, waiving all questions of the adequacy or inadequacy of the price bid, it is perfectly clear that the offer of so large an advance bid as thirty per cent, at the price for which the land sold, made a resale necessary in justice to Mrs. Powell and Mrs. Withers, whose legacies will otherwise be entirely lost to them.”
This ¿ase, however, has these distinctive features which indicate that the bid of the appellee is inadequate and far below the real value of the land: Before the property was offered for sale, the active commissioner made inquiry of well informed people as to the price which the land ought to bring, and he testified that from information received from Mr. McCutchan, surveyor of Augusta county, the 173 acre part thereof ought to bring from $35 to $40 per acre, and that according to one J. W. Miller, a large landowner living in the neighborhood of the property, it ought to bring $30 or better; and that McCutchan advised him that the *501other 176 acres of the Greene property ought to bring from $25 to $30 per acre, and that Miller’s view was that it ought to bring $20 per acre or better. These opinions of apparently disinterested persons, it is observed, were expressed, not for the purpose of defeating confirmation after the auction sale, as is frequent in such cases, but before the property had been offered. Therefore, greater weight should be attached to these opinions than should be accorded if they had been thereafter solicited by interested persons for the purpose of defeating confirmation.
The commissioners simply reported the bids without recommendation.
Then there is the additional circumstance that the upset bids made in this case amounted to an advance of fifty-eight per cent, over Hughson’s bid. While doubtless true that the trial court could not properly accept this upset bid unconditionally, for the reasons indicated, it was nevertheless evidence of great potency indicating that to confirm the sale at the Hughson bid would be to sell the property for an inadequate price.
It was certainly very human and natural for the mother 'of these infants, both in her own interest and in theirs, to seek to defeat the confirmation of the sale at an inadequate price. She had the legal right to find, if possible, a bona fide purchaser of the property in which they were so vitally interested at an adequate price. If she had not been interested in the bid of Scott, it would have been the duty of the trial court to refuse confirmation of the sale to Hughson at $17 per acre in the face of a bona fide bid of $27 per acre from one entitled to make such offer. The only support for the Hughson bid outside of the fact that the sale was properly made is two affidavits, one made by J. S. Collins and the other by W. J. Campbell, to the effect that they thought that the *502bid of Hughson was a fair and adequate price, that much of the land is pine land, none of it is very rich, and they thought the price all that the land is worth. It also appears, however, from the evidence of another witness who is counsel for the appellants, that Campbell, one of these affiants, said that he (Campbell) regretted that he had not advanced the bids at the sale, as the property was worth considerably more than $17 per acre.
The ancient rule that property should not be sold at judicial sales for grossly inadequate prices is still effective. The weight of the evidence in this case, in our view, sufficiently indicates that, the price of $17 per acre is so inadequate as that to confirm the sale at that price would be needlessly to sacrifice the property, and while the legal rights of these infant appellants do not exceed the rights of adults in such cases, their interests are always the peculiar care of courts of equity. Neither the property of infants nor adults should be sold at judicial sales for grossly inadequate prices, if it can be fairly avoided.
We, therefore, differ with the learned trial judge and are of the opinion that because of the distinctive facts of this case the decree confirming the sale to Hughson is erroneous, and that the property should be again offered for sale, upon the usual terms and conditions, for the protection of the rights of all of the parties interested.
Reversed.