delivered the opinion of the Court:
1. It is not quite apparent to us how we can properly review the order appealed from in this case without a bill of exceptions or some equivalent therefor. There is no bill of exceptions in the record; nor is there anything to show definitely what the testimony was upon which the order in question was based. We find in the printed transcript before usa number of affidavits on each side, but nothing to show that these affidavits were used at the hearing, or whether there was any oral or other testimony introduced by either party. The order appealed from makes no reference whatever to the affidavits, and does not purport to be based upon it.
It is true that the argument before us was conducted upon the theory that these affidavits constituted the whole testimony in the case; and yet reference was repeatedly made to matters not contained in these affidavits. But there is no agreement of parties or of counsel that these affi*373davits were the testimony upon which the case was decided in the court below; and there is no certificate of that court as to what took place before it.
A battle of affidavits, even if it appeared conclusively that they were the whole testimony in the cause, is not a satisfactory mode for the determination of issues intended to be presented to an appellate tribunal, however necessary or proper they may be in the trial court. They need the essential element and crucial test of cross-examination. They present more frequently the ingenious manipulation of counsel than the candid testimony of witnesses. It may be that, in the appeals provided by the act of Congress creating this court which are allowed to be taken from certain interlocutory orders of the Supreme Court of the District, there is no other mode of determining the propriety of the orders appealed from than by the consideration of the same affidavits that were before that court, although even then it should in some way definitely appear that upon such affidavits the orders appealed from were based. But the appeal in the case before us purports to be taken as from a final order of the court below; and that can only be heard by us, in accordance with the course of the common law, by the means of a bill of exceptions. This is in accordance with the repeated decisions of this court, as well as with the unanimous decisions of all other courts in causes at common law, in the absence of special statutory provision to the contrary. See Otterback v. Patch, 5 App. D. C. 69; Lyon v. Ford, 7 App. D. C. 314; Barbour v. Paige Hotel Co., 2 App. D. C. 174; Wilkins v. Hillman, 8 App. D. C. 469.
In the case of Barbour v. Paige Hotel Co., which was a case of attachment, and where it was held that, under the special provisions of the statute, a formal bill of exceptions was not necessary, this court said, recognizing the general rule: “It is certainly true that in cases at common law, where there has been trial of an issue of fact, the evidence, *374whether written or oral, does not become part of the record unless made so by bill of exceptions or agreed statement.”
In the case of Lyon v. Ford, which arose upon proceedings in scire facias', the principle of which is entirely applicable to the present case, we said:
“One of the most usual pleas in either case would be that of nul tiel record; and that plea would raise an issue of fact, although triable by the court and not by a jury. Being an issue of fact, and not an issue of law, there is no mode known to our law whereby the action of the trial court in regard to it can be reviewed in an appellate court, except, by means of a bill of exceptions. While we might know what record ought to have been offered in support of the affirmative side of the issue, we cannot know what record was actually produced, or whether the plaintiff did not make default and fail to produce any record. We cannot assume that everything was done in a trial before a trial court that should naturally have been done. We can only know properly what happened in such cases bj7 the certificate of the trial judge appended to a bill of exception.”
And in the case of Wilkins v. Hillman, which was a case of attachment, we said:
“Undoubtedly the proper mode for bringing up a case of this kind for review is by bill of exceptions. . . . The question to be determined in cases like the present is usually a single issue of fact. But when it is desired to have the adjudication of the trial justice on that question reviewed in this court, it is proper that it should be brought before us in the mode usual in the trial of causes at the common law by requests for rulings upon the testimony presented to the trial justice upon the conclusion of that testimony, exception then and there taken to the ruling, and sueli exception in due time thereafter fashioned into a formal bill of exceptions purporting to have been taken at the time of the trial, as in other cases.”
*375In view of these cases, which unquestionably express the rule and the practice of the common law, it is quite clear that there is no record before us in this case upon which« we can properly review the order of the trial justice.
2. But even if we assume that the record before us might be regarded as an agreed statement, dispensing with a bill of exceptions, we find no reason to disturb the decision in this case. In a matter so largely appealing to the equitable discretion of the trial court, and under such circumstances as those here apparent, it should be made very clear to an appellate tribunal that the order appealed from is erroneous to induce the reversal of such order. There is no such clear indication of error. On the contrary, it would seem that the trial court was entirely right in the premises.
What Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Graffam v. Burgess, 117 U. S. 180, 186, 194, said in his usual incisive planner, is quite applicable to the present case. He said:
“It is insisted that the proceedings were all conducted according to the forms of law. Very likely. Some of the most atro'cious frauds are committed in that way. Indeed, the greater the fraud intended, the more particular the parties to it often are to proceed according to the strictest forms of law. . . . The rule has become almost universal, that a sale will not be set aside for inadequacy of price, unless the inadequacy be so great as to shock the conscience, or unless there be additional circumstances against its fairness (citing numerous cases). From the cases here cited we draw the general conclusion that, if the inadequacy of price is so gross as to shock the conscience, or if, in addition to gross inadequacy, the purchaser has been guilty of any unfairness, or has taken any undue advantage, or if the owner of the property, or party interested in it, has been for any other reason misled or surprised, then the sale will be regarded as fraudulent and void, or the party injured will be permitted to redeem the property sold. Great inade*376quacy requires only slight circumstances of unfairness in the conduct of the party benefited by the sale to raise the presumption of fraud. . . .
“Mr. Kerr, in his treatise on Fraud and Mistake, says: ‘ Inadequacy of consideration, if it be of so gross a nature as to amount in itself to conclusive and decisive evidence of fraud, is ground for cancelling the transaction.’ Kerr on Fraud (Amer. Ed.), 186. Chancellor Desaussure, in the case of Butler v. Haskell, 4 Desaussure, 651, 697, on the same subject, says: [I consider the result of the great body of the cases to be, that wherever the court perceives that a sale of property has been made at a grossly inadequate price, such as would shock a correct mind, this inadequacy furnishes a strong, and in general a conclusive, presumption, though there be no direct proof of fraud, that an undue advantage has been taken of the ignorance, the weakness, or the distress and necessity of the vendor; and this imposes on the purchaser a necessity to remove this violent presumption by the clearest evidence of the fairness of his conduct.’
“It is true that these observations, both of Mr. Kerr and Chancellor Desaussure, were made in reference-to private sales between parties and do not strictly apply to judicial sales. But they show that great inadequacy of price is a circumstance which a court of equity will always regard with suspicion, unless it appears by the circumstances of the case, or by evidence, that it was no fault of the buyer.”
The case of Graffam v. Burgess was a proceeding in equity; but its doctrine is entirely applicable to proceedings at common law where the court acts in the exercise of its equitable discretion and its control over its own process, which it should never permit to be used unnecessarily and wantonly to the injury of any one. And that the process of the court, especially during the term at which the judgment was rendered, is within its control, and subject for good cause to be amended, modified, or recalled, is beyond reasonable question. For there is inherent in every court *377a power to supervise the conduct of its officers and the execution of its judgments and process. Griffin v. Thompson, 2 How. 244.
That there was gross inadequacy of price in this case, sufficient to shock the conscience, is too plain to need any argument to show it. At the very lowest appraisement the interest of the appellee in the property sought to be sold was worth not less than $1,000 or $1,200; and the preponderance of testimony would indicate a much greater value. This interest was sold for the paltry sum of $145. Of course, we do not take into consideration the alleged inchoate dower interest of the appellee’s wife, if such there be, which is not shown; nor do we regard in the estimate the void devise over contingent upon indefinite failure of issue on the part of the appellee; for that can have no part in the consideration. If that devise entered into the marshal’s sale in such manner as to affect the result, as would seem to have been the case and to have been intended by the appellants with the view of affecting the result, that circumstance was amply sufficient, if additional circumstance be needed, in connection with the gross inadequacy of price, to vitiate the sale.
But this is not the only circumstance deserving of consideration. Not much consideration, probably, is due to the judgment debtor who for years manifested no purpose to satisfy the just demand against him, notwithstanding that his property was amply sufficient for the purpose. Nor is it, perhaps, a matter of great importance that the two appellants entered into a speculative arrangement' with each other, of which the circumstances leave no doubt, to appropriate the appellee’s property to themselves, by its sale at a sacrifice, under a writ of execution. But in the enforcement of that writ a well established rule of law was disregarded.
• Levy was made on three several and distinct lots, or on three several and distinct parts of several lots, any one of *378which would have been sufficient to satisfy the judgment. Yet they were sold in bulk as one piece, for a nominal sum, It is well settled law that whén several distinct parcels or lots of land are to be sold under execution, it is the duty of the officer to offer them for sale separately, so that competition may be increased, and no more property be sold than necessary to satisfy the execution. Tiernan v. Wilson, 6 John. Ch. 411; Jackson v. Newton, 18 John. 355; Johnson v. Garrett, 1 C. E. Green (N. J.) 31; Rorer on Judicial Sales, Secs. 81, 730; Freeman on Executions Sec. 206; 12 Am. & Eng. Encyc. L., Title, Judicial Sales.
Nor does the fact that the three different parcels were contiguous to each other and were capable of being described by metes and bounds as one lot, and were in fact so described in the levy and the advertisement of sale, and as such sold in pursuance of the advertisement, aid the matter in any'manner. It is plain that, even with the specific description by metes and bounds thus given, the lot was large enough to be subdivided, and should have been subdivided before sale. It was more than sufficient for two ordinary city lots. If sales under execution at law are to be sustained .as muniments of" title, the officer making, such sales must use reasonable discretion in their conduct, and must not unnecessarily sacrifice the interest of the judgment debtor while satisfying the just demands of the creditor. The perfunctory manner in which such sales have sometimes been conducted, cannot be commended.
We attach no importance to the fact that a deed was executed and delivered by the marshal to the purchaser in this case. Under other circumstances and other conditions such fact might be exceedingly important: Titles pass by deeds, and rights thereby become vested ; and vested rights should not lightly be interfered with.
But it is not in the power of a purchaser at an execution sale, by hastening to take his deed from the sheriff or marshal, to defeat the right which we have seen to be inherent *379in the court to control its process, especially when that purchaser is the plaintiff in the judgment, as he virtually is in the present case. Until the sheriff or marshal makes return of the writ and of the manner of his service of it, and the court is enabled to judge of the propriety of such service, the debtor cannot be barred of his right of objection and to have the sale vacated on the ground of irregularity. It is only required of him that he should act promptly before any rights of innocent parties have intervened. See Am. and Eng. Encyc. of L. (1st Ed.), Vol. 12, p. 235-239, and cases there cited.
In conclusion, we are of opinion that the order of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, vacating the sale in this case, should be affirmed with costs. And it is so ordered.