Here’s a function you can use to sort the list by multiple objects, where if the first object is equal, the second order will be used as a fallback. Empty values should also be ignored to fallback order, if possible.
function sortObjects(list, orderBy){
    list.sort(function(a, b){
        let byIndex = 0;
        let order = orderBy[byIndex];
        while(!a[order.by] || !b[order.by] || a[order.by] === b[order.by]){
            byIndex++;
            if(byIndex >= orderBy.length){break;}
            order = orderBy[byIndex];
        }
        if(!a[order.by] || !b[order.by] || a[order.by] === b[order.by]){
            return false;
        }
        if(order.desc){
            return a[order.by] < b[order.by];
        }
        return a[order.by] > b[order.by];
    });
    return list;
}
Usage:
var objs = [
    {a: 10, b: 20, c: 30},
    {a: 30, b: 10, c: 20},
    {a: 20, b: 10, c: 30},
];
sortObjectList(objs, [{by: 'a'}]);
[
    {a: 10, b: 20, c: 30},
    {a: 20, b: 10, c: 30},
    {a: 30, b: 10, c: 20},
]
sortObjectList(objs, [{by: 'a', desc: true}]);
[
    {a: 30, b: 10, c: 20},
    {a: 20, b: 10, c: 30},
    {a: 10, b: 20, c: 30},
]
sortObjectList(objs, [{by: 'b', desc: true}, {by: 'c'}]);
[
    {a: 10, b: 20, c: 30},
    {a: 30, b: 10, c: 20},
    {a: 20, b: 10, c: 30},
]
Another example:
var objs = [
    {a: 5, b: 5},
    {a: 10, b: 15},
    {a: 15, b: 25},
    {b: 10},
    {b: 20},
    {a: 10, b: 30},
    {a: 10, b: 12},
];
sortObjectList(objs, [{by: 'a'}, {by: 'b'}]);
[
    {a: 5, b: 5},
    {b: 10},
    {a: 10, b: 12},
    {a: 10, b: 15},
    {b: 20},
    {a: 10, b: 30},
    {a: 15, b: 25},
]