This is an appeal' from a decree that the trustee in bankruptcy of the Sunnyside Quarry Corporation recover from the appellant, Mary H. Selvage, $2,500, with interest thereon from, September 1, 1921, and which decree imposes upon certain real estate in Richmond a trust for1 that amount in favor of the trustee. The bankrupt was a corporation of the" state of Virginia, organized February 5, 1921, against which the petition for adjudication as a bankrupt was filed February 15, 1922, one year and ten days later. It does not appear that a share of its stock was ever paid' for. It was a-.family corporation, the presi-r dent of which was the son, and the vice president and treasurer the husband, of the appellant. The son and the husband, together with a stenographer, constituted the board of directors of the corporation. It made a contract with the Stonewall Courts Corporation to -do some work for the latter, and was to take its pay, or part of its pay, in two unimproved lots, valued by the parties at $3,000. The appellant’s husband, as vice president of the bankrupt, directed- that these two lots should be conveyed to his wife. This, however, was not actually done, but by direction of the husband the lots were sold for $2,500, and this $2,500 was applied by the appellant as a payment upon the house she purchased at 305 South Mulberry street, Richmond. Before the deed to the property:at 305 South Mulberry street had been acknowledged, a question as to the'regularity, of the transaction arose, and the eon-' veyanee was actually delivered to her counsel, to be held by him until the court should pass on the questions of law and fact involved. She consented that “all questions involving .the'claims'to all title to and interest in 305 South Mulberry street should be fully heard and adjudicated” in the court below in the bankruptcy proceedings in question.
: The .proceeds of the lots were turned over - to her, as she said, in repayment of moneys *143advanced by her to the bankrupt. The referee and the court both found that the bankrupt was not indebted to the appellant. The judge held that, if any advances had been made by her to anybody, they were to her husband and not to the corporation, and that the payment of the $2,500 to or for her was a fraud upon the bankrupt and its creditors. In our view, the record not only justifies, but requires, that conclusion.
She says that in any event there is no authority to enter a money judgment or decree against her, because the pursuit of property fraudulently obtained cannot be abandoned and a judgment in personam taken for its value. Phipps v. Sedgwick, 95 U. S. 3, 24 L. Ed. 591; U. S. Trust Co. v. Sedgwick, 97 U. S. 309, 24 L. Ed. 954; Huntington v. Saunders, 120 U. S. 80, 7 S. Ct. 356, 30 L. Ed. 580; Clark v. Beecher, 154 U. S. 632, 14 S. Ct. 1184, 24 L. Ed. 705. None of these authorities is applicable to the facts in this particular ea.se. Prom the sale of the lots, which were the property of the bankrupt, the appellant received $2,500 of its money, and that she should be required to return to the trustee in bankruptcy. Moreover, as the fund was traced into a particular piece of property, the court below was right in impressing a trust upon her interest in it, to the extent of such sum, with interest and costs.
Affirmed.