OPINION
Emmеns appeals the award of a decedent’s profit-sharing plan to appellee Marla Johnson. We reverse and render.
FACTS
Decedent Malcolm Emmens participated in a Prudential-Bache profit-sharing plan that was held solely in his name and named his wife, Marla Johnson, the beneficiary. Dece *707 dent and Johnson divorced in 1988. The divorce decree states:
Respondent [decedent] is awarded the following as Respondent’s sole and separate property, and Petitioner is hereby divested of all right, title, interest, and claim in and to such property:
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8. Any and all sums of cash in the possession of or subject to the sole control of Respondent, including money on account in banks, savings institutions, or other financial institutions, which accounts stand in Respondent’s sole name or from which Respondent has the sole right to withdraw funds or which are subject to Respondent’s sole control. 1
The divorce decree does not expressly refer to the profit-sharing plan. Appellant contends this language waives Johnson’s rights in the plan.
At divorce, the plan’s value was $77. Decedent never changed the beneficiary, nor did he redesignate Johnson as the beneficiary, although he could have done so any time. The acсount’s value later rose to about $18,-000.
The governing instrument of the profit-sharing plan provides:
The designation form last accepted by the Plan Administrator during the designating person’s lifetime before such distribution is to commence shall be controlling and, whether or not fully dispositive of the vested portion of the Account of the Participant involved, thereupon shall revoke all such forms previously filed by that person.
After Emmens died and before benefits were paid, appellant notified Prudential that under Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.638 (Vernon 1993), 2 the divorce terminated the designation of Johnson as beneficiary. Thereafter, appellant sued to receive plan benefits for the estate.
The trial judge first ruled for appellant, but then reheard the cause and ruled that Johnson, the ex-wife, was the proper beneficiary.
ANALYSIS
Emmens contends she should receive the proceeds because Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.633 and federal common law mandate that a former spouse who was designated as beneficiary during marriage, but not redesignated after divorce, is not entitled to death benefits.
Applicable Law
This issue is governed by federal law because the profit-sharing plan is covered by ERISA.
See
29 U.S.C. § 1002(2)(A), (3);
Lyman Lumber Co. v. Hill,
Federal Statutory or Common Law?
We “look to either the statutory language [of ERISA] or, finding no answer there, to federal common law which, if not clear, may draw guidance from analogous state law.”
Brandon,
ERISA — Federal Statutory Law
The Sixth Circuit has held that section 1104(a)(1)(D) of ERISA specifically controls.
McMillan,
Federal Common Law
Several federal appellate courts have looked to, or created, federal common law because they found, contrary to
McMillan,
that no express ERISA provision controls this issue.
Mohamed v. Kerr,
Petitioner [husband] is awarded the following as Petitioner’s sole and separate property, and Respondent [wife] is divested of all rights, title, interest, and claim in and to such property
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(8) Any and all sums, whether matured or unmatured, accrued or unaccrued, vested or otherwise, together with all increases thereof, the proceeds therefrom, and any other rights relating to any profit sharing plan, retirement plan, pension plan, employee stock option plan, employee savings *709 plan, aсcrued unpaid bonuses, or other benefit program existing by reason of Petitioner’s past, present, or future employment.
Id. at 1323,1327.
Thus, the ex-wife in
Brandon
lost, because of “waiver,” even though: 1) life insurance was not mentioned in the divorce decree, 2) the husband named her a beneficiary after they separated and after the divorce was filed, 3) in the divorce suit, she signed a waiver of citation, had no attorney, and did not appear in court, and 4) after the divorce, the former spouses “continued to see each other and sustained many social contacts.”
Brandon requires any waiver of ERISA benefits to be explicit, voluntary, and made in good faith. Id. at 1327. Voluntariness and good faith are not in dispute here; if we follow the federal common law as declared in Brandon, the only issue is whether Johnson explicitly waived her rights by consenting to the divorce dеcree. Id.
Brandon
is not controlling, however, because we are not controlled by decisions of the lower federal courts, including the Fifth Circuit.
Penrod Drilling Corp. v. Williams,
The
Brandon
court first found that the issue of beneficiary designation was preempted by ERISA.
Brandon,
The court next considered whether the anti-alienation provision of ERISA prevented the former spouse from waiving her rights by consenting to the divorce decree. For reasons unrelated to this case, the Fifth Circuit found no violation of the anti-alienation statute.
Brandon,
Having found that none of ERISA’s provisions controlled, the Fifth Circuit proceeded to create federal common law by adopting a significantly modified version of Texas Family Code section 3.632.
Brandon,
Federal respect for state domestic relations law has a long and venerable history. When courts face a potential conflict between state domestic relations law and federal law, the strong presumption is that state law should be given precedence.... The law of family relations has been a sacrosanct enclave, carefully protectеd against federal intrusion. One way our federalist system maintains the integrity of the folkways and mores of localities is *710 through the conservation of state control over the creation and separation of families.
Brandon,
We believe the Fifth Circuit took the wrong course when it modified Texas law in this respect, and we doubt that the modification is bolstered by
Lyman Lumber.
In
Lyman Lumber,
Minnesota law was adopted and followed — without modification
5
— and Minnesota law is the exact opposite of Texas law.
Lyman Lumber,
Texas statutory law unambiguously reaches the opposite result of Minnesota and Illinois law, and any ex-spouse wishing to avoid that strong, clear, rеpeatedly enacted public policy must come within one of the three exceptions in Family Code sections 3.632 and 3.633, which has not been done in this case. Moreover, the supervision of the Texas courts is exercised in every divorce case, and therefore, a property agreement incorporated in a final divorce decree should be entitled to the presumption of regulаrity, i.e., the presumption that it was entered voluntarily, knowingly, and in good faith. Consequently, we disagree with the Fifth Circuit’s conclusion that “wholesale adoption of the Texas redesignation statute will not sufficiently protect the interests of beneficiaries.”
Brandon,
Nor do we agree that waiver is the controlling issue.
See Brandon,
Some federal opinions, like McMillan and the dissents in Fox Valley, state that allowing a divorce to nullify a beneficiary designation defеats Congress’s intent in enacting ERISA. Judge Easterbrook, dissenting in Fox Valley, stated:
Rules requiring payment to named beneficiaries yield simple administration, avoid double liability, and ensure that beneficiaries get what’s coming quickly, without the folderol essential under less-certain rules.
Simple Administration
We agree with the majority in Fox Valley that allowing payment to other than the named beneficiary poses no threat to simple administration. The court declared:
We also disagree ... that our decision imposes burdensome obligations on plan administrators. No such additional burdens will be imposed because, under the ERISA statutory scheme, a plan administrator must investigate the marital history of a participant and determine whether any domestic relations orders exist that could affect the distribution of benefits. This case arose from just such an investigation. Our decision only requires plan administrators to continue their current practice of thoroughly investigating the marital status of a participant.... It was suggested ... that under our holding the Fund would be burdened with always having to investigate to determine if possibly there was a waiver, or something else affecting payment of the benefit to the last-named beneficiary. We place no such investigative burdеn or responsibility on the Fund beyond what is imposed by statute. Under the facts of this ease, we need only hold that the settlement waiver is effective when it becomes known to the Fund before payment.
Avoiding Double Liability
Double liability is not a problem because in Family Code sections 3.632 and 3.633, Texas law gives the plan trustee the same protection that the Lyman Lumber court gave— the nullification is effective only if the divorce is known to the fund befоre payment. Section 3.633(c) provides that when a trustee pays a beneficiary whose designation has been voided by divorce, the trustee is liable to other beneficiaries only if before payment, it received written notice at its home or principal office that the designation was not effective due to divorce and the trustee did not interplead the money into the court’s registry. Section 3.632 рrovides the same protection for insurance companies. Thus, a trustee who follows the ERISA requirements discussed in Lyman, and reads its mail, need not fear double liability.
Ensuring that Beneficiaries get what’s coming quickly without “Folderol”
By passing statutes like Family Code sections 3.632 and 3.633, and Probate Code section 69, the legislature has determined what is coming to divorced beneficiaries. Nothing is coming, unless they come within one of the Family Code’s three exceptions. It is well within the legislature’s discretion (right or wrong) to decide that most people probably don’t intend to give their life savings to someone they divorced — or who divorced them.
Moreover, there should be little of the “folderol” feared by the dissenters in McMillan. Texas statutes are clear, and existing provisions for summary judgment and for sanctions against frivolous lawsuits should *712 discourage folderol. Moreover, it is worth the price to see that those whom most decedents intend to get their property actually do so. We believe this procedure is less likely to inspire litigation than the Fifth Circuit’s test, which requires that property agreements must be shown, years later, to contain voluntary, explicit, and good faith waivers— long after one of the two best witnesses is dead. 8 Better to resolve that in “suitably armored” state courts, while both spouses are still alive.
We adopt Tex.Fam.Code § 3.633 as the federal common law on this issue. Consequently, we sustain Emmens’ point of error.
The trial court’s judgment is reversed, and judgment is rendered that Marla Johnson take nothing. If the parties can agree on the amount and nature of the judgment to be granted to Jacqueline Emmens, we will render judgment in accord with the agreement. Tex.R.App.P. 80(b). Otherwise, we will remand the cause to the trial court with instructions to render judgment granting all proceeds in the decedent’s profit-sharing plan to Emmens as administratrix of his estate.
Notes
. The decree contains an identical provision divesting Malcolm Emmens of the same property owned by Marla Johnson. In addition, the decree contains mutual provisions divesting both spouses of any interest in life insurance policies on the other’s life.
. Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.633 (Vernon 1993) provides:
(a) In a decree of divorce or аnnulment the court shall determine all rights of both spouses in any pension, retirement plan, annuity, or other form of savings, bonus, profit-sharing, or other employer or financial plan of an employee, whether or not self-employed, in the nature of compensation or savings.
(b) If a decree of divorce or annulment is rendered after a spouse has designated the other spouse as a beneficiary under a financial plan described by this section in force at the time of rendition, a provision in the plan in favor of the designated spouse is not effective unless:
(1) the decree designates the former spouse as the beneficiary;
(2) the designating spouse redesignates the former spouse as the beneficiary after rendition of the decree; or
(3) the former spouse is designated to receivе the proceeds or benefits in trust for, on behalf of, or for the benefit of a child or dependent of either former spouse.
. Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.632 (Vernon 1993). Although the court adopted section 3.632, which applies only to redesignation of insurance beneficiaries, it is sufficiently similar to section 3.633, which applies to redesignation of financial plan beneficiaries, to guide us in the present case. See also TexProb.Code Ann. § 69 (Vernon Supp. 1996) (divorce nullifies provisions in wills favoring former spouses).
. If there were no federal common law on this issue, or none that we agreed with, the question would arise whether we could make federal common law ourselves. We do so, of course, every time we decide federal constitutional issues or interpret federal law governing claims arising in state court. We need not decide that issue, however, because we choose to follow the federal common law of another circuit.
. The Lyman Lumber opinion, unlike Brandon, says nothing about modifying state law. It claims to follow Minnesota law.
. The Eighth Circuit in
Fox Valley
followed Illinois law, also apparently without modification.
.This is precisely the analysis used in
McMillan,
where the Sixth Circuit gave conclusive effect to the designation, based on the ERISA statute itself, regardless of the parties’ intent.
. The Fifth Circuit was obliged to review the divorce proceeding in full to determine that the waiver was voluntary. It examined Wanda’s testimony that Richard told her she would remain the beneficiary,
Brandon,
