Jerome Baker and his family operated Bakco Data, Inc., which had a profit-sharing pension plan. When the firm encountered financial difficulties, Baker and three of his children borrowed from the plаn and used the money as working capital for Bakco. Some of the checks were written directly to Bakco. The loans were not properly documented and exceeded permissible lеvels; the borrowers did not attempt to repay the loans; but at least disbursements did not exceed the borrowers’ vested balances and did not compromise other participants’ ac
*638
counts. Throwing good money after bad did not work; Bakco is defunct and Baker landed in bankruptcy. The question we must decide is whether the irregular transactions mean that the funds remaining in Baker’s pension account arе unsheltered by ERISA’s anti-alienation rule, 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1). LaSalle Bank, Baker’s largest creditor, asked the bankruptcy court to include Baker’s pension wealth in his bankruptcy estate. Relying on
Patterson v. Shumate,
Section 541(c)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code of 1978, 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2), excludes from the debtor’s estate any property that is held in trust and subject to a restriction on transfer under “applicable nonbankruptcy law”. This language keeps out of the estate (and therefore out of creditors’ hands) property in which the debtor owns the trust’s beneficial interest, but subject to a spendthrift clause or some equivalent that prevents the debtor from converting a stream of future payments into a caрital sum for current consumption.
Patterson
held that a pension trust subject to ERISA’s anti-alienation rule is like a spendthrift trust under state law, and that “applicable nonbankruptcy law” includes federal statutes as well as stаte law. Judge Schwartz assumed that if Bakco’s plan was “ERISA-qualified” (a term we discuss below), then the balance of Baker’s account is outside the bankruptcy estate given § 541(c)(2) and
Patterson.
It is not clear to us that this is so.
Patterson
holds that ERISA counts as “apрlicable nonbankruptcy law,” not that all the full balances in all ERISA-qualified plans are necessarily protected from creditors. Sometimes the employee is entitled to invade the principal of a defined-contribution plan for his own purposes — to take a loan that can be converted to a withdrawal by failure to repay, or to accelerate disbursement directly, as many рlans provide once the employee reaches a specified age. Cf.
In re Kochell,
Patterson
states its holding this way: “a debtor’s interest in an ERISA-qualified pension plan may be excluded from the рroperty of the bankruptcy estate pursuant to § 541(c)(2)”.
Subchapter I of ERISA covers every “employee benefit plan” established by an employer engaged in interstate commerсe, *639 with five exceptions. 29 U.S.C. § 1003(a) (coverage), § 1003(b) (exceptions). Bakco’s profit-sharing plan was an “employee pension benefit plan” within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 1002(2)(A) because it provides for deferred and retirement income, and under the definition in § 1002(3) an “employee pension benefit plan” is also an “employee benefit plan”. Bakco was engaged in interstate commerce, and nonе of the five exceptions applies, so ERISA covers the plan — which contains a proper anti-alienation clause. All of this is common ground between the parties. It follows that § 541(c)(2) of the Bаnkruptcy Code excludes the plan’s value from Baker’s estate in bankruptcy.
LaSalle Bank observes that a trust can be an “employee pension benefit plan” only if it provides retirement incоme or deferred compensation “to employees”, § 1002(2)(A)(i), and the Bank insists that Baker is an “employer” rather than an “employee” because he owned a majority of Bakco Data’s stoсk. A sole proprietor cannot participate in an ERISA pension plan, see
Giardono v. Jones,
Baker violated his duties as one of the plan’s trustees. The plan states that loans must be requested in writing; Baker disbursed loans without written requests. The plan requires the consent of a participant’s spouse for any loan; on behalf of the plan, Baker made loans without obtaining this consent. The plan states that only one loan may be outstanding to one participant at a time; Baker made multiple loans to two participants, including himself. The plan requires borrowers to pledge the balance of their accounts as collateral; borrowers did not do this. The plan requires borrowers to repay principal and interest within five years, and to make payments at least quarterly. Borrowers from Bakeo’s plan did not repay a dime of principal, and only one borrower paid anything toward interest. The plan sets caps on the amount that could be borrowed; these were sometimes exceeded. Some loans were disbursed from the plan to Bakco rather than to the participаnt, as the plan requires. Many of the plan’s requirements are necessary under ERISA the Internal Revenue Code, or both. See 29 U.S.C. § 1108. So Baker may have exposed Bakco and himself to extra taxes, plus remedies (damages as well as criminal prosecution) for breach of fiduciary duties under ERISA — although most of the violations appear to be technical. (The plan could have written checks tо the participants, who could have invested in Bak *640 co without violating 29 U.S.C. § 1106; the lack of pledges did not prevent the plan from collecting by offsetting unpaid loans against the account balancеs; none of the participants’ spouses is complaining about the diminution of retirement income.) Nonetheless, violations of ERISA do not make ERISA inapplicable, as the Bank believes; if extensive violations of a federal law made that law go away, the rules would be chimerical. ERISA applied, and was violated; for purposes of Patterson, what matters is the application of ERISA’s subehapter I, rather than observance of its rules.
The Bank believes that it is inequitable for a plan fiduciary to flout his duties and then invoke ERISA as a shield. Perhaps— although the Bank offers no reason to believe that Baker’s miscоnduct increased his apparent wealth and therefore induced the Bank to lend more. When it extended the credit that it seeks to collect from Baker’s (remaining) interest in Bakeo’s profit-sharing plan, the Bank knew or should have recognized that this wealth could not be reached in a bankruptcy action. Inequitable or not, however, the anti-alienation clause governs. There is no “equity” exception to § 1056(d)(1) of ERISA, or § 541(c)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code.
Guidry v. Sheet Metal Workers National Pension Fund,
Affirmed.
