Thеodore Shanbaum (Shanbaum) appeals the district court’s holding that Roy Her-berger (Herberger), the trustee of Shanb-aum’s pension plan, may offset an amount Shanbaum owes to the plan against Shanb-aum’s monthly pension benefits. We reverse.
I.
Shanbaum, along with Ellis Carp and Glen Auerbach, were the three principal shareholders of Lee Optical, Inc. (Lee Optical). All three served as charter trustees of the Lee Optical Pension Plan (the Pension Plan or the Plan), which was created in 1951. Shanbaum was also a beneficiary of the Plan. He is now seventy-seven years old and draws a monthly pension of $3,521.87.
Beginning in 1980, the U.S. Secretary of Labor initiated an action against Shanb-aum, Carp, Lee Optical, and its subsidiary Dаl-Tex, alleging violation of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a), in connection with their management of the Pension Plan. In 1981, that action was settled in a Consent Decree that removed Shanbaum as sole-surviving trustee and appointed Oscar Lindemann (Lindemann) as his successor. In addition, the decree ordered the Dal-Tex subsidiary of Lee Optical to pay over one million dollars in outstanding principal and interest owed to the Plan, and held Shanbaum and Carp jointly and severally liable for this sum if Dal-Tex prоved unable to pay.
Soon afterward, Dal-Tex defaulted, and the Plan sought to enforce the judgment against Shanbaum and Carp. In satisfac
*802
tion of this debt, Lindemann accepted Shanbaum’s and Carp’s interests in SCP, a joint venture owned in equal shаres by Shanbaum, Carp and the Plan. Later squabbling over the value of the joint venture’s assets, however, resulted in a two million dollar judgment against Lindemann for breach of his fiduciary duty to the Plan. Shanbaum was held jointly liable for this sum as a “knowing and active participant[ ] in Lindemann’s breach of fiduciary duty.”
Whitfield v. Lindemann,
Herberger, plaintiff-appellee, was appointed by the court to succeed Lindemann as trustee of the Plan. By this time, Shanbaum had begun receiving his pension payments, which were his only sоurce of income. Unable to otherwise collect the debt, Herberger sought to offset Shanb-aum’s monthly benefit payment against the judgment rendered against Shanbaum’s in
Whitfield.
The district court allowed the offset. On appeal, however, this court noted that the judgment against Shanbaum was not for the breach of a trustee’s fiduciary duty; rather, the judgment was for participation in such a breach by a nonfidu-ciary third party. This court held that the anti-alienation provision of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1), prevented the offset and reversed the district court’s order.
McLaughlin v. Lindemann,
During the pendency of this federal litigation, an unrelated lawsuit was filed in Texas state court by W.F. deTournillon, who had at one time been an employee of the Grayson Company. Shanbaum, Carp and the Plan had been the sole shareholders of Grayson which had been liquidated in 1982. DeTournillon sought to recover salary and bonuses earned while he was an employee of Grayson, and since that corporation was defunct he sued its successors: Shanbaum, Carp’s estate, and the Pension Plan.
The Pension Plan settled with deTournil-lon for $20,000. In September 1986, the state court awarded the plaintiff a $168,000 judgment against Shanbaum and Carp’s estate, and also awarded the Pension Plan a $20,000 indemnification judgment against Shanbaum “for the breach of his fiduciary duty as trustee” of the Plan. Again, however, the Pension Plan’s judgment against Shanbaum proved uncollectible and again, Herberger sought an order from the federal district court to allow the Plan to offset the outstanding judgment against Shanb-aum’s monthly pension benefits. The district court entered judgment allowing the offset. Shanbaum now appeals that judgment.
II.
Shanbaum argues that the district court erred in allowing an offset, becаuse doing so violated the anti-alienation provision of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1). This provision states that “[ejach pension plan shall provide that benefits provided under the plan may not be assigned or alienated.” This court has not previously addressed the question of whether, despite § 1056(d)(1), a pension plan may offset a judgment against a former trustee’s benefits when the judgment against the former trustee is predicated on a breach of his fiduciary duties.
This court held in
McLaughlin v. Lindemann,
*803
In
Crawford, v. La Boucherie Bernard,
First, the court stated that the purpose of ERISA was to protect the interests of beneficiaries by establishing standards and obligations for fiduciaries and by providing remedies for breaches of such obligations. 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). The court further explained that 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a) provided that in addition to liability for losses and restitution of wrongful profits, breaching trustees are “subject to such other equitable or remedial relief as the court may deem appropriate.” Similar language is included in 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(B) which describes the type of relief available in civil actions brought to enforce the ERISA requirements. The court concluded that provisions within ERISA gave courts broad authority to fashion remedies fоr redressing breaches.
Second, the
Crawford
court relied on language in ERISA’s legislative history to conclude that the objective of ERISA remedial provisions was to “make applicable the law of trusts; ... to establish uniform fiduciary standards to prevent transactions which dissipate or endanger trust assets; and to provide effective remedies for breaches of trust.”
Crawford,
Finally, the
Crawford
court addressed the anti-alienation provision dirеctly and found that the general rule against aliena-bility of ERISA benefits was not “immutable.” The court explained that the Eleventh Circuit had carved out an exception for liabilities arising from the employee’s criminal conduct towards his emрloyer. See
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Cox,
Although the
Crawford
decision presents strong arguments for allowing an offset, we decline to follow it, primarily because of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Guidry v. Sheet Metal Workers National Pension Fund, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
Although the Court expressly reserved the question of whether an offset would be allowed where the employee’s liability was predicated on a breach of fiduciary duty to the plan, the Court’s dicta leads us to conclude that an offset should not be allowed. The Court stated that:
As a general matter, courts should be loath to announce equitable exceptions to *804 lеgislative requirements or prohibitions that are unqualified by the statutory text. The creation of such exceptions, in our view, would be especially problematic in the context of an antigarnishment provision. Such a provision acts, by dеfinition, to hinder the collection of a lawful debt. A restriction on garnishment therefore can be defended only on the view that the effectuation of certain broad social policies sometimes takes precedenсe over the desire to do equity between particular parties. It makes little sense to adopt such a policy and then to refuse enforcement whenever enforcement appears inequitable. A court attemрting to carve out an exception that would not swallow the rule would be forced to determine whether application of the rule in particular circumstances would be “especially” inequitable. The impracticability of defining such a standard reinforces our conclusion that the identification of any exception should be left to Congress.
Id.
The Court’s decision in
Guidry
so undermines the
Crawford
reasoning that we decline to follow
Crawford.
First, the
Crawford
court’s reliance on ERISA’s legislative history to authorize the application of general trust law to create an exception to the anti-alienation provision is no longer persuasive. The Supreme Court found no justification to create an exception to the anti-alienation provision in order to impose a cоnstructive trust on benefits. Also, the holdings in some of the cases relied on by
Crawford
to support the proposition that the anti-alienation provision is not “immutable” were rejected by the Court in
Gui-dry.
For example,
Guidry
holds that an employee’s criminal misconduct cаnnot be the basis for an offset. This is contrary to the holding in
St. Paul Fire & Marine,
The only aspect of the
Crawford
reasoning that remains untouched by
Guidry
is the weighing of ERISA’s remedial provisions against the anti-alienation provision. In
Guidry,
the Supreme Court held that thе civil enforcement provision, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(B), which allows a participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary to “obtain other
appropriate equitable reliefs
to redress ... violations or (ii) to enforce any provisions of this subchapter or the terms of the plan,” (emphasis addеd) was not expansive enough to allow an offset. The
Crawford
court recognized the similarity between the above language contained in § 1132(a)(3)(B) and the language contained in 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a), the specific provision applicable in
Crawford
and in this сase, which allows “equitable or remedial relief as the court may deem appropriate” when a person breaches the fiduciary duties.
Crawford,
Because of our disposition of this appeal, we need not reach Shanbaum’s two other contentions: (1) that the state court had no subject matter jurisdiction over Shanb-aum’s actions, therefore the state court judgment is void; and (2) that the trustee did not have authority to act on the plan’s behalf.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
