(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued September 14, 1993 -- Decided June 28, 1994
PER CURIAM
Louis Pulasty was treasurer of the New Jersey State Firemen's Association in East Orange. He was
indicted on charges of embezzling more than $600,000 from the Association. In 1986, he pled guilty to theft by
deception and agreed to pay restitution. The trial court sentenced Pulasty to a five-year prison term and ordered
him to pay $453,378.32 in restitution.
In July 1990 Pulasty moved to strike language in the restitution order that required him either to assign
his $531 per month Firemen's Association pension to the Association or, in the alternative, to pay the Essex
County Probation Department $531 per month until he had paid the balance of his restitution obligation. When
Pulasty argued that the order violated the anti-alienation provision of a federal statute ("ERISA"), the trial court
deleted reference to Pulasty's pension but retained the requirement that Pulasty pay $531 per month to the
Probation Department.
In 1991, Pulasty moved to vacate his guilty plea, arguing that the plea lacked a factual basis, that he had
not voluntarily and intelligently made the plea, and that he had received ineffective assistance of counsel. The
trial court denied the application.
Pulasty appealed both decisions to the Appellate Division, which filed a single opinion. That court found
the claims of error on the guilty plea appeal to be without merit. On the ERISA issue, the Appellate Division
held that a United States Supreme Court case on the subject applied only to civil cases, not criminal restitution.
It upheld the trial court's modified order.
The Supreme Court granted Pulasty's petition for certification.
HELD: Once a defendant has actually received pension benefits, those benefits are no longer protected by
ERISA and are subject to a judgment.
1. The judgment of the Appellate Division in respect of the application to vacate Pulasty's guilty plea is affirmed,
substantially for the reasons expressed in the opinion of the Appellate Division. (p. 5)
2. The United States Supreme Court case that construed the inalienability clause of ERISA dealt with an
attempt to place a constructive trust on the defendant's pension. The Court held that ERISA barred such an
action. Here, however, the trial court's order does not place a constructive trust on Pulasty's pension benefits.
The order requires Pulasty to make restitution out of funds that have been paid over to him. (pp. 6-7)
3. The intent of ERISA's inalienability clause is to ensure that pensioners actually receive their benefits, not to
make them judgment proof. The inalienability clause is inapplicable to the order of restitution. (pp. 7-8)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
CHIEF JUSTICE WILENTZ and JUSTICES CLIFFORD, HANDLER, POLLOCK, O'HERN,
GARIBALDI, and STEIN join in the opinion of the Court.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
2 September Term 1993
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
LOUIS PULASTY,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued September 14, 1993 -- Decided June 28, 1994
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported
at
259 N.J. Super. 274 (1992).
Martha A. Suhayda-Vogt and John L. Pritchard
argued the cause for appellant (Ms. Suhayda-Vogt, Mr. Pritchard, and Harold Kamens,
attorneys).
Hilary L. Brunell, Assistant Prosecutor,
argued the cause for respondent (James F.
Mulvihill, Acting Essex County Prosecutor,
attorney).
PER CURIAM
Defendant pleaded guilty to second-degree theft by
deception. The trial court ordered him to make restitution to
his employer. On defendant's appeal the Appellate Division
affirmed, and we granted certification,
133 N.J. 430 (1993).
Substantially for the reasons set forth in the Appellate Division
opinion, see
259 N.J. Super. 274 (1993), we reject defendant's
argument that the trial court should have permitted him to
withdraw his guilty plea. We likewise agree with the court
below, although on a different basis, that the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
29 U.S.C.A.
§§1001-1461
(ERISA), does not preempt the trial court's restitution order.
Defendant, Louis Pulasty, was treasurer of the New Jersey
State Firemen's Association. A grand jury charged him, in a
twenty-nine count indictment, with embezzling more than $600,000.
According to the trial court, the charge exposed defendant to a
twenty-year term of imprisonment and $200,000 in fines, in
addition to restitution. In July 1986, pursuant to a plea
bargain, defendant pleaded guilty to second-degree theft by
deception in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:20-4 and agreed to pay
restitution. The trial court sentenced defendant to five years
imprisonment and ordered him to pay $453,378.32 in restitution.
Defendant served fourteen months in prison, after which he
completed probation.
In July 1990 defendant moved to have the trial court strike certain language in its restitution order that required defendant either to assign to the Firemen's Association the $531-per-month pension that it paid to defendant, or in the alternative to pay the Essex County Probation Department $531 per month until
defendant had discharged the balance of his restitution
obligation. In light of defendant's argument that the order as
phrased violated the anti-alienation provisions of ERISA,
29 U.S.C.A. 1056(d), the trial court deleted the reference to
defendant's pension but left in place so much of the order as
imposed on defendant the obligation to make restitution of $531
per month.
In 1991, five years after he had entered his guilty plea, defendant moved to withdraw his plea. The trial court denied the motion. Defendant then began two separate appeals. In the first, defendant argued that the denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea was manifestly unjust because, first, the plea lacked a factual basis; second, defendant had not voluntarily and intelligently made the plea because he had not understood its consequences; and, third, defendant had been deprived of effective assistance of counsel. Pursuant to Rule 2:11-3(e)(2), the Appellate Division found those claims to be "entirely lacking in merit." 259 N.J. Super. at 278. The court stated that the record "demonstrate[d] conclusively" that defendant had understood his plea, that he had voluntarily pleaded guilty, and that the record supported his conviction for second-degree theft. It also found "not a shred of evidence" to support defendant's claim that his counsel had provided ineffective assistance or that but for any error of counsel, defendant would not have entered a plea of guilty. On defendant's first appeal,
therefore, the Appellate Division affirmed the judgment of the
trial court. Id. at 278-79.
On the second appeal, defendant, whose sole source of income
is the combined Social Security payments that he and his wife
receive ($1581 per month), a pension benefit from the Firemen's
Association ($558 per month), and a pension from Foster Wheeler
Corporation ($123 per month), argued that ERISA and 42 U.S.C.A.
§ 470 of the Social Security Act prohibited the trial court from
ordering that he pay $531 per month in restitution because the
restitution would come from sources that, defendant asserted,
those laws protected. Specifically, defendant claimed that the
trial court's modified order directly or indirectly garnisheed
his pension in violation of ERISA, U.S.C.A. § 1056(d)(1), which
provides that "[e]ach pension plan shall provide that benefits
provided under the plan may not be assigned or alienated." To
support that argument defendant relied on Guidry v. Sheet Metal
Workers National Pension Fund,
493 U.S. 365,
110 S. Ct. 680,
107 L. Ed.2d 782 (1990).
In Guidry, a union official had pleaded guilty to embezzling funds from his employer union. Id. at 367, 110 S. Ct. at 683, 107 L. Ed. 2d at 789. The United States Supreme Court held that a constructive trust on the official's pension benefits established to satisfy a civil judgment in favor of the union was no different from a garnishment order, id at 371-72, 110 S. Ct.
at 685, 107 L. Ed.
2d at 792, and that both were barred by
ERISA's anti-alienation clause. Id. at 376-77, 110 S. Ct. at
687-88, 107 L. Ed.
2d at 794-95.
The Appellate Division distinguished Guidry on the basis
that Guidry was limited to civil cases and did not prohibit
restitution as part of a criminal penalty under a plea bargain.
259 N.J. Super. at 283-84. In doing so, the court below
characterized the criminal misconduct underlying the restitution
in Guidry as "mere happenstance." Id. at 282-83. The court
concluded that because criminal restitution is designed to strip
a defendant of wrongful monetary gain, it is unlike a civil
judgment, which is designed to make the victim whole, and is
therefore not contemplated by the anti-alienation clause of
ERISA, which is designed to protect pensioners from losing their
benefits to creditors. Id. at 283-84. It therefore upheld the
trial court's modified restitution order.
On appeal to this Court, defendant makes substantially the
same arguments as he raised before the Appellate Division. As
indicated above, in respect of defendant's motion to withdraw his
plea and the allegedly ineffective assistance of counsel, we
affirm on the basis of the opinion below.
On defendant's inalienability claim, we also affirm, but we
do not adopt the Appellate Division's distinction between the
applicability of ERISA's non-alienability clause in criminal
cases and its inapplicability in civil cases. Our decision
requires no such distinction.
We hold instead that Guidry is inapplicable to this case
because the Guidry Court dealt with an attempt to place a
constructive trust on the defendant's pension. The Court ruled
that ERISA's non-alienability clause barred such an action. 493
U.S. at 376-77, 110 S. Ct. at 687-88, 107 L. Ed.
2d at 795.
Here, we are not faced with an attempt to place a constructive
trust on defendant's pension benefits. The trial court
specifically deleted from its original restitution order any
reference to those benefits. This case instead involves the
ability of the State, under a generally-applicable criminal law,
to require a defendant to make restitution after the pension
funds have been paid over to defendant. That issue is closer to
the one that faced the Supreme Court of Indiana in Brosamer v.
Mark,
561 N.E.2d 767 (1990).
In Brosamer, the plaintiffs won a $718 judgment against defendant, Brosamer. Brosamer claimed that the court could not garnishee his income because his sole sources of income were pension benefits that qualified for ERISA non-alienability protection and Social Security benefits. The court declared that
to hold, as defendant urged, that pension payments continue to be
protected by ERISA after deposit into the recipient's bank
account "would run contrary to the legislative history and the
weight of the relevant case law and [would] stretch ERISA beyond
the purposes declared by Congress in the statute itself." Id. at
769. We agree with the Indiana Supreme Court that ERISA's non-alienability clause is based on a congressional intent to ensure
that pensioners actually receive their benefits, not to make them
judgment proof. See id. at 770 (discussing relevant case law).
We therefore hold that once a defendant has actually received
pension benefits, those benefits are subject to judgment.
Our decision today creates no exception to ERISA's non-alienability clause. That clause is inapplicable in a case such as this, which concerns restitution to be paid out of funds that are unprotected because they are in the pensioner's possession, not out of protected benefits that are owed to the pensioner. Cf. Woolsey v. Marion Lab., Inc., 934 F.2d 1482, 1458 (10th Cir. 1991) (stating that ERISA's non-alienability clause's prohibition of forfeiture, garnishment, or offsetting of vested pension rights is inapplicable to decision to award pension benefits in form of cash instead of stock). We are satisfied that "the congressional policy choice" contained in the non-alienability clause, specifically the "decision to safeguard a stream of income for pensioners (and their dependents * * *), even if that decision prevents others from securing relief for wrongs done to
them," Guidry, supra, 493 U.S. at 376, 110 S. Ct. at 687, 107 L.
Ed.
2d at 795, was not designed to make pensioners judgment
proof. The inclusion of a spendthrift provision "secure[s] the
financial well-being of employees and their dependents," Ablamis
v. Roper,
937 F.2d 1450, 1454 (9th Cir. 1991), and we recognize
that the creation of an exception to the statute "is a question
for legislative rather than judicial judgment." United Metal
Prods. Corp. v. National Bank of Detroit,
811 F.2d 297 300 (6th
Cir. 1987). However, the power to order restitution out of
unprotected funds, see N.J.S.A. 2C:44-3 (authorizing fines and
restitution), is "a state law of general application with only a
'tenuous' effect on an ERISA plan * * * ." Retirement Fund Trust
of the Plumbing v. Franchise Tax Bd.,
909 F.2d 1266, 1274 (9th
Cir. 1990) (quoting Shaw v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
463 U.S. 85,
100 n.21,
103 S. Ct. 2890, 2901 n.21,
77 L. Ed.2d 490, 503 n.21
(1983)). Accordingly, the non-alienability clause does not
apply.
Judgment affirmed.
Chief Justice Wilentz and Justices Clifford, Handler, Pollock, O'Hern, Garibaldi, and Stein join in this opinion.