Title 38 › Part PART V— - BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter CHAPTER 72— - UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - RETIREMENT AND SURVIVORS ANNUITIES › § 7297
Lets judges of the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims join a survivor annuity program that can pay monthly pensions to a surviving spouse and/or dependent children when a judge dies. It tells who counts for the program, how a judge joins, how much must be paid in, how survivor pensions are figured, and who gets money if no usual survivor is eligible. Key terms (one line each): Court — the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. Judge — an active or retired judge of that Court. Pay — the judge’s salary and retired pay. Retirement fund — the Court’s annuity fund. Surviving spouse — a spouse married at least one year before death or parent of a child from the marriage. Dependent child — same meaning as in another federal law. Member of Congress — Representative, Senator, Delegate, or Puerto Rico’s Resident Commissioner. Assassination — has the special meaning used for judges in federal law. A judge must file a written election to join while in office or, if already retired, within six months after marrying. A regular percentage will be taken from each pay period and put into the retirement fund. In addition, a judge must deposit 3.5 percent of pay (including certain prior public service pay) into the fund, or may pay that in installments while serving. Those deposits earn 3 percent interest compounded each December 31. If the deposit rule is not met, the surviving spouse’s annuity is reduced by 10 percent of the missing deposit (unless the spouse chooses to drop that service from credit). If a judge leaves office without retiring or revokes the election after a marriage ends, the judge gets back the account plus 3 percent interest. If the judge served at least 18 months and the required deductions or deposits were made for the last 18 months (the 18-month rule is waived for assassination), a surviving spouse and/or dependent children can receive immediate annuities. Child annuities are set by fixed percentages of the judge’s average pay (for example, a child with a surviving spouse gets the lesser of 10 percent of average pay or 20 percent divided by the number of children). If no spouse survives, children share larger percentages (up to the lesser of 20 percent or 40 percent divided). A spouse’s annuity is lost on the spouse’s death or if the spouse remarries before age 55. Survivor annuities are paid monthly, cannot be assigned or attached for debt, and are adjusted at the same time and by the same percent as similar judicial survivor annuities. A judge who elects must waive most civil service retirement benefits, and certain judges may buy up to one extra year of service credit each year in 3-month increments.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 7297
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73