Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle D— Air Force and Space Force › Part IV— SERVICE, SUPPLY, AND PROCUREMENT › Chapter 975— DISPOSITION OF EFFECTS OF DECEASED PERSONS › § 9712
When a person under military law dies at an Air Force or Space Force location, or when a resident of the Armed Forces Retirement Home dies in an Air Force hospital outside the District of Columbia after being sent there for treatment, and no legal representative or surviving spouse is present, the commanding officer must order a summary court-martial (a small military court) to gather the deceased person’s belongings that are at the base or quarters. The court may collect local debts owed to the estate and pay undisputed local creditors with money it holds, keeping receipts for its report to the Air Force. It must send the effects and money, at government expense, to the highest living person it can find in this order: surviving spouse or legal representative; child; parent; brother or sister; next-of-kin; or a beneficiary named in the will. If no one can be found or addresses are not known, the court may sell the effects (but not sabers, insignia, decorations, medals, watches, trinkets, manuscripts, or other keepsakes) only after 30 days from the date of death. After any sale, the court must deposit the cash with the officer named in regulations and send a receipt, any will or valuable papers, and an inventory of unsold keepsakes to the executive part of the Department of the Air Force. The Secretary of the Air Force must give any items received there to the Armed Forces Retirement Home.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 9712
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60