Title 38 › Part V— BOARDS, ADMINISTRATIONS, AND SERVICES › Chapter 72— UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS › Subchapter V— RETIREMENT AND SURVIVORS ANNUITIES › § 7297
Judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims can choose to join a survivor annuity program so a spouse or child can get monthly payments if the judge dies. To join, a judge files a written choice while in office or, if already retired, within six months after marrying. The judge’s pay will have deductions taken each pay period equal to the same percent judges of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims pay under 28 U.S.C. 376(b)(1)(B). A judge who joins must also put into the court’s retirement fund an amount equal to 3.5 percent of the judge’s pay and certain prior government pay, with interest at 3 percent per year compounded each December 31; the chief judge can allow payment in installments. To trigger survivor payments the judge normally must have at least 18 months of covered service with the required deductions or deposits for the last 18 months, unless the judge’s death was by assassination. If the judge dies with eligible survivors, a surviving spouse’s annuity is worked out by a formula: 1.5 percent of the judge’s average annual pay times certain years of service plus three‑fourths of 1 percent for other allowable years. The spouse’s annuity cannot be more than 50 percent or less than 25 percent of the judge’s average pay. Child annuities are smaller and set by fixed percentages depending on whether a spouse also survives. A spouse’s annuity stops at the spouse’s death or if the spouse remarries before age 55; a child’s annuity stops at the child’s death. If a judge dies before five years of service or without eligible survivors, any payable amount goes to beneficiaries in this order: a written designee, then spouse, then children, then parents, then estate, then other next of kin as the chief judge decides. Payments are monthly, due the first business day after the month for which they are owed, cannot be assigned or taken by creditors, and may go to a guardian for minors or people legally unable to manage money. A judge who elects the program must waive civil service retirement benefits except for 5 U.S.C. 8440d. Survivor annuities rise by the same percentage as Judicial Survivors’ Annuities Fund increases. Eligible judges may buy extra service credit in three‑month blocks, up to one extra year for each year of federal judicial service. Defined terms in one line each: Court — the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims; judge — a Court judge in active service or retired under section 7296; pay — salary under section 7253(e) and retired pay under section 7296; retirement fund — the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims Retirement Fund; surviving spouse — a spouse married at least one year before the judge’s death or a parent of children from the marriage; dependent child — the “child” definition in 28 U.S.C. 376(a)(5); Member of Congress — a Representative, Senator, Delegate, or the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico; assassination — has the meaning given for judicial officials in 28 U.S.C. 376(a)(7).
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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60