MILITARY PENSIONS
BE SMART-UNDERSTAND
THE LAW
By: Stuart H. Grozbean
We often get
questions on military pensions and whether there is any truth
that if a couple has not been married for 10 years the spouse is
excluded for sharing in the pension.
The answer is YES.
but only if you read the fine print and look at the case law.
A review of
USFSPA provides military retirement payments may not be made
"under this section" to a former spouse who was not married to
the service member for at least 10 years. 10 U.S.C. Sec.
1408(d)(2). The 10-year requirement applies only to military
retirement pay paid directly by the military finance center to
the former spouse. Virginia appellate courts have stated
while a 10-year marriage is a condition for direct payment,
failure to meet the 10-year requirement does not bar the court's
division of a spouse's military retirement pay. Cook v.
Cook , 18 Va. App. 726, 446 S.E.2d 894 (1994).
Likewise, the
Court have held that even if the military personnel has not
served 20 years and is not fully vested, does not mean that the
spouse is excluded. Like any pension, the military pension is a
deferred compensation and can be includable for consideration in
a divorce. Similarly, The marital estate for purposes of
dividing the pension, includes only that portion of a military
pension which is earned during the marriage.
Military pensions
are tricky and you need to talk to a qualified domestic
relations attorney who can better assist you.
REAL LAWYERS- FOR REAL
PEOPLE- WITH REAL PROBLEMS

BELLI, WEIL, GROZBEAN & DAVIS, LLP
serves the State of Georgia, Washington, D.C. and clients across
the Nation. Georgia lawyers are also licensed in the District of
Columbia, Florida and Montana. Our Law firm works with lawyers across the
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