Tennessee Code 8-619 – Service required for retirement
Terms Used In Tennessee Code 8-619
- Attorney general: means the attorney general and reporter and any assistant thereto by whatever name known, any district attorney general and any assistant thereto by whatever name called, and any officer or full-time employee of the general assembly or any committee thereof established by statute, who is duly licensed to practice law in Tennessee, whose duty it is to provide facilities for drafting bills or to assist individual legislators in drafting bills or who renders legal advice and services to the members of the general assembly or committees thereof. See Tennessee Code 8-34-101
- Member: means any person included in the membership of the retirement system, as provided in chapter 35, part 1 of this title. See Tennessee Code 8-34-101
- Person: includes a corporation, firm, company or association. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
- Retirement: means withdrawal from membership with a retirement allowance granted under chapters 34-37 of this title. See Tennessee Code 8-34-101
- Retirement system: means the Tennessee consolidated retirement system as defined in §. See Tennessee Code 8-34-101
- Service: means service as a general employee, a teacher, a state police officer, a wildlife officer, a firefighter, a police officer, a state judge, a county judge, an attorney general, a commissioner or a county official which is paid for by an employer, and also includes service for which a former member of the general assembly is entitled to under former §. See Tennessee Code 8-34-101
- State: means the state of Tennessee. See Tennessee Code 8-34-101
Any attorney general as defined in § 8-618 may retire (a) at the age of seventy (70) upon twenty (20) years’ service; (b) at the age of sixty-five (65) upon twenty-four (24) years of service; (c) at the age of sixty (60) upon thirty (30) years of service.
Provided that all persons who have served continuously in this state as assistant attorney general and attorney general for a period of time as much as twenty-one (21) years and who had reached the age of seventy-three (73) years on April 6, 1953, and who had been retired from said service prior to April 6, 1953, and was as much as seventy (70) years of age at the time of his retirement, and whose salary as such assistant attorney general and attorney general was paid entirely from the state treasury, shall be included as a person entitled to receive benefits from §§ 8-618 – 8-622 on same terms and conditions as those enumerated in said sections.
After September 1, 1958, if any attorney general as defined in § 8-618 should have a total of thirty (30) years service as such attorney general and/or as a member of either the state or teachers’ retirement system, the last ten (10) years of which service shall have been as attorney general, such person shall be eligible to retirement, regardless of age, under §§ 8-618 – 8-622 and shall be given credit thereon for his services in such other retirement system: provided, that his reserve paid to such other retirement system shall be transferred to this retirement system.