The court of appeals has
jurisdiction to hear appeals from judgments in
criminal cases and certain other quasi-criminal cases in which a minor is accused of committing a crime (
juvenile delinquency cases), cases in which
prisoners are challenging the legality of their confinement (
habeas corpus and post-conviction relief matters), and cases involving
probation and
parole decisions. Also, a
defendant in a criminal case who appeals from district court to superior court can ask the court of appeals to review the resulting decision of the superior court, but the court of appeals may, in its discretion, refuse to hear the appeal. The court of appeals' jurisdiction is therefore over criminal and quasi-criminal matters rather than civil matters; it was created in 1980 to take the burden of these matters from the supreme court, which is therefore able to concentrate on civil matters. However, unlike the
Supreme Court of the United States, the Alaska Supreme Court is required to hear appeals in civil cases in the first (and usually last) instance and is not able to exercise its discretion whether to consider appeals previously heard by other appellate courts. Although granting both civil and criminal jurisdiction to the new court of appeals (freeing the supreme court to be purely an appellate court of last resort rather than first instance) had been considered by some proponents in 1980, it was not then believed that the Alaska legislature would be amenable to creating such a court. == Decisions ==