By statute, the court is empowered to hear the following types of cases: 1. As a matter of right, all appeals from final judgments' of the Superior Court, and all other orders that effectively cut-off further litigation, such as
condemnation orders,
termination of parental rights,
juvenile court proceedings, and
incompetency proceedings. • All Personal Restraint Petitions (a statutory variation of the
Writ of Habeas Corpus) • Writs of
Mandamus and
quo warranto (the
Writ of Habeas Corpus is only available in Superior Court) • Appeals from decisions of
administrative agencies. • Discretionary Review of the Superior Court's decision in an appeal from a court of
limited jurisdiction. • Discretionary Review of interlocutory appeals from rulings of the Superior Court for which there is no other effective remedy.
Jurisdiction precluded (vested in the Supreme Court of Washington) • Writs of
quo warranto,
prohibition,
injunction or
mandamus that are directed to state officials. • Cases where the
death penalty has been imposed. • Cases where the validity of all or any part of a
statute or
tax has been held to violate the state constitution, the
US Constitution or
federal law. • Cases involving fundamental and urgent issues of broad public import requiring prompt and ultimate determination. == Current judges ==