- Alaska Court of Appeals
The Alaska Court of Appeals is an intermediary court of appeals in the State of
Alaska 's judicial department (Alaska Court System ), created in1980 by theAlaska Legislature as an additionalappellate court to lessen the burden on theAlaska Supreme Court . Thecourt of appeals consists of a chiefjudge and two associate judges, who are all appointed by thegovernor of Alaska (seeList of Governors of Alaska ) and face judicial retentionelections ; the chief judge of the court of appeals is selected from among the three by thechief justice of the supreme court to serve a two-year term.The court of
appeals hearsoral argument from lower statetrial court s on a regular basis in Anchorage.All Alaska state court judges are selected in accordance with the
Missouri Plan . The governor of Alaska appoints a court of appeals judge from a list of qualified candidates submitted by the Alaska Judicial Council. To be eligible for appointment, a person must be a citizen of theUnited States and a resident of Alaska for five years prior to appointment. A court of appeals judge must be licensed to practice law in Alaska at the time of appointment and must have engaged in the active practice of law for eight years. The appointed judge must be approved by the voters on a nonpartisan ballot at the first statewide general election held more than three years after appointment; thereafter, each court of appeals judge must participate in another retention election every eight years.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 whichprison ers are challenging the legality of their confinement (habeas corpus and post-conviction relief matters), and cases involvingprobation andparole decisions. Also, adefendant 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's 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 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.The court of appeals usually announces its decisions of cases by issuing memorandum opinions and judgments (MO&Js) and orders summarily ruling on the merits of cases or dismissing them, as well as opinions for official publication (in
Westlaw , the Pacific Reporter and the Alaska Reporter). Although the MO&Js and most orders are not published, the MO&Js are available for public inspection at the Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Juneau offices of the clerk of the appellate courts, and the orders are filed in the clerk's Anchorage office. Current MO&Js are also available on the Alaska Court Systemwebsite . Nevertheless, MO&Js are binding only upon the parties andstare decisis does not apply.Judges
*
Robert G. Coats (since 1980), Chief Judge
*David Mannheimer (since 1990)
*David Stewart (Alaska) , (since 1997)External links
* [http://www.appellate.courts.state.ak.us Alaska Appellate Courts]
* [http://www.state.ak.us/courts Alaska Court System]
* [http://www.touchngo.com/ap/ap.htm Alaska Court of Appeals Cases]
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