149 - Governor may appoint extraordinary terms and name justices to hold them.

§  149.  Governor may appoint extraordinary terms and name justices to  hold them.   1. The governor  may,  when,  in  his  opinion  the  public  interest  requires,  appoint  one or more extraordinary special or trial  terms of the supreme court. He must designate  the  time  and  place  of  holding the same, and name the justice who shall hold or preside at such  term,  and  he must give notice of the appointment in such manner as, in  his judgment, the public interest requires. The governor  may  terminate  the  assignment  of  the  justice  named by him to hold a term appointed  pursuant to this section, and may name another justice in his  place  to  hold  the  same term. In such event, the grand jury drawn to attend such  term shall continue to serve thereat  until  discharged  in  the  manner  prescribed  by  law. A justice named to preside at an extraordinary term  appointed under this section shall have power to order the drawing of  a  grand  jury or grand juries in place of or in addition to the grand jury  originally drawn for such term. Such other grand jury  or  grand  juries  shall  be  summoned in the manner prescribed for grand juries in general  and shall be subject to all the provisions of law applicable to a  grand  jury  summoned pursuant to sections five hundred thirty-one, six hundred  nine and six hundred eighty-four of this chapter.    2. A motion involving  a  matter  pending  before  such  extraordinary  special  or  trial  term  shall  be made returnable at such term, except  that, in the exercise of discretion, a justice of the appellate division  of the supreme court in  the  department  in  which  such  extraordinary  special or trial term is being held may grant permission for such motion  to be heard at a term of such appellate division.