Samuel L. Fuller, the appellant, was indicted during the April 1985 Term of the Bibb Superior Court for the offenses of robbery by sudden snatching, and criminal solicitation to compound a felony. The record indicates that Fuller was represented by counsel, entered a plea of guilty to both counts during the August 1985 Term, and was *615 sentenced on September 23, 1985 to eight years on Count 1, and two and one-half years on Count 2. No appeal was taken from that judgment and sentence.
On August 14, 1986, Fuller, pro se, filed a “Belated Plea in Abatement” in the Bibb Superior Court. In that document he presented a challenge to the grand jury, alleging, inter alia, failure to select the “most experienced, intelligent and up right [sic] citizens,” that the jury commissioners selected special individuals to serve and excluded blacks, and that the grand jury sitting in the February Term was the same grand jury sitting in the April Term.
The superior court directed the district attorney to respond to the charges, and “[a]fter considering arguments from both sides” the court dismissed appellant’s “Plea in Abatement” without convening an oral hearing. A timely notice of appeal was filed with this court. Held:
Appellant argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his Plea in Abatement without holding an oral argument. We do not agree. We cannot fathom the purpose of a purported “plea in abatement” following the trial of a criminal case which has been completed for almost one year. Appellant has cited us to
Betts v. State,
The appellant entered pleas of guilty to both charges in his trial. “[T]he valid plea of guilty waived all defenses, known and unknown.”
Snell v. Smith,
We must note that although appellant filed his plea in abatement he neither filed nor requested a rule nisi. And, since appellant cannot appeal from a judgment on a plea in abatement and we have treated the plea as a motion for new trial, because it was not filed within the statutory 30 days, it must be considered as an extraordinary motion for new trial.
Dyal v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
