Jonah Lay appeals from the trial court’s denial of his motion in arrest of judgment. We affirm.
1. In June 2004, Lay was convicted in Fulton County of felony murder and other crimes, and his trial counsel filed a notice of appeal to this Court. New appellate counsel was then appointed for Lay and filed a motion asking this Court to remand the case to the trial court to allow Lay to assert a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. On June 16, 2005, we dismissed the appeal and remanded the case “for the limited purpose of allowing a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel to be raised and heard at the earliest practicable time.” Case No. S05A1469. Eleven days later, appellate counsel sent Lay a letter indicating that another lawyer from the public defend *211 er’s office would be representing Lay, but the record does not reflect that new counsel ever appeared or that an ineffectiveness claim has been raised or heard in the nearly six years since our remand order. 1 Lay, however, has filed various pro se motions in the intervening years, including an August 3, 2010, motion in arrest of judgment. That motion asserted that Lay’s indictment was substantively defective because it did not set forth the essential elements of the “charged offense.” On August 16, 2010, the trial court summarily denied the motion, and Lay timely appealed that ruling.
2. This case raises a question of appellate jurisdiction to which we have suggested but never squarely stated the answer. See
Sanders v. State,
On several occasions, this Court has addressed the merits of, rather than dismissing, direct appeals from trial courts’ rulings on untimely filed motions in arrest of judgment, without discussing this jurisdictional issue. See
Wright,
*212
We have reached the same result in a similar situation. A motion to withdraw a guilty plea must be filed within the same term of court as the sentence entered on the guilty plea. See
Dupree v. State,
3. Pursuant to our jurisdictional holding, we proceed to address and affirm the trial court’s denial of Lay’s motion, as it was clearly untimely.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The status of the direct appeal of Lay’s conviction is therefore uncertain. Lay may have decided not to pursue an ineffectiveness of trial counsel claim or a direct appeal. However, if the delay in asserting the claim or the appeal is due to the absence or ineffectiveness of the appellate counsel to which Lay is constitutionally entitled, he may he entitled to raise the claim in the trial court or to pursue a direct appeal. See
Rowland v. State,
In the event that a criminal defendant labels a pleading as a “motion in arrest of judgment” hut it is in substance some other type of motion, the appealability of the trial court’s ruling on the motion will turn on the substance of the motion. See
Johnson v. RLI Ins. Co.,
