Defendant Wayne Degree appeals from sentence entered after his pleas of guilty to two counts of assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 14-32(b).
The evidence shows that defendant, armed with a- shotgun, went to the house where his mother-in-law and his estranged wife were staying. When defendаnt’s wife looked out the glass door in the kitchen of the house, defendant shot her in the face. Defendant then broke the glass and entered the house. Defendant’s mother-in-law, who had been standing in the kitchen, attempted to flee down the hall. Defendant shot her in the back. Both women were seriously injured. Defendant entered pleas of guilty to assaulting both women with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury on 23 May 1991, and Judge John Mull Gardner conducted a sentencing hearing,' during which he heard testimony from defendant. Judge Gardner then stated, “I’m. going to consider one other potential mitigating factor overnight, and I’ll sentence him tоmorrow morn *640 ing. I’ll continue prayer for judgment until tomorrow morning .[24 May 1991] at nine-thirty a.m.” On 24 May 1991, prayer for judgment was continued until 31 May 1991. On 31 May 1991, prayer for judgment was continued until 3 Junе 1991. The clerk’s minutes reveal that no action was taken on the case on 3 June 1991.
At some point the failure to act on the case was discovered, and defendant’s sentencing hearing was rescheduled for 16 July 1991. On that date, Judge Loto Greenlee Caviness heard evidence from defendant and from thе victims of the assaults, and found factors in aggravation and mitigation. Included among these was the nonstatutory aggravating factor that defendant had intended to kill when he shot the victims. Judge Caviness found that the factors in mitigation were outweighed by the factors in aggravation, and sentenced defendant to the mаximum term of ten years in prison on each count, with the second sentence suspended and defendant placed on supervised probation fоr five years.
The issues are whether (I) the trial court’s failure to continue prayer for judgment from 3 June 1991 until a later time divested the trial court of jurisdiction to sеntence defendant at a later session of court; and, if not, (II) defendant has preserved for appellate review the alleged error by thе trial court in finding as a nonstatutory aggravating factor that defendant intended to kill when he assaulted the victims.
I
Defendant first argues that because he was nоt sentenced on 3 June 1991, the date set by the court, the court was without jurisdiction to enter sentence on 16 July 1991. We disagree.
The sentence of a criminаl defendant “does not necessarily have to be imposed at the same term of court at which the verdict or plea of guilty was had.”
State v. Graham,
In this case, defendant pled guilty on 23 May 1991, prayer for judgment was continued for a definite period of time until 3 June 1991, and sentence was imposed by another judge on 16 July 1991. The record does not reveal any improper purpose for the delay in sentencing, and there is no evidence that defendant suffered any actual рrejudice because his sentence was entered on 16 July 1991 rather than 3 June 1991. The delay of some sixty days between the plea of guilty and the imposition оf sentence was itself not unreasonable in length. Furthermore, defendant at no time prior to 16 July 1991 asked that judgment be pronounced,
State v. Everitt,
Finally, it is not material that a trial judge different from the judge who presided over the taking of the guilty plea entered the sentence.
State v. Sauls,
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in sentencing defendant on 16 July 1991.
II
Dеfendant next argues that the trial court improperly found as a nonstatutory aggravating factor that defendant had the intent to kill when he assaulted the victims.
Defendant did not object to the finding of the nonstatutory aggravating factor at trial. It is the general rule that failure to object to an alleged error in the trial court waives the consideration of such error on appeal. N.C. R. App. P. 10(b)(1) (1993). When a defendant has failed to object to an allegеd error, but contends that an exception “by rule or law was deemed preserved or taken without” an objection at trial,
id.,
it is the defendant’s burden to establish his right to appellate review “by showing that the exception was preserved by rule or law or that the error alleged constitutes plain error.”
State v. Gardner,
*643 Defendant failed to object at the sentencing hearing to the trial court’s consideration of the nonstatutory aggravating factor. Defendant has failed to give this Court notice of his failure to object at trial, and has also failed to establish that any rule or law would preserve his assignment of error without an objection at trial. He does not argue that the trial court’s consideration of the aggravating factor constituted plain error. His right to appellate review on this issue is, therefore, waived.
Accordingly, the sentencing order is
Affirmed.
