dissenting:
I agree with the majority’s disposition of all issues except *374defendant’s claim that he should be discharged for escape.1 While the county sheriff filed a criminal complaint against defendant for the crime of escape, the district attorney never filed an information formally charging defendant with that crime. This would clearly seem to require defendant’s discharge on his escape conviction, because as Chief Justice Maxey observed in a unanimous opinion for our Supreme Court:
No authority is needed to sustain the proposition that a defendant cannot be legally convicted of a crime neither charged in the indictment nor a necessary constituent of any crime so charged, but on those rare occasions when such a question has come before the appellate courts of this State they have consistently held as we hold in this case that such a conviction is a nullity.
Commonwealth v. Komatowski, 347 Pa. 445, 455-56, 32 A.2d 905, 910 (1943).
Since the time of Komatowski, almost all judicial districts in Pennsylvania, including the one involved in this case, have abandoned grand jury indictments and adopted infor-mations filed by the district attorney as the instrument for formally charging defendants with crimes. See Pa.Const., art. 1, § 10 (Supp.1985); Pa.R.Crim.P. 225. The rule stated in Komatowski, however, is equally applicable to informa-tions and this court has held that a trial court lacks jurisdiction to convict a defendant of a crime not charged in the information. Commonwealth v. Speller, 311 Pa.Super.Ct. 569, 579, 458 A.2d 198, 203-04 (1983). We have also held that the court has no jurisdiction to accept defendant’s guilty plea to a crime not charged in the information. Commonwealth v. Longo, 269 Pa.Super.Ct. 502, 503-04, 410 A.2d 368, 369 (1979).
Since the defendant here pled guilty to escape, with which the district attorney had not charged him by information, the Longo case is directly on point, and the escape convic*375tion could be reversed and discharged without further explanation, were it not for Commonwealth v. Diaz, 477 Pa. 122, 383 A.2d 852 (1978), in which the Supreme Court unanimously held that a trial court did have jurisdiction, under the circumstances of that case, to accept a guilty plea to a charge as to which there had been no indictment filed. Id., 477 Pa. at 127, 383 A.2d at 855. The unanimous opinion in Diaz, however, did not refer to the unanimous opinion in Komatowski, which seemed to hold exactly the opposite. This conflict cannot be resolved by viewing Komatowski as an old and outdated case, since its holding was a fundamental principle of law, which both the Supreme Court and this court en banc had recently restated at the time Diaz came before the Supreme Court. See Commonwealth v. Lee, 454 Pa. 526, 528, 312 A.2d 391, 392 (1973);2 Commonwealth v. Hoffman, 230 Pa.Super.Ct. 444, 446, 331 A.2d 805, 806 (1974).
Although Komatowski involved a trial and Diaz involved a guilty plea, there is nothing in the Diaz opinion to suggest that the different result in that case was based on the fact that a guilty plea, rather than a trial, was involved. Thus we seem to have two unanimous Supreme Court opinions contradicting each other. I believe the cases can only be reconciled by close analysis of the discussion in the Diaz opinion in the context of the facts of the case.
The Diaz opinion quoted the trial court’s summary of the facts as follows:
“On April 13, 1974, the defendant, Anibal Diaz, was arrested and charged with Attempted Rape, Kidnapping, *376Indecent Assault and Simple Assault. On April 18, 1974, the defendant appeared before Judge Thomas N. Shio-mos. The defendant knowingly and intelligently waived the preliminary hearing, presentment to the Grand Jury and indictment, and entered a plea of guilty on the Municipal Court transcript to the charge of Attempted Rape. In return for the guilty plea, the Commonwealth moved to nolle prosse the remaining charges. Thereupon, Judge Shiomos, sitting as a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, accepted the guilty plea and sentenced the defendant to five years probation.”
Commonwealth v. Diaz, supra, 477 Pa. at 124, 383 A.2d at 853.
The Commonwealth later indicted defendant for the same charges, and defendant moved to dismiss the indictment on double jeopardy grounds. The Commonwealth argued that there was no double jeopardy violation in reprosecuting defendant on the same charges, because the trial court had not had jurisdiction to accept defendant’s guilty plea, since there was no indictment at the time the guilty plea had been accepted. The Supreme Court rejected this argument, discussing the issue as follows:
- If the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction, appellant was placed in jeopardy, within the meaning of the constitutional protections, on April 13, 1974, when he pleaded guilty in conjunction with the plea bargain and was sentenced for the crimes of which he was accused. Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784, 89 S.Ct. 2056, 23 L.Ed.2d 707 (1969). The prosecution argues that the trial court did not have subject matter jurisdiction because an indictment was necessary to invoke that court’s jurisdiction. The prosecution relies principally on Commonwealth v. Little, 455 Pa. 163, 314 A.2d 270 (1974), and Commonwealth ex rel. Fagan v. Francies, 53 Pa.Super. 278 (1913). According to the prosecution, these cases hold that a court’s subject matter jurisdiction cannot be invoked absent an indictment. We do not accept the *377prosecution’s statement of the holdings of these cases. In Commonwealth v. Little, we said:
“The right to formal notice of charges, guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and by Article I, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, is so basic to the fairness of subsequent proceedings that it cannot be waived even if the defendant voluntarily submits to the jurisdiction of the court. Albrecht v. United States, 273 U.S. 1, 47 S.Ct. 250, 71 L.Ed. 505 (1927); Commonwealth ex rel. Fagan v. Francies, 53 Pa.Super. 278 (1913).” (Emphasis added.) 455 Pa. at 168-169, 314 A.2d at 273.
We further said in Little, supra:
“In the case before us, the requirement of notice to the defendant is fully satisfied by the indictment returned by the grand jury. Id. 455 Pa. at 169, 314 A.2d at 273.
The prosecution misreads Little. Little said that there must be a “formal notice of charges,” and that “the requirement of notice ... is fully satisfied by the indictment.” Little did not say that an indictment was the only way to satisfy the requirement of formal notice.
Likewise, in Fagan, supra, cited in Little, the Superior Court said:
“The objection that the case was not certified into the oyer and terminer may be regarded as technical, but the objection that no court had power to impose the sentence, except upon an indictment, without the relator’s express and unequivocal consent, is not technical but substantial.” (Emphasis added.)
Fagan, like Little, was concerned with whether there had been a formal notice of charges. Had there been an “express and unequivocal consent” in Fagan, an indictment would have been dispensable.
Commonwealth v. Diaz, supra, 477 Pa. at 124-25, 383 A.2d at 854.
The opinion in Diaz went on to determine that the formal notice requirement had been satisfied without an indictment *378under the specific facts of that case, but this determination can only be understood against the background of the above-quoted discussion of the Little and Fagan cases. The significant point about this discussion is that it clearly does not discard the long-standing rule that the requirement of formal notice of charge is jurisdictional, and therefore cannot be waived. Instead, Diaz says that Little leaves open the possibility of satisfying the formal notice requirement by means other than an indictment. The only specific reference to any means other than an indictment is the quotation from Fagan, referring to an “express and unequivocal consent.”
When read only in the context of the single sentence from Fagan quoted in Diaz, the phrase “express and unequivocal consent” might be interpreted to mean consent to the jurisdiction of the court, but such an interpretation would be inconsistent with the statement Diaz had just quoted from Little, that there could be no waiver “even if the defendant voluntarily submits to the jurisdiction of the court.” When the phrase “express and unequivocal consent” is read in the context of the full opinion in Fagan, however, it becomes clear that what appears to be a vague and open-ended expression was intended to have a quite specific meaning. It refers to a procedure under the Act of April 15, 1907, P.L. 62, § 1, 19 P.S. § 241, whereby a defendant could waive grand jury action of an indictment by endorsing the waiver on a bill of indictment prepared by the Commonwealth.
It was only action by the grand jury that was waived by the procedure under the Act of 1907. There still had to be a bill of indictment, an instrument by which the district attorney formally charged the defendant with a specific crime or crimes, as a basis for the jurisdiction of the court. See Commonwealth ex rel. Fagan v. Francies, supra, 53 Pa.Super.Ct. at 290. This remained true when the Act of 1907 was supplanted by an essentially similar procedure in Rule of Criminal Procedure 215, adopted by the Supreme Court in 1964.
*379With the understanding that the “express and unequivocal consent” approved by the Diaz opinion refers to the procedure for waiver of grand jury action under the Act of 1907 and Rule 215, it is possible to make sense of the Diaz holding that the court had jurisdiction under the circumstances of the case, even though there had been no indictment. Most of the Diaz opinion’s discussion of the circumstances on which it relied consists of a lengthy quotation from the Municipal Court transcript of a statement by the prosecutor of the specific facts underlying the charges.3 This transcript, which defendant endorsed with his waiver of grand jury action,4 thus provided the substantial equivalent of a bill of indictment prepared by the Commonwealth.
From this close reading of the entire discussion in the Supreme Court’s opinion in Diaz, it is possible to glean the essential holding that the specific facts of Diaz represented a case of substantial compliance with Rule of Criminal Procedure 215. While the opinion is not explicit concerning this or any other rationale,5 this is the only way to reconcile *380the Diaz opinion with Little and Fagan, which Diaz approved, as well as the Supreme Court’s unanimous holding in Commonwealth v. Komatowski, supra, that the court has no jurisdiction to convict or sentence a defendant for a crime for which he has not been indicted.6
*381In the case before us, there is no question of substantial compliance as in Diaz. There was simply no information or indictment or any other instrument filed with the court by the district attorney formally charging defendant with the crime of escape.7 The court below therefore had no jurisdiction to accept defendant’s guilty plea to escape, or to sentence him for that crime. Commonwealth v. Komatowski, supra; Commonwealth v. Speller, supra; Commonwealth v. Longo, supra. Defendant should therefore be discharged for escape.
. Our Supreme Court might well take this case to clarify this issue, since it is one of great technical difficulty, and involves interpretation of the court’s own apparently conflicting opinions.
. Like the Komatowski case, Commonwealth v. Lee, supra, appears to contradict Diaz, since Lee cites Komatowski for the following proposition: "One cannot be convicted or sentenced for an indictable offense unless the grand jury has approved an indictment covering that offense.” What makes this particularly astonishing is that the Lee and Diaz opinions were written by the same author. Further compounding the confusion is the fact that only a year after Diaz, which superficially seems to hold that even a jurisdictional issue is waivable, the author of Diaz argued in a lone dissent that even a nonjurisdic-tional issue should not be waivable. Commonwealth v. Montgomery, 485 Pa. 110, 115, 401 A.2d 318, 320 (1979) (dissenting opinion).
. The quotation from the Municipal Court transcript is preceded by a brief reference to the sufficiency of the criminal complaint, but there is no indication that a complaint alone would be sufficient to confer criminal jurisdiction. Commonwealth v. Little, supra, 455 Pa. at 169, 314 A.2d at 273, held that the absence of a complaint did not deprive the court of criminal jurisdiction, which was conferred by the indictment. It would seem to follow from the reasoning of Little that something as insignificant to the jurisdictional issue as a criminal complaint could not by itself substitute for something as important as the indictment. Since Diaz purported to be consistent with Little, the brief mention of the criminal complaint in Diaz should be interpreted as simply one factor the Court took into consideration in holding that under all the circumstances, the unusual procedure followed by the Commonwealth amounted to the substantial equivalent of filing a bill of indictment under Rule of Criminal Procedure 215.
. According to the trial court’s statement of facts, which the Supreme Court quoted, “The defendant knowingly and intelligently waived the preliminary hearing, presentment to the Grand Jury and indictment, and entered a plea of guilty on the Municipal Court transcript to the charge of Attempted Rape.” Commonwealth v. Diaz, supra, 477 Pa. at 124, 383 A.2d at 853.
. It is not clear why the Supreme Court’s opinion fails to mention Rule 215 explicitly, since the Superior Court, whose judgment was reversed by the Supreme Court, had discussed the rule in holding that an indictment or a bill of indictment was necessary to the court’s *380criminal jurisdiction. Commonwealth v. Diaz, 235 Pa.Super.Ct. 352, 355-56, 340 A.2d 559, 561 (1975). The Superior Court, however, had not mentioned the possibility that even though no bill of indictment had been formally drawn up, the Municipal Court transcript with defendant’s waiver endorsement constituted the substantial equivalent of the Rule 215 bill of indictment, and this interpretation is the only one which fits the facts cited in the Supreme Court’s opinion. Cf. Commonwealth ex rel. Kolodziejski v. Tancredi, 222 Pa.Super.Ct. 436, 443-44, 295 A.2d 174, 178 (1972) (citing factors supporting a finding of a lack of substantial compliance with Rule 215).
. An alternative route by which the Diaz result could have been justified would have been to distinguish Diaz from Komatowski and its progeny, in that the Komatowski type of case involves a defendant who claims the court had no jurisdiction to try him unless the attorney for the Commonwealth files a formal charge, while Diaz involved a defendant who was being prosecuted for the second time on the same charges, and the Commonwealth opposed the defendant’s double jeopardy claim on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction over the first set of charges, which were void. The Diaz Court could simply have held that the whole question of jurisdiction over the first set of charges, along with the "void — voidable” distinction, has no relevance in the double jeopardy context. In effect, the Commonwealth would be estopped from disclaiming the validity of the original set of charges it had brought. The United States Supreme Court had at least left the door open to this approach in Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784, 89 S.Ct. 2056, 23 L.Ed.2d 707 (1969), a case cited by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Diaz, 477 Pa. at 124, 383 A.2d at 854. In Benton, the U.S. Supreme Court called the government’s argument that the defective first indictment involved in that case was void "a bit strange,” 305 U.S. at 796, 89 S.Ct. at 2063, but did not go so far as to hold that the "void-voidable” distinction should be eliminated entirely in the double jeopardy context, as it was unnecessary in that case, since under Ball v. United States, 163 U.S. 662, 16 S.Ct. 1192, 41 L.Ed. 300 (1896), the defective first indictment was merely voidable. Benton v. Maryland, supra, 395 U.S. at 797, 89 S.Ct. at 2064. This would certainly have permitted the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to throw out the void-voidable distinction entirely in a case such as Diaz, where there was no indictment at all, rather than merely a defective one as in Benton, making it much more difficult in Diaz to characterize the original charges as merely voidable. The Diaz Court could also have bypassed federal law entirely by holding that double jeopardy claims under the Pennsylvania Constitution do not require that the first set of charges be voidable rather than absolutely void, although perhaps the Court did not do this because of the confusion surrounding the applicability of the double jeopardy clause *381of the Pennsylvania Constitution to non-capital cases at the time of the Diaz decision. See generally Commonwealth v. Boerner, 281 Pa.Super.Ct. 505, 513-15 & nn. 7-11, 422 A.2d 583, 587-88 & nn. 7-11 (1980), petition for allowance of appeal denied (1981). In any event, I have not relied on these alternative approaches, since the Diaz opinion does not indicate they provided a basis for the Court’s decision.
. A criminal complaint was filed by the sheriff charging defendant with escape, but as previously discussed, a criminal complaint alone is insufficient. See note 3, supra.