Opinion by
Appellant, Anthony Sanutti, was convicted on a plea of guilty to receiving stolen goods and was sentenced to a term of one-to-five years. No direct appeal was taken. He is before us on a grant of allocatur following the Superior Court’s per curiam affirmance of the dismissal after hearing of appellant’s petition under the Post Conviction Hearing Act. Our review convinces us that appellant’s post-conviction claim that his guilty plea was not knowing and intelligent is without merit. Accordingly, we will affirm.
On October 5,1970, Sanutti was called to trial on an indictment charging larceny and receiving stolen goods. That same day defense counsel and the prosecuting attorney met with the trial judge in chambers to discuss the possibility of Sanutti pleading guilty. While no transcript of that meeting exists, it is not controverted that a guilty plea was in fact discussed. After returning to open court, the assistant district attorney and defense counsel informed the court of Sanutti’s intention to plead guilty. Appellant was then sworn and an extensive colloquy placed on record in which Sanutti revealed his understanding of the consequences of the plea, denied the existence of any promises or commitments made to induce his plea, and acknowledged his awareness of the fact that the court was at liberty to sentence as it saw fit within statutory limitations. After acceptance of the plea and on request of appellant’s counsel, the court then dispensed with a presentencing report. The assistant district attorney stated that the Commonwealth “[had] no recommendation in this matter.” Appellant was sentenced to a term of one-to-five years. 1 Defense counsel immediately re *347 quested that the court “reconsider ... or at least order a pre-sentence investigation. ...” The court declined to do so. 2
There is no record as to what exactly was said by the trial court to defense counsel at the conference in chambers. Both the Commonwealth and defense counsel agree, however, that the court made no commitment to impose probation rather than a prison term. Following this conference, defense counsel conveyed the fact of the meeting with the judge to appellant and informed him that he, counsel, thought it “more likely than not” that a plea of guilty would produce a sentence of probation only. Although counsel would not say that he expressed his conclusion to his client in the form of a promise, he conceded that “it was pretty close to it.”
We have held in the past that disappointed expectations
alone
do not vitiate guilty pleas.
Commonwealth v. White,
In
Commonwealth v. Evans,
*349
The entering of a plea of guilty is a “grave and solemn act [in which] the defendant [admits] in open court that he committed the acts charged in the indictment.”
Brady v. United States,
Order affirmed.
Notes
Appellant’s trial counsel in his PCHA testimony explained that he desired immediate sentencing because his client was a truck *347 driver, had a wife and three children, and could, if placed on immediate probation, continue in his employment without interruption.
The larceny count was subsequently nol pressed.
The trial judge was not called as a witness at the post-conviction hearing.
We take this occasion to reaffirm what was said in the single footnote to
Commonwealth v. Evans,
