Opinion by
This is an appeal by the Commonwealth from an order of the Court of Common Pleas granting a new trial to the defendant, Kenneth Youngblood. It presents, inter alia, the question whether a court en banc considering a convicted defendant’s motion for a new trial must include the pre-trial suppression judge among its members and have before it the notes of testimony from the suppression hearing. On the merits there is also presented the question whether the court en banc erred in overruling the suppression judge’s decision that a confession was voluntarily made and admissible in evidence.
The history of the case is as follows: On April 14, 1969, the defendant, accompanied by his sister Hattie *227 Bryant, surrendered himself to the Philadelphia police. After several hours in custody the defendant made a statement in which he admitted shooting Hattie’s husband, Sidney Bryant. Subsequently, the defendant was charged with murder, to which he pleaded not guilty. Youngblood filed a motion to suppress the confession and after a full hearing the suppression judge denied the motion and ruled the statement admissible. The case then went to trial before a judge and jury. As permissible under Pennsylvania practice, the voluntariness of the confession was again challenged at trial and that issue was submitted to the jury. By its verdict of second degree murder, the jury unquestionably accepted the confession as voluntary. Post-trial motions were filed and argued before a court en heme consisting of the trial judge and two other judges, none of whom was the suppression judge. The court en banc ordered a new trial, ruling unanimously that the defendant had not intelligently waived his right to counsel as required by Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S, 436 (1966), and that therefore the confession should not have been admitted into evidence. This appeal followed.
At the outset, we note that the right of the Commonwealth to appeal from adverse decisions in criminal cases is limited to pure questions of law.
Commonwealth v. Tabb,
I
The Commonwealth’s first contention is that the court
en banc
as it was constituted did not have the power to overrule the finding of the suppression judge that the confession was admissible. We recently held in
*228
Commonwealth v.
Ware,
The Commonwealth argues, however, that in the instant case the court en bcmc made its own finding of fact, in direct conflict with a finding of the suppression judge. We disagree. The following facts were found by the suppression judge and were accepted by the court en banc: Upon arrival at the police station at approximately 12:20 a.m. on April 14, the defendant was given the standard Miranda warnings. At that time he said he did not wish to say anything until he had talked with his sister. After the sister had been brought into the room, the warnings were re-read to the defendant. To the question “Do you want either to talk with a lawyer at this time or to have a lawyer with you while we ask you questions?” the defendant replied, “Yes, I want a lawyer”. Questioning then stopped. The sister left at 2:28 a.m., saying that she would be back with an attorney later that morning. Twelve minutes later, a detective entered the interrogation room where the defendant had been left alone and began to fill out an “intelligence summary” consisting of the defendant’s name, age, address, employment, and other background information of general nature. After answering two or three questions on the form, the defendant told the detective he wanted to recount everything that had happened. He stated that the only reason he had not done so sooner was in order to satisfy his sister, who was concerned and tired, so that she would return home *229 and rest. Without a further reading of the Miranda warnings, Youngblood then proceeded to give a full inculpatory account of the killing of his brother-in-law.
The Commonwealth concedes that up to this point the findings of the suppression judge and the court en banc coincide. The court en banc, however, also considered the fact that the defendant was a mental defective. Admittedly, the suppression judge made no specific finding in this regard. Therefore, while it is impossible to say that the court en banc overruled the suppression judge, it does appear to have made a new or additional finding of fact. We think the finding was justified in this case. At the suppression hearing the Commonwealth itself introduced the report of a court-appointed psychiatrist. The summary section of this evaluation contained the following conclusion: “Mr. Youngblood would appear to represent a Personality Disorder, Schizoid Personality which means that he appears to fantasize and withdraw and establish few meaningful relationships in life. He, furthermore, is a young man of mildly defective intelligence.” In addition, there was presented to the suppression judge uncontradicted testimony that the defendant had progressed through the third grade when he was removed to a special school for the mentally retarded. On this basis alone, i.e., accepting as true the Commonwealth’s evidence on mental capacity and without considering the testimony of a defense psychiatrist that the defendant suffered from organic brain damage and was a schizophrenic personality, the position taken by the court en banc was altogether justified. Its function was analogous to that performed by a court in reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, and it concluded that as a matter of law the evidence was not sufficient to find voluntariness. 1 Moreover, as will appear later in this *230 opinion, the determination of mental infirmity was unnecessary to the court’s ultimate invalidation of appellant’s confession
II
The Commonwealth’s second contention is that it was improper for the court en banc to overrule the suppression judge because (1) that judge was not a member of the court en bane, and (2) the court en banc rendered its decision without having before it the transcribed notes of testimony from the suppression hearing. 2
The contention of appellant that error was committed in failing to have the suppression hearing judge sit on the court en bane we find to be without merit.
As to the failure of the court en bane to await transcription of the notes of testimony, any error arising *231 therefrom is harmless. 3 In the first place, the court en banc had. the equivalent of a complete transcript. The Commonwealth concedes that with one exception the same evidence introduced at the suppression hearing was also introduced at trial. The missing piece of evidence was the psychiatric report of the court-appointed expert, referred to above. The summary of this report, however, was read to the court en banc by defense counsel. The Commonwealth argues that this procedure was unsatisfactory because counsel improperly characterized the entire report as being in substantial agreement with that of the defendant’s expert. The faulty characterization, however, was of minimal importance, attested to by the District Attorney’s failure to object at the time. 4 In the second place, the legal question which the court en banc was asked to decide is the same one which has been raised by the Commonwealth in this Court and which will be considered in Part III, infra. We have been provided with the entire record and can correct any errors which might have been made below.
Ill
The Commonwealth urges, finally, that the court
en banc
erroneously concluded as a matter of law, based upon the facts as recited above, that the defendant did not knowingly and intelligently waive his right to counsel. In
Miranda v. Arizona,
The Commonwealth contends that the interrogation in this case
did
cease immediately after the defendant invoked his rights to remain silent and to the presence of an attorney; that the defendant “volunteered” his confession; and that new warnings were not required before the “volunteered statement”. The taking of an intelligence summary is not,
per se,
custodial interrogation. We have recently so held in
Commonwealth v. DuVal,
In this case Youngblood, a 15-year-old youth “of mildly defective intelligence”, had been in police custody for several hours and was the prime suspect in the murder of his brother-in-law. He had already once elected to remain silent and to have his sister seek to find an attorney. When he suddenly changed his mind and exhibited a willingness to talk, the police should have been alert to the danger of accepting a statement without making as certain as possible that the suspect understood his rights and wished to waive them. Unlike
DuVal,
there was here no sudden blurting out of a confession: there was a statement of willingness to give a statement, and then interrogation by the officer. Whatever positive inference concerning appellant’s comprehension of his rights can be drawn from his initial choice to remain silent and to seek the services of an attorney is undermined by the complete change of face which came only a few minutes later. While it is true that the reversal of defendant’s position was initiated by him, his explanation that his sister was tired and that he only wanted her to go home hardly suffices as proof of a knowing and intelligent waiver of constitutional rights. In concluding that the Commonwealth has not sustained its burden as to voluntariness, see
Commonwealth v. Nathan,
Our position today is not inconsistent with prior decisions of this Court. In three recent cases we have held that a defendant’s initial exercise of
Mwanda
rights did not foreclose a later waiver. In each instance, however, the waiver was preceded by a complete reexplanation of those rights, conspicuously absent in this case.
Commonwealth v. Grandison,
The order granting a new trial is affirmed.
Notes
It is apparent from reviewing the testimony of the hearing on post-trial motions that the court en bane realized that its scope *230 of review was limited to legal issues. The following colloquy took place between Judge (now Justice) Nix, a member of the court, and counsel for the defendant: “Judge Nix: Just a moment. Aren’t we in this position: At this point you already have a court making an initial determination as to admissibility? Mb. De Fino : That’s correct, sir. Judge Nix: So that the factual issues were resolved adverse to your position by the Court in reaching that conclusion? Mb. De Fino: That is correct, sir. Judge Nix: Then you had a jury who also had a right to review on the factual question who also decided against your version of how the confession was obtained, at least insofar as to whether or not it was coercive. At this point you have to take the evidence—most favorable evidence to the Commonwealth in review and then we would have to accept the testimony of the detective that he voluntarily made this statement. It seems to me that the only real issue that you have at this point is whether or not the evidence on the record, the total evidence on the record, justifies that he could make an intelligent waiver.”
The court en bane rendered its decision on October 30, 1970. The Commonwealth then realized that the notes from the suppression hearing had not yet been transcribed. The stenographer was notified, and delivered the transcribed notes one or two days thereafter.
While this matter was also not raised below, it cannot now be considered waived. Realistically, wo recognize that the very nature of the objection makes it impossible for it to be raised until after the fact.
The Commonwealth seeks to excuse this failure on the ground that the assistant district attorney assigned to post-trial motions was a different assistant district attorney from the one who had earlier handled the motion to suppress. It is obvious that such an explanation is not satisfactory.
