Opinion by
This is an appeal by the Commonwealth from an order of the Criminal Court of Bucks County sustaining an Application for Suppression of Evidence. The facts, as shown by the record, are as follows: On September 1, 1967, an informer telephoned the Bristol Township Police and spoke to Detective Richard Batezel. Approximately forty-five minutes after this phone call, a person appeared at the police station and identified himself to Detective Batezel as the informer who had called earlier. He told Batezel that he had been in the home of William Somershoe a few hours earlier and had seen in the kitchen “approximately a pound and a half of marijuana” and had been offered some for sale. The informer further stated that he had seen “a large quantity of drugs, capsules, pills which were various colors.”
Based on these facts and knowledge that the informer had been involved with narcotics in the past, Detective Batezel prepared an affidavit for the purpose of obtaining a search warrant for Somershoe’s home. The affidavit contained the following: “That he has information from an informant who stated that he had *249 been at the home of Mr. Somershoe and had seen Somershoe with dangerous drugs of various kinds which he wanted to sell and also marijuana in a paper bag this date. Subject Wm. Somershoe also has been arrested in the last month for possession of dangerous drugs”. In addition to the affidavit, Detective Batezel testified under oath before the Justice of the Peace for the purpose of supplementing the information contained in his affidavit. He testified that the narcotics referred to in his affidavit had been described to him by the informer. The detective in turn narrated the informer’s description of the narcotics to the Justice of the Peace. Detective Batezel told the Justice that the informer was familiar with drugs and marijuana and knew them when he saw them because he had previously been involved in narcotic investigations and also that defendant Somershoe had been arrested earlier in the month for possession of dangerous drugs and had appeared before the same Justice of the Peace to whom the detective was presenting his testimony. Detective Batezel knew the informer was a user but the evidence does not show whether he gave this information to the Justice of the Peace.
On a Petition to suppress presented on behalf of the defendant, the lower court ordered that the items taken from Somershoe’s home were inadmissible as evidence on the grounds that Detective Batezel’s affidavit and testimony failed to set forth some of the ■underlying circumstances which were necessary to inform the Justice of the Peace of the Detective’s conclusion that the informer was credible or his information reliable.
The test for determining the validity of a search warrant is that pronounced in the leading case of
Aguilar v. Texas,
The magistrate in this kind of a case is in effect obliged to make an independent and detached appraisal of the affidavit in order to determine the presence of statements contained therein setting forth “underlying circumstances” as referred to in
Aguilar v. Texas,
In the instant case, we have no difficulty in finding that the issuing magistrate was sufficiently informed of the “underlying circumstances” from which the informer concluded that the narcotics and drugs were where he claimed they were. The informer was an eyewitness to these items being present in the Somershoe home. He had left the Somershoe home just a few hours prior to the time Detective Batezel prepared his affidavit. He described the items he saw in Somershoe’s *251 home to the Detective who in turn described them to the Justice of the Peace. The Justice of the Peace knew of defendant Somershoe who had been before him within the month on a similar charge. Thus we feel that the first requirement of Aguilar is satisfied.
The troublesome question is whether Detective Batezel set forth sufficient underlying circumstances necessary to give the magistrate a basis for finding the propriety of the officer’s conclusion that the informant was credible or his information reliable. On this point the lower court found that the underlying circumstances set forth in Batezel’s affidavit and testimony failed to give the magistrate information from which the officer concluded that the informer was credible. It is interesting to note that the lower court considered the affidavit and testimony only as they pertained to the affiant’s conclusion regarding credibility of the informer but omitted a discussion on the affidavit as it related to the officer’s conclusion relating to the reliability of the informant’s information.
A magistrate must make an independent and impartial judgment on probable cause, but he is not expected to make an independent judgment on probable cause in a vacuum or based on his own personal impression divorced entirely from the information presented him in the affidavit, and the testimony before him. His independence of judgment is important only to the extent that he decides from the facts and circumstances surrounding the case whether or not the officer had reasonable grounds for believing the informer or for relying on his information. The point we must remember is that it is not whether the Justice of the Peace personally believed the informer to be credible or his information reliable, but whether the underlying circumstances were set forth sufficiently to give him an understanding of the officer’s conclusion of the in *252 formant’s credibility or the reliability of his information.
In
Commonwealth v. Rose,
In the instant case the informer came personally to the Police Station to tell Detective Batezel (who knew the informer to be a user) that he had seen the narcotics and drugs in the Somershoe home. Although this act of the informer presenting himself before the police was in itself not a self-incriminatory act, yet it was such as to entitle him to credence,
Commonwealth v. Rose,
Affidavits of probable cause are tested by much less vigorous standards than those governing the ad
*253
missibility of evidence at trial,
McCray v. Illinois,
The cases relied on by the lower court in this case are inapposite. In the case of
Commonwealth v. Smyser,
The situation was the same in
Aguilar
in which the affidavit recited that “Affiants have received reliable information from a credible person and do believe that heroin, marijuana, and barbiturates and other narcotics and narcotic paraphernalia are being kept at the above described premises for the purpose of sale and use contrary to the provisions of the law.” This affidavit was held insufficient and understandably so. The affidavit merely contained a conclusion that
Aguilar
possessed narcotics. In
Commonwealth v. Bondi,
It is our opinion therefore that the second requirement of Aguilar is also met, and that Detective Batezel’s affidavit and testimony formed a proper basis for the issuance of the search warrant, and that the motion to suppress was improperly granted.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed and the case is remanded to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
