delivered the opinion of the Court.
The charter of Tampa, Florida, authorizes the issuance of certain arrest warrants by clerks of the Tampa Municipal Court.
1
The sole question in this case is whether
Appellant was arrested for impaired driving on a warrant issued by a clerk of the municipal court. He moved the court to quash the warrant on the ground that it was issued by a nonjudicial officer in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. When , the motion was denied, he initiated proceedings in the Florida courts by means of that State’s writ of common-law certiorari. The state proceedings culminated in the holding of the Florida Supreme Court that “[t]he clerk and deputy clerks of the municipal court of the City of Tampa are neutral and detached ‘magistrates’ ... for the purpose of issuing arrest warrants within the requirements of
I.
A clerk of the municipal court is appointed by the city clerk from a classified list of civil servants and assigned to work in the municipal .court. The statute does not specify the qualifications necessary for this job, but no law degree or special legal training is required. The clerk’s duties are to receive trafile fines, prepare the court’s dockets and records, fill out commitment papers and perform other routine clerical tasks. Apparently he may issue subpoenas. He may nbt, however, sit as a judge, and he may not issue a search warrant or even a felony or misdemeanor arrest warrant for .violations of state laws. The only warrants he may issue are for the arrest of those charged with having breached municipal ordinances of the city of Tampa. 2
Appellant, contending that the Fourth Amendment requires that warrants be issued by “judicial officers,” argues that even this limited warrant authority is constitutionally invalid. He reasons that warrant applications of whatever nature cannot be assured the discerning, independent review compelled by the. Fourth Amendment when the review is performed by less than a judicial officer.
3
It is less than clear, however, as to who would qualify as a “judicial officer” under appellant’s theory. There is some suggestion in. appellant’s brief that a judicial officer must be a lawyer or the municipal court judge himself.
4
A more complete portrayal of appellant’s position would be that the Tampa clerks are disqualified .as judicial officers not merely because they are not lawyers
II
Past decisions of the Court have mentioned review by a “judicial officer” prior to issuance of a warrant,
Whiteley
v.
Warden,
The Court frequently has employed the term “magistrate” to denote those who may issue warrants.
Coolidge
v.
New Hampshire,
An examination of the Court’s decisions reveals that the terms “magistrate” and “judicial officer” have been used interchangeably. Little attempt was made to define either term, to distinguish the one from the other, or to' advance one as the definitive Fourth Amendment requirement. We find no commandment in either, term, however,., that all warrant authority naust reside exclusively in a lawyer or judge.. Such a requirement would have been incongruous when even within the federal system warrants were until recently widely issued by nonlawyers. 8
Ill
. The requisite detachment is present in the case at hand'.' Whatever else, neutrality and detachment might entail, it is clear that they require severance and disengagement from activities of law enforcement. There has-been no showing whatever here of partiality, or affiliation of these clerks with prosecutors or police. The record shows no, connection with any law enforcement activity or authority which would distort the independent judgment
Appellant likewise has failed to demónstrate that these clerks lack capacity to determine probable cause. The clerk’s authority extends only to the issuance of arrest warrants for breach of municipal ordinances." We presume from the nature of the clerk’s position that he would be able to deduce from the facts on an affidavit before him whether there was probable cause to believe a citizen guilty of impaired driving, breach of peace, drunkenness, trespass, or the multiple other common offenses covered by a municipal code. There has been no showing that this is too difficult a task for a clerk to accomplish. Our legal system has long entrusted non-
We decide today only that clerks of. the municipal coutt may constitutionally issue thé warrants in question. We have not considered whether the actual issuance was based upon an adequate showing of probable cause.
Aguilar
v.
Texas,
Nor need we determine whether a State may lodge warrant authorityun someone entirely outside the sphere of the judicial branch. ' Many persons may not qualify as the kind of “public civil officers” we have come to associate with the term “magistrate.” Had the Tampa clerk been entirely divorced from á judicial position, this-case would have presented different considerations. Here, however, the clerk is an employee of the judicial branch of' the city of Tampa, disassociated from the role of law enforcement. On the record in this case, the independent status of the clerk.cannot be questioned.
What we' do reject today is any per se invalidation of a state or local warrant system on the ground that the issuing magistrate i§ not a lawyer or judge. Communities may have sound reasons for delegating the responsibility of issuing warrants to competent personnel other than judges of lawyers.
10
Many-municipal courts face
We affirm the judgment of the Florida Supreme Court.
Affirmed.
Notes
The relevant Florida .statute and Tampa charter provisions are set forth below:
1. Section 168.04 of Fla. Stat. (1965) reads as follows:
"The clerk may administer an oath to and take affidavit of any person charging another with an offense by breach of an ordinance, and may issue a warrant to the marshal to- have the accused person arrested and brought before the mayor for trial. The marshal may, in the absence of the mayor and clerk from the police station, administer oaths to affidavits of complaints and issue warrants- for the arrest, of persons complained against.” ■
2. Section 495 of the Charter of the City of Tampa enacted by . the legislature of the State of Florida in Section 17, Chapter 5363, Laws of Florida 1903, reads as follows:
“The Chief of Police, or any policeman of the City of Tampa, may arrest, without warrant, any person Violating any of the ordinances of said city, committed in the presencé of such-officer, and when knowledge of the violation of any ordinance of said city shall come to said chief of police or policeman, not committed in his presence, he shall at once make affidavit, before the judge or clerk of the municipal court, against the person' charged with such violation, whereupon said judge or clerk shall issue a warrant for the arrest of such person.”
' 3. Section 160 of the Charter of the City of Tampa enacted by the legislature of the State of Florida in Sectioii 1, Chapter 61-2915, Laws of Florida 1961, reads as follows:
“The city clerk of the City of Tampa,-with the approval of the mayor, may appoint one' or moré deputies, such deputy or deputies • to be selected from the approved classified list of the city civil service, and to have and exercise the same powers as the city clerk himself, including but not limited to the issuance of warrants. One or more of such deputies may be designated as clerks of the municipal court.”
Tr. of Oral Arg. 6, 7, 20, 21.
Brief for Appellant 6; Tr. of Oral Arg. 10.
Brief for Appellant 12 — 13; Reply Brief for Appellant 8.
Reply Brief for Appellant 8; Tr. of Oral Arg. 10-12.
The United States Commissioner system has, of course, been replaced by the Federal Magistrates Act of 1968, 82 Stat. 1107.
In Compton, a notary public was deemed a “magistrate,” but the Court has nowhere indicated that the term denotes solely a lawyer or judge.
Dictionary (2d ed. 1957), defines magistrate as “[a] person clothed with power as a public civil officer; a public civil officer invested with executive or judicial powers . . or, more narrowly, “[a] magistrate of a class having summary, often criminal, jurisdiction, as a justice of the peace, or one of certain officials having a .similar jurisdiction Random. House Dictionary (1966) defines magistrate as (1) “a civil officer charged with the administration of the law” and' (2) “a minor judicial, officer, as a justice of the peace or a police justice, having jurisdiction to try minor criminal cases and to conduct. preliminary examinations of persons charged with serious crimes.”
United States Commissioners were not required to be lawyers until passage of the Federal Magistrates Act of 1968. Even under this Act, a limited exception to lawyer’s status is afforded part-time magistrates. 28 U. S. C. §631 (b)(1).
Tr. of Oral Arg. 10.
Some communities, such as those in rural or sparsely settled
See generally Mass Production Justice and the Constitutional Ideal (C. Whitebread ed., 1970).
States differ significantly as to whom they entrust the authority to grant a warrant. See Burke v.
Superior Court,
Harlan, Thoughts at a Dedication: Keeping the Judicial Function in Balance, 49 A. B. A. J. 943, 944 (1963).
