D. C. Riley, J.
Following a long and tortuous procedural path involving a district court, a circuit court, various panels of the Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court, the case at bar presents itself for our resolution. While retracing that circuitous route might prove interesting to scholars of legal procedure, we choose to dispense as much as possible with so fruitless an undertaking and proceed [92]*92instead to the more significant substantive matters involved.
I.
The record reflects that on August 1, 1974, an assistant prosecutor in Washtenaw County, acting on the request of an Ypsilanti police officer, authorized prosecution of defendants Joslin and Christante for violation of Michigan’s Controlled Substances Act, MCLA 335.301 et seq.; MSA 18.1070(1). On that day, complaints were filed against the defendants and warrants were issued charging possession of marijuana with intent to deliver,1 a felony carrying a maximum penalty of 4 years imprisonment and $2,000 fine. MCLA 335.341(l)(c); MSA 18.1070(41)(l)(c).
On September 19, 1974, defendants filed motions before the district court to dismiss the charges on the ground that the instant prosecution contravened Ypsilanti City Ordinance No 437,2 which [93]*93"has been held a lawful enactment by the Circuit Court for the County of Washtenaw”. Specifically, defendants argued that the Ypsilanti police officer who had filed the complaint in this matter had violated § (d) of the ordinance by taking the case to the Washtenaw County Prosecutor rather than to the Ypsilanti City Attorney as the ordinance requires.
In the circuit court decision on which defendants relied, Ypsilanti Police Officers’ Association v City [94]*94of Ypsilanti, No 74-9222-CL, an action for declaratory judgment decided on August 21, 1974, Judge Patrick J. Conlin had declared the ordinance valid and constitutional in all but one respect. Interpreting § (d) of the ordinance, Judge Conlin upheld that part of the section requiring city police officers to refer marijuana violations to the city attorney but invalidated the remainder of the section limiting the city attorney’s ability to refer complaints to any other authority for prosecution. The court ruled instead that the city attorney, once apprised by a city policeman of a marijuana violation, may elect either to proceed under the ordinance or to refer the matter to the county prosecutor for disposition under state law. For reasons unknown to this panel, however, Judge Conlin did not issue an order of declaratory judgment until March 4, 1975, over 6 months from the decision date of his opinion.3
Thus, on October 3, 1974, when District Judge Thomas F. Shea ruled on defendants’ motions to dismiss the state charges, Judge Conlin’s order of declaratory judgment had not yet been entered. Though aware of the prior decision in circuit court upholding most of the ordinance, Judge Shea nonetheless denied defendants’ motions and voided the ordinance in its entirety.
Defendants then sought an order of superintending control before Judge Conlin in the circuit court. By written opinion of October 16, 1974, Judge Conlin, alluding to his prior decision in Ypsilanti Police Officers’ Association, supra, held that a district judge may not overrule a prior, relevant decision of a circuit judge located in the same county. Judge Conlin then instructed Judge Shea "to treat the Ypsilanti ordinance as a valid [95]*95enactment in this and -all future cases”. Although at the time Judge Conlin did not order the charges against defendants dismissed, he later so ruled while this case awaited appellate resolution. We issued a stay of Judge Conlin’s order of dismissal pending our decision in the cause.
II.
At the outset, we must acknowledge that this case represents a woeful example of an adversary proceeding. The parties apparently have chosen to avoid at all costs any discussion of opposing arguments. The Washtenaw County Prosecutor, mounting a broad-based constitutional and statutory attack, would have us nullify the ordinance in toto. Conversely, counsel for defendant Christante, raising various procedural objections, contends that we should abstain where possible from discussion of constitutional issues. Moreover, neither defendant Joslin nor the Ypsilanti City Attorney have participated in the case on this appeal.
Given, then, these unilateral arguments and our recognition that the underlying issues transcend the interests of the instant parties, we proceed to resolve only those questions pertaining to the facts at hand.
Of the three contentions advanced by defendant Christante, one has already been decided by a prior panel of this Court and another is without merit. The third involves the question whether a decision of a circuit judge upholding a municipal ordinance is binding on a district judge 'Sitting in the same county. Although the question is intriguing, its answer must await another day. As noted, Judge Conlin had not yet issued his order of declaratory judgment sustaining the ordinance when Judge Shea denied defendants’ motions to [96]*96dismiss. Since a court speaks through its orders, not its opinions, Jones v Hicks, 358 Mich 474, 485; 100 NW2d 243 (1960), In re Spalter, 31 Mich App 458, 464; 188 NW2d 67 (1971), we hold that there was no circuit-court order extant that could bind the district judge.
Of the prosecutor’s arguments, only one is necessarily invoked on the facts at bar. The prosecutor charges that § (d) of the ordinance impermissibly restrains Ypsilanti police officers from enforcing state law. We agree.
By its terms, § (d) purports to prevent the Ypsilanti police from complaining to anyone but the city attorney about marijuana violations. The law is clear, however, that municipal police are authorized to enforce state law. MCLA 764.15; MSA 28.874 ("Any peace officer may, without a warrant, arrest a person — (a) For the commission of any felony or misdemeanor committed in his presence; [or] (b) When such person has committed a felony although not in the presence of the officer”). See also, Odinetz v Budds, 315 Mich 512; 24 NW2d 193 (1946). The power of a city to enact ordinances "relating to its municipal concerns, property and government, [is] subject to the constitution and law”. Const. 1963, art 7, § 22.
Accordingly, to the extent § (d) limits the authority of city police to enforce state law, we hold it void. Hence the district court properly denied defendants’ motions to dismiss the state charges, § (d) of the ordinance being no bar to prosecution under the Controlled Substances Act.
We expect that municipal police officers in performing their dual functions as representatives of the city and state will exercise their considerable discretion, 16 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations [97]*97(3d ed), § 45.15, p 616, in a rational, evenhanded manner. The day may soon arrive, however, when the legitimate exercise of that discretion causes this Court and ultimately the Supreme Court to be confronted with the issues left unresolved by today’s decision.
Whatever the judgment eventually pronounced on the validity of the remaining portions of the ordinance, we must recognize that a sizable contingent of our citizens,4 as well as the administrations in Lansing
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D. C. Riley, J.
Following a long and tortuous procedural path involving a district court, a circuit court, various panels of the Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court, the case at bar presents itself for our resolution. While retracing that circuitous route might prove interesting to scholars of legal procedure, we choose to dispense as much as possible with so fruitless an undertaking and proceed [92]*92instead to the more significant substantive matters involved.
I.
The record reflects that on August 1, 1974, an assistant prosecutor in Washtenaw County, acting on the request of an Ypsilanti police officer, authorized prosecution of defendants Joslin and Christante for violation of Michigan’s Controlled Substances Act, MCLA 335.301 et seq.; MSA 18.1070(1). On that day, complaints were filed against the defendants and warrants were issued charging possession of marijuana with intent to deliver,1 a felony carrying a maximum penalty of 4 years imprisonment and $2,000 fine. MCLA 335.341(l)(c); MSA 18.1070(41)(l)(c).
On September 19, 1974, defendants filed motions before the district court to dismiss the charges on the ground that the instant prosecution contravened Ypsilanti City Ordinance No 437,2 which [93]*93"has been held a lawful enactment by the Circuit Court for the County of Washtenaw”. Specifically, defendants argued that the Ypsilanti police officer who had filed the complaint in this matter had violated § (d) of the ordinance by taking the case to the Washtenaw County Prosecutor rather than to the Ypsilanti City Attorney as the ordinance requires.
In the circuit court decision on which defendants relied, Ypsilanti Police Officers’ Association v City [94]*94of Ypsilanti, No 74-9222-CL, an action for declaratory judgment decided on August 21, 1974, Judge Patrick J. Conlin had declared the ordinance valid and constitutional in all but one respect. Interpreting § (d) of the ordinance, Judge Conlin upheld that part of the section requiring city police officers to refer marijuana violations to the city attorney but invalidated the remainder of the section limiting the city attorney’s ability to refer complaints to any other authority for prosecution. The court ruled instead that the city attorney, once apprised by a city policeman of a marijuana violation, may elect either to proceed under the ordinance or to refer the matter to the county prosecutor for disposition under state law. For reasons unknown to this panel, however, Judge Conlin did not issue an order of declaratory judgment until March 4, 1975, over 6 months from the decision date of his opinion.3
Thus, on October 3, 1974, when District Judge Thomas F. Shea ruled on defendants’ motions to dismiss the state charges, Judge Conlin’s order of declaratory judgment had not yet been entered. Though aware of the prior decision in circuit court upholding most of the ordinance, Judge Shea nonetheless denied defendants’ motions and voided the ordinance in its entirety.
Defendants then sought an order of superintending control before Judge Conlin in the circuit court. By written opinion of October 16, 1974, Judge Conlin, alluding to his prior decision in Ypsilanti Police Officers’ Association, supra, held that a district judge may not overrule a prior, relevant decision of a circuit judge located in the same county. Judge Conlin then instructed Judge Shea "to treat the Ypsilanti ordinance as a valid [95]*95enactment in this and -all future cases”. Although at the time Judge Conlin did not order the charges against defendants dismissed, he later so ruled while this case awaited appellate resolution. We issued a stay of Judge Conlin’s order of dismissal pending our decision in the cause.
II.
At the outset, we must acknowledge that this case represents a woeful example of an adversary proceeding. The parties apparently have chosen to avoid at all costs any discussion of opposing arguments. The Washtenaw County Prosecutor, mounting a broad-based constitutional and statutory attack, would have us nullify the ordinance in toto. Conversely, counsel for defendant Christante, raising various procedural objections, contends that we should abstain where possible from discussion of constitutional issues. Moreover, neither defendant Joslin nor the Ypsilanti City Attorney have participated in the case on this appeal.
Given, then, these unilateral arguments and our recognition that the underlying issues transcend the interests of the instant parties, we proceed to resolve only those questions pertaining to the facts at hand.
Of the three contentions advanced by defendant Christante, one has already been decided by a prior panel of this Court and another is without merit. The third involves the question whether a decision of a circuit judge upholding a municipal ordinance is binding on a district judge 'Sitting in the same county. Although the question is intriguing, its answer must await another day. As noted, Judge Conlin had not yet issued his order of declaratory judgment sustaining the ordinance when Judge Shea denied defendants’ motions to [96]*96dismiss. Since a court speaks through its orders, not its opinions, Jones v Hicks, 358 Mich 474, 485; 100 NW2d 243 (1960), In re Spalter, 31 Mich App 458, 464; 188 NW2d 67 (1971), we hold that there was no circuit-court order extant that could bind the district judge.
Of the prosecutor’s arguments, only one is necessarily invoked on the facts at bar. The prosecutor charges that § (d) of the ordinance impermissibly restrains Ypsilanti police officers from enforcing state law. We agree.
By its terms, § (d) purports to prevent the Ypsilanti police from complaining to anyone but the city attorney about marijuana violations. The law is clear, however, that municipal police are authorized to enforce state law. MCLA 764.15; MSA 28.874 ("Any peace officer may, without a warrant, arrest a person — (a) For the commission of any felony or misdemeanor committed in his presence; [or] (b) When such person has committed a felony although not in the presence of the officer”). See also, Odinetz v Budds, 315 Mich 512; 24 NW2d 193 (1946). The power of a city to enact ordinances "relating to its municipal concerns, property and government, [is] subject to the constitution and law”. Const. 1963, art 7, § 22.
Accordingly, to the extent § (d) limits the authority of city police to enforce state law, we hold it void. Hence the district court properly denied defendants’ motions to dismiss the state charges, § (d) of the ordinance being no bar to prosecution under the Controlled Substances Act.
We expect that municipal police officers in performing their dual functions as representatives of the city and state will exercise their considerable discretion, 16 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations [97]*97(3d ed), § 45.15, p 616, in a rational, evenhanded manner. The day may soon arrive, however, when the legitimate exercise of that discretion causes this Court and ultimately the Supreme Court to be confronted with the issues left unresolved by today’s decision.
Whatever the judgment eventually pronounced on the validity of the remaining portions of the ordinance, we must recognize that a sizable contingent of our citizens,4 as well as the administrations in Lansing5 and Washington,6 no longer view as effective, necessary or reasonable the present crim[98]*98inal sanctions punishing possession by adults of small amounts of marijuana.
To be sure, this question of policy is best addressed to the Legislature. But perhaps the time has arrived for our lawmakers to see the handwriting on the wall. In light of the developing trend toward decriminalization in the states, the time seems ripe for a responsive Legislature to reexamine the issue. If after thorough inquiry, Michigan declines to follow the lead of Oregon, California, Ohio, Maine, Minnesota, Colorado, Alaska and South Dakota,7 then perhaps it will opt for an intermediate step, namely, delegating express authority to the cities to enact ordinances lessening current state penalties. Cf., People v Hanrahan, 75 Mich 611; 42 NW 1124 (1889).
The courts, too, have a significant role to play. The question deferred in People v Alexander, 56 Mich App 400, 404; 223 NW2d 750 (1974)— whether the private possession or use of marijuana is a protected right — can only be postponed so long. Perhaps a panel of this Court, or a majority of the Supreme Court, may soon decide (based on briefs and argument that fully ventilate the issue) Whether to adopt the view previously expressed by now Chief Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh:
"As I understand our constitutional concept of government, an individual is free to do whatever he pleases, so long as he does not interfere with the rights of his neighbor or of society, and no government — state or Federal — has been ceded the authority to interfere with that freedom. As has been said:
[99]*99" '[T]he sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collectively, in interfering with the liberty of action of any of these number, is self-protection. That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral is not a sufficient warrant.’ J. S. Mill, On Liberty, Chapter 1.
"Whatever the validity of the concept that traffic in marijuana is freighted with a proper public interest, it is extending the concept entirely too far to sanction proscription of possession and private use of it. Although it is conceivable that some legitimate public interest might warrant state interference with what an individual consumes, 'Big Brother’ cannot, in the name of Public health, dictate to anyone what he can eat or drink or smoke in the privacy of his own home.
"In my view when the legislature proscribed the possession and private use of marijuana as a Public health measure it did so unconstitutionally.” People v Sinclair, 387 Mich 91, 133-134; 194 NW2d 878 (1972). (Emphasis in original.)
Even if this position cannot garner the requisite consensus, the courts may yet subscribe to the recent holding of the Alaska Supreme Court in Ravin v State, 537 P2d 494, 511 (1975):
"[W]e conclude that no adequate justification for the state’s intrusion into the citizen’s right to privacy by its prohibition of possession of marijuana by an adult for personal consumption in the home has been shown. The privacy of the individual’s home cannot be breached absent a persuasive showing of a close and substantial relationship of the intrusion to a legitimate governmental interest. Here, mere scientific doubts will not suffice. The state must demonstrate a need based on proof that the public health or welfare will in fact suffer if the controls are not applied.
"The state has a legitimate concern with avoiding the [100]*100spread of marijuana use to adolescents who may not be equipped with the maturity to handle the experience prudently, as well as a legitimate concern with the problem of driving under the influence of marijuana. Yet these interests are insufficient to justify intrusions into the rights of adults in the privacy of their own homes.” (Footnote omitted.)
We quote these extracts from prior cases not to express our personal views (indeed, we agree with the Ravin court that the use of any psychoactive drugs should be discouraged, id.), but rather to emphasize the need for an evaluation of whether the present mode of discouragement is appropriate or permissible.
The orders of superintending control issued by the circuit court are vacated. Prosecution of defendants under state law may proceed.
Beasley, J., concurred.