D. C. Riley, J.
Defendant Ghazi Dean, raising two issues, appeals his jury-based conviction on a charge of delivering phencyclidine, a controlled substance, under MCLA 335.341(l)(b), 335.318(l)(b); MSA 18.1070(41)(l)(b), 18.1070(18)(l)(b).
I
At the outset, defendant challenges the constitutionality of MCLA 335.356(1); MSA 18.1070(56X1), arguing that the section impermissibly shifts to defendant the burden of proving that no exception exists which would absolve him of criminal culpability. MCLA 335.356(1); MSA 18.1070(56)(1) provides:
"Sec. 56. (1) It is not necessary for the state to negate any exemption or exception in this act in any complaint, information, indictment or other pleading or in any trial, hearing or other proceeding under this act. The burden of proof of any exemption or exception is upon the person claiming it.”
To appreciate the legislative intendment behind § 56, reference must be had to another provision in the Controlled Substances Act which empowers the administrator (i.e., the State Board of Pharmacy, see MCLA 335.303[2]; MSA 18.1070[3] [2]) to except certain substances from the sanctions of the act:
[22]*22"(2) The administrator may except by rule any compound, mixture or preparation containing any stimulant or depressant substance listed in subdivisions (a) and (b) from the application of all or any part of this act if the compound, mixture or preparation contains 1 or more active medicinal ingredients not having a stimulant or depressant effect on the central nervous system, and if the admixtures are included therein in combinations, quantity, proportion or concentration that vitiate the potential for abuse of the substances which have a stimulant or depressant effect on the central nervous system.” MCLA 335.318(2); MSA 18.1070(18X2).
Similarly, see MCLA 335.320(2); MSA 18.1070(20X2). See also, MCLA 335.331(1); MSA 18.1070(31X1).
At the close of the prosecution’s case in chief, defendant moved for a directed verdict contending that the phencyclidine defendant concededly transferred to an undercover officer "might be excepted” from the act, and if so, the statute places an inordinate burden on defendant to prove by complex chemical analysis that the seized drug does not have a potentially abusive, depressant effect on the central nervous system. After surveying the Michigan Administrative Code from the date of the act’s promulgation to the present, the court "ruled that the existence of the exception as a matter of law can be determined and a search by this Court indicates that there is no exception and therefore there is no burden upon the People to prove anything other than the existence of PCP [phencyclidine]”.
Earlier, however, the trial judge indicated that if an exception did indeed exist, then he "might be inclined with [defense] Counsel that chemical analysis at this point would be something that might place an undue burden on the defendant and I [23]*23would likely order upon request chemical analysis for those purposes”, that is, "to see what medicinal ingredients, if any, were contained within the PCP [phencyclidine] to determine whether that substance falls within the exception”.
Our independent perusal of the Michigan Administrative Code discloses that the lower court erred in concluding that no exception exists. Rule 338.3129, 1973 AACS provides:
"Rule 29. A compound, mixture or preparation containing a depressant or stimulant substance or of similar quantitive composition shown in federal regulations as an excepted compound or which is the same except that it contains a lesser quantity of a controlled substance or other substances which do not have a stimulant, depressant or hallucinogenic effect, and which is restricted by law to dispensing on prescription is excepted from sections 14, 16, 18, 20 and 22 of the [Controlled Substances Act].”1
Evidently, the administrator has ruled that any stimulative or depressive compound, mixture or preparation (or quantitatively similar concoction), which has been excepted by Federal regulations and which is required to be dispensed by prescription, is without the punitive scope of the Controlled Substances Act. Hence, under the language of § 56(1), supra, a defendant claiming the Rule-29 exception must show at a minimum that a Federal exception exists and that the chemical in question can be obtained solely by prescription. If these threshhold requirements are met, a defendant might still have to prove by chemical testing that the instant concoction is the same as a Federally excepted compound but "that it contains a lesser quantity of a controlled substance or other sub[24]*24stances which do not have a stimulant, depressant or hallucinogenic effect”. Rule 29, supra. Thus, a quantitative analysis may still be required, beyond determining the foregoing threshhold matters.
The question then becomes whether the Legislature may constitutionally place the onus probandi on defendant to establish an applicable exception. It should be noted that cases interpreting the prior narcotics law, see, e.g., People v Moore, 30 Mich App 451, 453; 186 NW2d 788 (1971), are not particularly instructive since they rely chiefly on a dissimilar statute:
"Sec. 48. No indictment for any offense created or defined by statute shall be deemed objectionable for the reason that it fails to negative any exception, excuse or proviso contained in the statute creating or defining the offense. The fact that the charge is made shall be considered as an allegation that no legal excuse for the doing of the act exists in the particular case.” MCLA 767.48; MSA 28.988.
Rather, a progression of three Michigan cases on this issue, People v Rios, 386 Mich 172; 191 NW2d 297 (1971), People v Henderson 391 Mich 612; 218 NW2d 2 (1974), and People v Dempster, 396 Mich 700; 242 NW2d 381 (1976), serves as the guiding light for our decision. Rios, supra, was a narcotics prosecution under a since repealed law, see MCLA 335.366(c); MSA 18.1070(66)(c), which held that under MCLA 767.48; MSA 28.988, the people need not plead defendant’s lack of a drug license to indict defendant. The Court emphasized, however, that the statute does not shift to defendant the burden of proving his licensure; in fact, the question "whether the legislature may by appropriate legislation place the burden of the proof on the [25]*25defendant to disprove an element of a crime” was intentionally avoided. 386 Mich at 174.
This issue was addressed initially by Henderson, and more definitively, by Dempster, supra. In Henderson, the defendant, charged with carrying a pistol in a motor vehicle, MCLA 750.227; MSA 28.424, argued that the people failed below to prove defendant’s lack of a gun permit, which defendant maintained was an essential element of the crime. Plaintiff in turn asserted that MCLA 776.20; MSA 28.1274(1) absolves the state of proving non-licensure. MCLA 776.20; MSA 28.1274(1), an analogue to MCLA 767.48; MSA 28.988, provides:
"Sec. 20.
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D. C. Riley, J.
Defendant Ghazi Dean, raising two issues, appeals his jury-based conviction on a charge of delivering phencyclidine, a controlled substance, under MCLA 335.341(l)(b), 335.318(l)(b); MSA 18.1070(41)(l)(b), 18.1070(18)(l)(b).
I
At the outset, defendant challenges the constitutionality of MCLA 335.356(1); MSA 18.1070(56X1), arguing that the section impermissibly shifts to defendant the burden of proving that no exception exists which would absolve him of criminal culpability. MCLA 335.356(1); MSA 18.1070(56)(1) provides:
"Sec. 56. (1) It is not necessary for the state to negate any exemption or exception in this act in any complaint, information, indictment or other pleading or in any trial, hearing or other proceeding under this act. The burden of proof of any exemption or exception is upon the person claiming it.”
To appreciate the legislative intendment behind § 56, reference must be had to another provision in the Controlled Substances Act which empowers the administrator (i.e., the State Board of Pharmacy, see MCLA 335.303[2]; MSA 18.1070[3] [2]) to except certain substances from the sanctions of the act:
[22]*22"(2) The administrator may except by rule any compound, mixture or preparation containing any stimulant or depressant substance listed in subdivisions (a) and (b) from the application of all or any part of this act if the compound, mixture or preparation contains 1 or more active medicinal ingredients not having a stimulant or depressant effect on the central nervous system, and if the admixtures are included therein in combinations, quantity, proportion or concentration that vitiate the potential for abuse of the substances which have a stimulant or depressant effect on the central nervous system.” MCLA 335.318(2); MSA 18.1070(18X2).
Similarly, see MCLA 335.320(2); MSA 18.1070(20X2). See also, MCLA 335.331(1); MSA 18.1070(31X1).
At the close of the prosecution’s case in chief, defendant moved for a directed verdict contending that the phencyclidine defendant concededly transferred to an undercover officer "might be excepted” from the act, and if so, the statute places an inordinate burden on defendant to prove by complex chemical analysis that the seized drug does not have a potentially abusive, depressant effect on the central nervous system. After surveying the Michigan Administrative Code from the date of the act’s promulgation to the present, the court "ruled that the existence of the exception as a matter of law can be determined and a search by this Court indicates that there is no exception and therefore there is no burden upon the People to prove anything other than the existence of PCP [phencyclidine]”.
Earlier, however, the trial judge indicated that if an exception did indeed exist, then he "might be inclined with [defense] Counsel that chemical analysis at this point would be something that might place an undue burden on the defendant and I [23]*23would likely order upon request chemical analysis for those purposes”, that is, "to see what medicinal ingredients, if any, were contained within the PCP [phencyclidine] to determine whether that substance falls within the exception”.
Our independent perusal of the Michigan Administrative Code discloses that the lower court erred in concluding that no exception exists. Rule 338.3129, 1973 AACS provides:
"Rule 29. A compound, mixture or preparation containing a depressant or stimulant substance or of similar quantitive composition shown in federal regulations as an excepted compound or which is the same except that it contains a lesser quantity of a controlled substance or other substances which do not have a stimulant, depressant or hallucinogenic effect, and which is restricted by law to dispensing on prescription is excepted from sections 14, 16, 18, 20 and 22 of the [Controlled Substances Act].”1
Evidently, the administrator has ruled that any stimulative or depressive compound, mixture or preparation (or quantitatively similar concoction), which has been excepted by Federal regulations and which is required to be dispensed by prescription, is without the punitive scope of the Controlled Substances Act. Hence, under the language of § 56(1), supra, a defendant claiming the Rule-29 exception must show at a minimum that a Federal exception exists and that the chemical in question can be obtained solely by prescription. If these threshhold requirements are met, a defendant might still have to prove by chemical testing that the instant concoction is the same as a Federally excepted compound but "that it contains a lesser quantity of a controlled substance or other sub[24]*24stances which do not have a stimulant, depressant or hallucinogenic effect”. Rule 29, supra. Thus, a quantitative analysis may still be required, beyond determining the foregoing threshhold matters.
The question then becomes whether the Legislature may constitutionally place the onus probandi on defendant to establish an applicable exception. It should be noted that cases interpreting the prior narcotics law, see, e.g., People v Moore, 30 Mich App 451, 453; 186 NW2d 788 (1971), are not particularly instructive since they rely chiefly on a dissimilar statute:
"Sec. 48. No indictment for any offense created or defined by statute shall be deemed objectionable for the reason that it fails to negative any exception, excuse or proviso contained in the statute creating or defining the offense. The fact that the charge is made shall be considered as an allegation that no legal excuse for the doing of the act exists in the particular case.” MCLA 767.48; MSA 28.988.
Rather, a progression of three Michigan cases on this issue, People v Rios, 386 Mich 172; 191 NW2d 297 (1971), People v Henderson 391 Mich 612; 218 NW2d 2 (1974), and People v Dempster, 396 Mich 700; 242 NW2d 381 (1976), serves as the guiding light for our decision. Rios, supra, was a narcotics prosecution under a since repealed law, see MCLA 335.366(c); MSA 18.1070(66)(c), which held that under MCLA 767.48; MSA 28.988, the people need not plead defendant’s lack of a drug license to indict defendant. The Court emphasized, however, that the statute does not shift to defendant the burden of proving his licensure; in fact, the question "whether the legislature may by appropriate legislation place the burden of the proof on the [25]*25defendant to disprove an element of a crime” was intentionally avoided. 386 Mich at 174.
This issue was addressed initially by Henderson, and more definitively, by Dempster, supra. In Henderson, the defendant, charged with carrying a pistol in a motor vehicle, MCLA 750.227; MSA 28.424, argued that the people failed below to prove defendant’s lack of a gun permit, which defendant maintained was an essential element of the crime. Plaintiff in turn asserted that MCLA 776.20; MSA 28.1274(1) absolves the state of proving non-licensure. MCLA 776.20; MSA 28.1274(1), an analogue to MCLA 767.48; MSA 28.988, provides:
"Sec. 20. In any prosecution for a violation of any acts of the state relative to use, licensing and possession of pistols or firearms, the burden of establishing any exception, excuse, proviso or exemption contained in any such act shall be upon the defendant but this does not shift the burden of proof for the violation.”
Despite prior cases holding lack of license to be an element of the crime,2 the Court, speaking through now Chief Justice T. G. Kavanagh, stated:
"[W]e hold that upon a showing that a defendant has carried a pistol in a vehicle operated or occupied by him, prima facie case of violation of the statute has been made out. Upon the establishment of such a prima facie case, the defendant has the burden of injecting the issue of license by offering some proof — not necessarily by oficial record — that he has been so licensed. The people thereupon are obliged to establish the contrary beyond a reasonable doubt.
"We read MCLA 776.20; MSA 28.1274(1), supra, not as absolving the state from proving one element of a [26]*26crime, for to do so would vitiate the presumption of innocence. Rather, we read this statute as an appropriate legislative expression that lack of a license is not an element of the offense and we are thereby prompted to reconsider our construction of the prohibiting language of MCLA 750.227; MSA 28.424, supra.” 391 Mich at 616-617. (Emphasis added.)
Recently, in Dempster, supra, the Court was asked whether MCLA 451.802(d); MSA 19.776(402)(d) of the Uniform Securities Act requires defendants "to bear an unconstitutional burden of proving innocence”. 396 Mich at 711. The Uniform Securities Act, using language almost identical to § 56 of the Controlled Substances Act, provides:
"(d) In any proceeding under this act, the burden of proving an exemption or an exception from a definition is upon the person claiming it.” MCLA 451.802(d); MSA 19.776(402)(d).
The Court in Dempster, speaking once again through Chief Justice T. G. Kavanagh, found no constitutional infirmity; rather it likened the duty to show an exception to that of an affirmative defense. Ultimately, the Court held at 713-714:
"This Uniform Securities Act provision, read in light of People v Henderson, supra, must be interpreted to mean that once the state establishes a prima facie case of statutory violation, the burden of going forward, i.e., of injecting some competent evidence of the exempt status of the securities, shifts to the defendant. However, once the defendant properly injects the issue, the state is obliged to establish the contrary beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Moreover, the Court brushed aside differences in [27]*27language between the concealed weapons statute and the Uniform Securities Act, and in a footnote illustrated the intended scope of a provision permitting an exemptive defense:
"We are cognizant of the fact that the concealed weapons statute speaks of the 'burden of establishing’ the license, and states that this does not shift the 'burden of proof for the violation’. (Footnote omitted.) While that language might be preferable to that of the instant statute, the principle is not different.8
In light of the teachings of Rios, Henderson, and principally Dempster, supra, we hold that once the people show a prima facie violation of the Controlled Substances Act, MCLA 335.356(1); MSA 18.1070(56)(1) then operates to impose on defendant "the burden of going forward, i.e., of injecting some competent evidence of the exempt status,” of the drug. Dempster, supra.
Since in the present case the lower court mistakenly forestalled whatever effort defendant might have made to show an applicable exception, we believe a remand for an evidentiary hearing is warranted. If on remand defendant can produce some competent evidence showing (1) that Federal regulations have excepted phencyclidine (or its chemical equivalent) and (2) that dispensing the [28]*28excepted compound is required under law to be by prescription, then defendant shall be retried, or, at the prosecution’s option, dismissed. Should a retrial occur, defendant will have the same burden of production as above, and once that burden is met, the plaintiff, whether by quantitative analysis or otherwise, shall have the onus of proving beyond reasonable doubt that the exception should not apply.
If, however, defendant on remand is unable to proffer the requisite evidence, then his conviction shall stand affirmed.
We have chosen the vehicle of a remand for a hearing over the reversal and discharge approach opted for in Dempster, supra, because, unlike the somewhat amorphous term "commercial paper” analyzed in Dempster, phencyclidine is a known quantity readily recognizable by chemical testing. Hence, no ambiguity can surround its use, possession or manufacture which would deprive one of notice that such activity is clearly proscribed.
II
Defendant next assails the lower court’s decision, over both the prosecution’s and defendant’s objections, to submit the issue of entrapment to the jury. The dispute centers not on whether this was error (for it surely was3), but rather, on what remedy will best cure the error. Defendant insists that a new trial is mandated, whereas the people urge us to grant merely an evidentiary hearing. [29]*29Both routes have precedential support. Compare People v Cushman, 65 Mich App 161; 237 NW2d 228 (1975), with People v Keefe, 69 Mich App 431; 245 NW2d 78 (1976).
We choose to follow People v Keefe, because of its factual similarity to the instant case. Accordingly, the defendant will be permitted an evidentiary hearing on remand where he will bear the burden of proving entrapment by a preponderance of the evidence. See People v Stanley, 68 Mich App 559; 243 NW2d 684 (1976).
In sum, then, the purpose of the remand is twofold. Irrespective of the order in which defendant chooses to raise the questions, he must either prove he was entrapped or else come forward with evidence showing that phencyclidine is an excepted compound. If the former proves fruitful, he shall be set free; if the latter, he shall, at the people’s option, be retried.
Remanded for proceedings consonant with this opinion.
Allen, J., concurred.