Lodged in this court for Suffolk County, the action was brought by a number of plaintiffs, for themselves and a class of persons similarly situated, against the Attorney General as defendant. The complaint alleged that the defendant proposed to enforce against the plaintiffs and others a statute, G. L. c. 94C, § 34, which prohibits under penalty the knowing possession of marihuana; the relief sought was a declaration that the statute is unconstitutional at least as applied to the personal possession of a small amount of the substance. The defendant having attacked the complaint by motion to dismiss, the single justice held that it described a controversy suitable for a declaration,
2
*64
and he entered judgment in аppropriate form upholding the constitutionality of the statute. He noted that a broad attack on the laws regulating the possession of (as well as the traffic in) marihuana had been repelled by this court in the case of
Commonwealth
v.
Leis,
In the Leis case we disagreed with the contention that the use of marihuana involved a liberty of high constitutional rank. Id. at 195. Therefore the validity of the legislation was to be tested in the first place by inquiring whether it bore a reasonable relation to any permissible object of legislation suсh as the protection of public health or safety.
We may observe that in the hands of this court, at least, such an inquiry has not been merely pro forma with a preordained conclusion favorable to the legislation. See
Commonwealth
v.
Dennis,
A showing that, since
Leis,
doubts about the drug had been resolved in its favor beyond reasonable scientific dispute, would portend a different legal result. See
State
v.
Anonymous,
*66
The plaintiffs contend, however, that legislation which goes to the extreme of forbidding the possession in one’s own home of a substance meant for personal use, invades a “zone of privacy”
(Griswold
v.
Connecticut,
It is true that “privacy” has grown in constitutional estimation as related to certain matters in which individual autonomy is thought to be especially important and desirable.
6
Thus it is held that individual choice as to procreаtion and other core concerns of human existence may be circumscribed by the State only in deference to highly significant public goals. See, e.g.,
Roe
v.
Wade,
The right to possess or use marihuana cannot be readily assimilated in character or importance to the kinds of rights just mentioned (cf.
Whalen
v.
Roe,
This language does not announce a privacy doctrine universally demanding peculiar justification for enforcing the criminal law against conduct within private homes. Never
*68
theless such justification mаy be required when the effects of the behavior are limited more or less to the hearth. Thus the
Paris Adult Theatre
and
Orito
cases were stressing the point that in
Stanley
the place of the possession, the confinement of the viewing of the material, reduced to a null force, or nearly so, any claim of deleterious public effects which could possibly legitimate the State’s intrusion. See also
Smith
v.
United States,
We find direct confirmation for these views in
Stanley
where the Court speaks to possession of drugs among other contraband: “What we have said in no way infringes upon the power of the State or Federal Government to make possession of other items, such as narcotics, firearms, or stolen goods, a crime. Our holding in the present case turns upon the Georgia statute’s infringement of fundamental liberties protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. No First Amendment rights are involved in most statutes making mere possession criminal.”
*69
With near unanimity, courts have in fact rejected arguments like the plaintiffs’, including that based on “privacy,” for a constitutionally-protected right to havе and use marihuana in the home. See, e.g.,
United States
v.
Drotar,
*70
It may indeed be that our discussion has taken too wide a range. If marihuana is supposed with some reason to be harmful tо users, the Legislature may claim a power to act against it even without identifying effects on others. Whereas in the First Amendment’s realm of information and belief a State “cannot constitutionally premise legislation on the desirability of controlling a person’s private thoughts”
(Stanley, supra,
The individual interests which are urged here against the conventional police-power reasons for the ban on marihuana are in essence merely recreational. These interests surely have their place in the assortment of liberties protected by due process guaranties (cf.
Selectmen of Framingham
v.
Civil Serv. Comm’n,
According to the present pattern of the criminal codes of the States of the Union, the possession of marihuana is illegal. 11 See Soler, Of Cannabis and the Courts: A Critical Examination of Constitutional Challenges to Statutory Marijuana Prohibitions, 6 Conn. L. Rev. 601, 716-723 (1974); also vol. 3 of Marijuana: A Study of State Policies and Penalties (National Governors’ Conference, Center for Policy Research and Analysis) 98-104 (1977). Nevertheless the wisdom of such legislation (and of corrеlative laws as to distribution) remains under active and even vehement debate. The menace to health and safety is clearly not as grave as was once supposed and, some would say, is minor compared to the dangers of a number of substances not controlled or banned. See J. Kaplan, Marijuana — The New Prohibition (1970). The enforcement problems and evils encountered under current law need not be dwelt on. Some countervailing benefits have been intimated above. These all sum up as matters for legislative deliberation and disposition, and it is worth noting that our Legislature has not been insensitive to the movement of public debate. Since the decision in Leis, the penalty for simple possession of mari *72 huana has been reduсed from up to three and a half years’ imprisonment and a fine to six months’ imprisonment and fine; for first convictions, probation is to be the normal sentence, with records sealed on completion of the term. G. L. c. 94C, § 34, as amended through St. 1975, c. 369. The medical, social, and law enforcement aspects of marihuana have been and can be studied by the General Court with an intensity and a breadth no court can readily approximate. See 1972 Mass. House Doc. No. 5896, cited above. It is for that branch of government to decide, perhaps at the plaintiffs’ urging, whether the present statute attains to the best solution. 12
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
See
First Nat'l Bank
v.
Attorney Gen.,
The defendants in Leis, prosecuted for possession of marihuana, possession with intent to sell, and conspiracy to violate the narcotic drug laws, moved in Superior Court to dismiss on constitutional grounds. The trial judge denied the motions but reported the question whether the relevant statutes violated provisions of the Constitutions of the- Commоnwealth and the United States. 355 Mass, at 190.
The cases at times speak of legislation which need only undergo a test of “reasonable relation” and legislation that must survive “strict scrutiny,” but we conceive that these soubriquets are a shorthand for referring to the opposite ends of a continuum of constitutional vulnerability determined at every point by the сompeting values involved. Cf.
State
v.
Erickson,
Cited in the briefs of both parties is Marihuana and Health (Fifth Ann. Rep. to Congress from the Secretary of HEW, 1975), which states (at 10) that “evidence of a range of potentially serious consequences of marihua
*66
na use exists." For recent discussions of the scientific position, see the materials cited in 1972 Mass. House Doc. No. 5896, Ninth Interim Report of the Special Commission on Drug Abuse 91-96, and
Ravin
v.
State,
In
Whalen
v.
Roe,
That the
Stanley
decision resulted
from
a combination of its First Amendment orientation, the locus of the questioned conduct, and the confinement of the effects of that conduсt, is suggested by a comparison with the Supreme Court’s affirmance without opinion,
The
Ravin
holding insulated from criminal sanction no more than possession of marihuana for private use by adults within the physiсal confines of the home. The limited reach of the Alaska privacy doctrine was further demonstrated in
State
v.
Erickson,
Attacks predicated оn constitutional grounds other than substantive due process and privacy have been also generally rejected. In
Leis
we passed on and rejected challenges based on theories of equal protection and cruel and unusual punishment. These contentions, not pressed in the present case, would have less force today beсause marihuana is no longer classed in our legislation as a “narcotic” and the penalties for simple possession have been reduced. See the text below. See also the cases rejecting contentions that the marihuana laws prevent freedom of expression, threaten cruel and unusual punishment, and either deny equal protection or lack rational basis in distinguishing marihuana from alcohol and tobacco and treating it like true narcotics, e.g.,
United States
v.
Kiffer,
An attack on equal protection grounds did succeed in
People
v.
Sinclair,
See
State ex rel. Colvin
v.
Lombardi,
Subject to certаin exceptions, the knowing possession of marihuana is a criminal offense under Federal law as well, 21 U.S.C. § 844(a) (1970), a proscription which would of course continue to apply to the plaintiffs even if they obtained their prayed-for declaration.
In the legislative forum, the plaintiffs could show that a growing number of States have removed personal possession from the felony category and now regard it as a minor offense. See, e.g., Colo. Rev. Stat. § 12-22-412 (12) (a) (Cum. Supp. 1976); 1977 N.Y. Laws c. 360 (Marihuana Reform Act of 1977). Further, there is advocacy of withdrawing all criminal sanctions from possession for personal use and from distribution of small amounts not for profit. Among the groups urging such decriminalization are the Americаn Bar Association (ABA Summary of Action Taken by the House of Delegates, 1973, at 12-13), the National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse (Marihuana: A Signal of Misunderstanding [Official Report, 1972]), and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (Handbook of 1973 Proceedings at 186-187). See also Final Report of the Canadian Commission of Inquiry into the Non-Medical Use of Drugs (1970).
