The instant case poses important questions of first impression regarding the constitutionality and construction of the Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act, MCLA 290.701, et seq.; MSA 12.94(101), et seq. Plaintiff Michigan Canners and Freezers Association also challenges the decision of defendant Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Board to accept and accredit the Michigan Asparagus Growers Division of defendant Michigan Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Association [MACMA] as the sole bargaining rep*341resentative of the Processing Asparagus Bargaining Unit.
However, there has been no hearing in the courts below on the merits due to uncertainty on the preliminary procedural question as to which court should properly serve as a forum for the presentation of the issues posed in this case.
We remand to the circuit court for consideration of two issues: first, the constitutionality of the Bargaining Act, and second, the applicability of the Administrative Procedures Act to accreditation proceedings under the act.
I. Facts
In November, 1973, the Michigan Asparagus Growers Division of appellee Michigan Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Association, Inc. [MACMA] petitioned defendant Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Board for a determination of an asparagus bargaining unit under the Michigan Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act [henceforth referred to as the Bargaining Act].
The board made such determination, and subsequently accredited Michigan Asparagus Growers as the sole sales and bargaining representative of the newly created Processing Asparagus Bargaining Unit, over the objection of plaintiff Michigan Canners and Freezers Association.
Michigan Canners brought an action in Ingham Circuit Court alternatively as a petition for review of a final decision of an administrative agency under the Administrative Procedures Act, MCLA 24.201 et seq.; MSA 3.560(101) et seq., and as an original action seeking an injunction and declaratory ruling on the unconstitutionality and con*342struction of the Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act.
The circuit court dismissed this action, ruling that under § 5(2) of the Bargaining Act, all board action requires review in the Court of Appeals.
Moreover, the circuit court explicitly declined to exercise its "equitable jurisdiction” to examine the constitutionality of the act. The court so ruled because it did not want to establish a bifurcated review procedure in which constitutional issues would be before the circuit court while all other issues were before the Court of Appeals.
In May of 1974, plaintiff filed for leave to appeal and a claim of appeal with the Court of Appeals. Both were denied in October, 1974.
Michigan Canners subsequently applied to this Court for leave to appeal the dismissals by the circuit court and the Court of Appeals.
Prior to granting of leave to appeal by this Court, Michigan Canners filed a petition for review in the Court of Appeals under § 5(2) of the Bargaining Act seeking a review of the constitutionality of the act and the procedures followed by the board in accrediting the Michigan Asparagus Growers Division.
MACMA moved to stay Court of Appeals proceedings pending decision by this Court on the application for leave to appeal.
This Court granted leave on January 15, 1975.
II. Remanding Constitutional Challenge to Circuit Court
As mentioned above, plaintiff has raised important questions regarding the constitutionality and construction of the Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act without developing a factual rec*343ord at trial which would help provide a context in which to consider these questions.
To resolve these significant issues in such a factual vacuum would be imprudent where it appears that further factual development would substantially contribute to the proper disposition of the case.
Such is the case here, especially in that Michigan Canners has claimed that the Bargaining Act is unconstitutional because it exceeds the police power of the state. This claim in particular requires full development of facts which might support or undermine the claim that the statute is an invalid exercise of the police power.
The police power, an attribute of state sovereignty, may be properly exercised through regulations which tend to foster the health, order, convenience and comfort of the people and to prevent and punish injuries and offenses to the public. It has as its object the preservation and/or improvement of social and economic conditions affecting the community at large. Such power is elastic in nature, changing shape as varying social conditions demand correction. People v Sell, 310 Mich 305, 315-316; 17 NW2d 193 (1945); People v Brazee, 183 Mich 259, 262; 149 NW 1053 (1914). People v Raub, 9 Mich App 114, 119; 155 NW2d 878 (1967).
As a matter of law, the party challenging the act carries the burden of overcoming the presumption of constitutionality which accrues to the statute. Irishman’s Lot, Inc. v Secretary of State, 338 Mich 662, 667; 62 NW2d 668 (1954); Thayer v Dept of Agriculture, 323 Mich 403, 410; 35 NW2d 360 (1949). To overcome this presumption, plaintiff must show either that there is no public purpose to be served by the statute, or that there is no *344reasonable relationship between the remedy adopted by the Legislature and the public purpose. Grocers Dairy Co v Dept of Agriculture, 377 Mich 71, 75; 138 NW2d 767 (1966); Carolene Products Co v Thomson, 276 Mich 172, 178; 267 NW 608 (1936).
As a practical matter, we ask both parties to contribute to the development of a factual context which will allow us to properly resolve the issue of the constitutionality of the act under the principles outlined above. What are the conditions in the farming and food processing industry which led to the enactment of the act? Is there an imbalance in the bargaining power of the growers and the handlers? If so, what are the consequences of that imbalance? Is the number of farmers in Michigan declining? Is the acreage of land devoted to farming on the decrease? Is there reason for concern about food supply in the future? Is there a trend toward larger farms, to the detriment of the small farmer, which might adversely affect the community at large? How will the operation of the act be beneficial or detrimental to producers, processors and consumers in the short run, and in the long run?
If any of the potential problems suggested above do exist, is there any evidence that the remedies embodied in the Bargaining Act are or are not reasonably related to the purpose of alleviating the problem(s)?
Defendant MACMA questions the appropriateness of the circuit court as a forum for the presentation of these issues given the language of § 5(2) of the Bargaining Act, MCLA 290.705(2); MSA 12.94(105X2), providing in relevant part:
"Any person aggrieved by a final order of the board granting or denying in whole or in part the relief *345sought may obtain a review of an order in the court of appeals, by filing in the court a written petition requesting that the order of the board be modified or set aside.”
However, it is well established that a litigant challenging the constitutionality of a statute and seeking injunctive relief is not necessarily required to follow the appellate procedure provided for in the statute challenged. Diggs v State Board of Embalmers & Funeral Directors, 321 Mich 508, 513; 32 NW2d 728 (1948); Asta v Department of Revenue, 338 Mich 505, 511; 61 NW2d 608 (1953); Smigel v Southgate Community School District, 388 Mich 531, 557; 202 NW2d 305 (1972).
We remand to the circuit court so that evidence relevant to these questions, and other questions related to the constitutionality of the Bargaining Act, may be received by that court.
III. Applicability op APA to Accreditation Proceedings
Plaintiff asserts that the Administrative Procedures Act, MCLA 24.201 et seq.; MSA 3.560(101), et seq., is applicable to the Bargaining Act, that the board failed to comply with the requirements of APA.
Defendant MACMA disputes the applicability of APA to the Bargaining Act, and asserts that the circuit court is not the proper forum for consideration of this issue under § 5(2). There has been no hearing on the merits of this issue in the courts below.
While the Court of Appeals no doubt has subject matter jurisdiction over this matter of construction, so also does the circuit court. Section 5(2) provides for original jurisdiction in the Court of *346Appeals only for review of final orders of the Agricultural and Marketing Board.
However, the issue of the applicability of the APA to the Bargaining Act is not limited to the validity of a particular order, but rather involves a broad question of construction of the statute itself.
Therefore, there is no reason why plaintiff should not be allowed to raise this question before the circuit court on remand along with the constitutional issues.
IV. Validity of the Declaration of Accreditation
The circuit court may not, however, consider plaintiff-appellant’s challenge to the validity of the declaration of accreditation of the Michigan Asparagus Growers on the merits for the Legislature has dictated in § 5(2) of the Bargaining Act, MCLA 290.705(2); MSA 12.94G05X2),1 that the Court of Appeals has original jurisdiction over such an appeal.
Plaintiff-appellant asserts that the accreditation *347is invalid in that it is not based on substantial evidence of compliance with § 7 of the act,2 as is required by § 5(2).
It is further argued that such a claim may be heard by the circuit court because the declaration of accreditation is not an "order”, as that term is used in § 5(2), which must be reviewed by the Court of Appeals.
*348We disagree with the claim that the declaration of accreditation is not an order under § 5(2).
In the first instance, we find it difficult to understand plaintiffs saying that § 5(2) applies to accreditation in establishing a requirement of substantial evidence in Court of Appeals review, and yet, does not apply to accreditation in establishing original jurisdiction in the Court of Appeals.
Moreover, an examination of the statute does not support plaintiff’s claim that the Legislature intended to establish a bifurcated review procedure for actions of the board in which dispositions regarding unfair practices under the act are "orders” to be reviewed by the Court of Appeals, while dispositions regarding accreditation are "determinations” to be reviewed in the circuit court.3
First, it should be noted that what is being challenged here is not merely a determination, but rather a "declaration of accreditation” which is issued after the board has determined that an association should be accredited.4 While this declaration is not termed an "order” specifically, it functions as a binding order 30 days after publica*349tion, absent a challenge to the declaration meeting the requirements of § 10(2) of the act.5
Furthermore, the use of the word "determination” throughout the act does not suggest, as plaintiff-appellant claims, that the Legislature had carefully chosen this word to inferentially create a bifurcated review system in which the accreditations of bargaining associations are to be reviewed in a forum different from all other actions of the board.
The word "determination” is used with neither great precision nor consistency. In § 9, for example, the words determination and finding are used interchangeably for no apparent reason. In subsection (1), the Legislature used the words "determine” and "determination”, while in subsection (2), there is a shift to the word "finding”, though it is apparent that no change in meaning was intended.6
*350In § 16, which deals with arbitration procedure, the word "determine” is used interchangeably with the word "find” and the word "determination” is used interchangeably with the word "finding”, again, for no apparent reason.7
Moreover, the wording "finding” seems to be equivalent in this section to an order under § 5(2), for it is said that "This finding [of a reasonable quantity] shall be enforced in accordance with the provisions of section 5”. MCLA 290.716(1); MSA 12.94(116X1).
Such word usage does not suggest that the Legislature intended to establish a strict distinction between orders and determinations under § 5(2).
*351The bifurcated system of review which plaintiff-appellant argues for would create unnecessary inconvenience and expense for parties disputing actions of the board, and we decline to conclude that the Legislature intended such without stronger indications of such intent.
V. Conclusion.
We remand to the circuit court for consideration of the questions of the constitutionality of the Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act, and the applicability of the Administrative Procedures Act to accreditation proceedings under the Bargaining Act. We retain appellate jurisdiction over the other issues presented in this case, and will consider those issues, along with the questions hereby remanded to the circuit court, subsequent to the disposition by the circuit court.
Kavanagh, C. J., and Levin, J., concurred with Williams, J. Lindemer and Ryan, JJ., took no part in the decision of this case.Section 5(2) of the Bargaining Act reads as follows:
"(2) Any person aggrieved by a final order of the board granting or denying in whole or in part the relief sought may obtain a review of an order in the court of appeals, by filing in the court a written petition requesting that the order of the board be modified or set aside. A copy of the petition shall be transmitted by the clerk of the court to the board and the aggrieved party shall file in the court the record in the proceeding certified by the board. Upon the filing of the petition, the court shall proceed in the same manner as in the case of an application by the board under this section and shall have the same jurisdiction to grant temporary relief or a restraining order as it deems just and proper, and in like manner to make and enter a decree enforcing, modifying and enforcing as so modified, or setting aside in whole or in part the order of the board; the findings of the board with respect to questions of fact if supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole shall in like manner be conclusive.”
Section 7 of the Bargaining Act reads as follows:
"Sec. 7. An association shall be accredited upon determination by the board that the association meets all of the following:
(a) The association meets the requirements of the Capper-Volstead act, 7 U. S. C. 291-2.
(b) The association has submitted a copy of its bylaws which provide that: Each member of the association shall have Í vote in all votes of the membership of the association; that officers or directors shall be elected by a majority of the members voting or by delegates representing a majority of the membership; and that all elections shall be by secret ballot.
(c) The association has marketing and bargaining contracts for the current or next marketing period with more than 50% of the producers of an agricultural commodity who are in the bargaining unit and these contracts cover more than 50% of the quantity of that commodity produced by producers in the bargaining unit. The board may determine the quantity produced by the bargaining unit using information on production in prior marketing periods, current market information, and projections on production during the current market periods. The board shall exclude from that quantity any quantity of the agricultural commodity contracted by producers with producer owned and controlled processing cooperatives and any quantity produced by handlers. An association whose main purpose is bargaining but which processes a surplus into a form which is not the subject of bargaining is not a processing cooperative. The contracts with members shall specify the agricultural commodity and that the members have appointed the association as their exclusive agent in negotiations with handlers for prices and other terms of trade with respect to the sale and marketing of the agricultural commodity and obligate them to dispose of their production or holdings of the agricultural commodity through or at the direction of the association.
(d) The association has established and authorized a marketing and bargaining committee to negotiate with handlers for the agricultural commodity. The committee shall be comprised of members elected by the members in a secret ballot election. The production of the agricultural commodity shall comprise a significant portion of the total farming operation of each committee member. Members who have any quantity of the commodity contracted with a producer owned and controlled processing cooperative are not eligible to serve on a marketing and bargaining committee for such commodity.”
Plaintiff supports this claim by arguing that § 4 of the act, which deals with unfair practices, uses the word "order,” while § 6 through 10, which deal with accreditation, speak of "determinations.”
See § 10(1) of the Bargaining Act, which reads as follows:
"(1) The board shall issue and publish its determination within 30 days after the close of the hearing. If the determination of the board is to accredit the association, the board shall include a preliminary declaration of accreditation in its determination. The preliminary declaration of accreditation shall clearly state that the association shall represent all producers, members and nonmembers alike, who are in the bargaining unit and act as exclusive sales agents for the bargaining unit in negotiations with handlers. A producer covered in a declaration of accreditation may join the association and have full membership rights therein. Handlers shall deduct marketing service fees from the proceeds to be paid to producers for the agricultural commodity in the amount as determined by the association and forward the service fees promptly to the association. The fees shall be within guidelines determined by the board and shall be subject to review by the board upon petition by 15% of the affected producers.”
Section 10(2) of the Bargaining Act reads as follows:
"(2) The accreditation of the association by the board shall be effective 30 days after the publication of the preliminary declaration of accreditation. The board shall delay the accreditation of the association whenever it receives during the 30-day period a petition signed by at least 1/3 of the producers in the bargaining unit who produce at least 1/3 of the production of the agricultural commodity produced by the bargaining unit, exclusive of quantities contracted with processing cooperatives and produced by handlers, and requesting that the association should not be accredited. The board shall determine by a mail referendum of bargaining unit producers within 30 days following receipt of the petition if producers assent to the accreditation of the association. Producers in the bargaining unit shall be deemed to have assented to accreditation if more than 50% of the producers in the bargaining unit who produce more than 50% of the volume of the affected commodity assent to representation by the association.”
Section 9 of the Bargaining Act reads as follows:
"(1) Within 60 days following the date of filing with the board a request for accreditation by an association, the board shall determine whether the association shall be accredited. If the board determines that insufficient evidence was filed by the association, the board may permit the association to file an amended request for accreditation within 30 days following the determination and notification of the association.
"(2) Within 30 days following the board’s preliminary ñnding that *350the association is to be accredited, the board shall hold a public hearing to obtain further evidence relevant to confirmation that the association is to be accredited. Producers of record involved in the bargaining unit shall be notified of the hearing by mail and publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the bargaining unit area at least 10 days prior to the date of the hearing.” (Emphasis added.)
Section 16 of the Bargaining Act reads in pertinent part as follows:
"Where the quantity of the agricultural commodity to be marketed is in dispute, the handler shall offer to accept for delivery a reasonable quantity of the agricultural commodity. This offer shall be made in writing to the accredited association at least 7 days prior to the start of the marketing period. A copy of this offer shall be sent by registered mail to the board. The accredited association may file a claim for relief with the board if it feels that the offer is unreasonable. The board shall determine the issue of reasonableness at a hearing in accordance with Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969, as amended. This determination shall have priority over all other board matters. The board shall base its determination on: (a) Projections as to the quantity of the agricultural commodity to be produced, (b) the relationship between the quantity of the commodity available and the amount of the quantity accepted by the handler, (c) the kind, grade, and quality of the commodity available, and (d) the past practices of the handler in relation to the items in subdivisions (a), (b) and (c). If, upon the preponderance of the evidence, the board is of the opinion that the quantity is unreasonable, it shall order the handler to accept the quantity which the board finds to be reasonable. The ñnding of the board shall be ñnal, subject to later modification by the joint settlement committee. This ñnding shall be enforced in accordance with the provisions of section 5. Within 15 days following the start of the marketing period for the agricultural commodity, the board shall establish a joint settlement committee to arbitrate the issues in dispute.” (Emphasis added.)