On Tuesday, the court pointed out that the state government's own rules mandated that minutes of meetings be always recorded. Accepting that there had been "an infraction" and the minutes were not recorded, Anturkar said that the state government can, however, say on oath in an affidavit that a meeting did take place and such a prohibition on unvaccinated people had been taken not as a discriminatory measure, but to check the spread of infections."Merely because the minutes of the meeting were not taken, the entire decision cannot be vitiated," the senior advocate told the court.