the matters recited (ii) that no facts had occurred or existed warranting such an opinion; (iii) that the Minister had no information or material upon which he could reasonably form such an opinion.
Held, 1 that the detention order was not examinable upon any ground affecting the Minister's opinion short of bad faith (2) that proof that the opinion of the Minister was erroneous, that it was based only on the advice of his officers and that there was no ground for suspecting the plaintiff's loyalty, was insufficient to invalidate the detention order.
Held, further, that an arrest made under the detention order was not rendered unlawful because the officer making the arrest was not in possession of the
(2) Reg. 26 (6) provided that a person in respect of whom an order is made in pursuance of the regulation should be supplied with a copy of the regulation.
Held, that a failure to comply with this provision would not make the (3) Reg. 25 (1) provided that the Minister upon being satisfied as stated above with respect to a particular person might make an order (a) for securing that except SO far as permitted by the order or by the authority or person specified in the order, that person shall not be in any area specified in the order; (b) for securing that he shall reside in a specified area and shall not leave that area except as he is permitted to do so by the order of the authority
The Minister made a restriction order directing that the plaintiff should reside outside such area as the military authorities from time to time determine.
Held, that the restriction order was invalid because (i) it did not require that he should not be in any area under par. (a) or that he should reside in an area under par. (b) (ii) it did not specify an area and the regulation meant that the whole order should be in writing and that there should be some description or indication in the order itself of the place intended; (iii) the attempt to delegate to the military authorities the selection of the place was not authorized by the regulation or any other power.
(4) Under the restriction order the military authorities communicated to the plaintiff certain directions as to where he might reside. The plaintiff acted in a way which appeared to officers of police to amount to an intended contravention of the order or the directions thereunder and they arrested the plaintiff without warrant, depending for their authority to do so upon S. 13 (1) of the National Security Act 1939-1940.
Held, that S. 13 (1) should be read as referring to the doing of acts or the making of omissions which do amount to an offence and as authorizing the arrest of a man found doing such acts or making such omissions or suspected of having done or made them or of being about to do or make them and sub-s.
1does not cover an erroneous belief on the part of the officer as to the legal significance or quality of the acts or omissions of the person arrested. Accor- dingly the arrest of the plaintiff for contravening the restriction order was