R v Zinn
R v Zinn, an important case in South African law, was heard in the Appellate Division on 6 December 1945, with judgment handed down on 13 March 1946. Watermeyer CJ, Tindall JA, Greenberg JA, Schreiner JA, and Davis AJA. NE Rosenberg KC appeared for the appellant, and C. Norman Scoble, for the Crown.
Facts
The appellant had been convicted of a contravention of Volksraad Besluit No. 104 of 25 September 1871, in that he had allowed coloured persons, other than those exempted by the Besluit, to occupy an erf in the village of belonging to the appellant, and had been fined £1. This decision was appealed on the grounds- that a breach of the provisions of the Besluit was not a crime; and
- that the Besluit, in so far as it referred to coloured persons, had been impliedly repealed by subsequent legislation.
Judgment
The court held, for this reason and for others, that the Besluit in question did not create a crime. Although it did not make the assumption that, if an enactment is to create a crime, it should provide, either expressly or by reference, for a punishment, "I think it improbable that if the lawgiver had intended that the Besluit should create a crime, he would not have taken the precaution of inserting a penalty—more particularly as this is what appears generally to have been done."
The decision of the Transvaal Provincial Division, was thus reversed.
Case law
- R v McCulloch 1930 South [African Law Reports, Transvaal Provincial Division|TPD] 350.
- R v Zinn 1946 South African [Law Reports, Appellate Division|AD] 346.
Legislation
- Natives Act 21 of 1923.