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S v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537 (A)
CRW1501 Criminal Law Sentencing
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, MODULE MASTER CRW1501 Case Law Series | S v Zinn
CASE AT A GLANCE
Case S v Zinn 1969 (2) SA 537 (A)
Topic Sentencing — The Zinn Triad
Court Appellate Division
Module CRW1501 — Criminal Law
Key Principle Crime · Criminal · Interests of Society
FACTS
Johannes Paulus Zinn owned a furniture-manufacturing company and over approximately eight years
persistently falsified balance sheets and invoices to obtain loans and overdraft facilities from financial
institutions. He was charged in the Cape of Good Hope Provincial Division with multiple counts of fraud,
theft, and a contravention of the Insolvency Act. Zinn, aged 58, pleaded guilty and was convicted on 14
counts of fraud, 221 counts of theft, and one count under the Insolvency Act. He was sentenced
to 15 years imprisonment and appealed against that sentence. The question before the Appellate
Division was purely one of sentencing methodology — the conviction was not in dispute.
ISSUES BEFORE THE COURT
1. What is the correct framework for sentencing in South African criminal law?
2. What factors must a sentencing court take into account?
3. How must those factors be balanced against each other?
COURT HELD
The Appellate Division held that sentencing requires the court to consider three factors, weighed
together and balanced against one another. These are: (1) the nature and gravity of the crime; (2)
the personal circumstances of the offender; and (3) the interests of society. This framework has
since become the Zinn triad — the foundational sentencing principle in South African criminal law.
No single factor automatically dominates. A serious crime does not make personal circumstances
irrelevant. A sympathetic offender does not allow society's interests to be ignored. The triad demands
genuine balancing — not a mechanical checklist.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
The Zinn Triad
Sentencing must consider: (1) the nature and gravity of the crime; (2) the personal circumstances of the
offender; and (3) the interests of society. All three must be weighed together.
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