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22 Can. B. Rev. 870 (1944)
Swiss Criminal Law (Continued)

handle is hein.journals/canbarev22 and id is 882 raw text is: 



870


   ENGLISH STUDIES IN CRIMINAL SCIENCE

            SWISS   CRIMINAL LAW (Continued)

                           PART  III.
21.  In what cases and to what extent can criminal legislation operate
     retrospectively? If so, what instances of this have there been in
     the period 1920-1939?
     The Swiss Criminal Code  applies to all crimes and medium
offences which have been committed after the Code had come into
force.  If a crime or medium offence has been committed before it had
come  into force, but if the trial takes place after it had come into
force, the law which is more favourable to the accused must be
applied  (Article 2 StGB).  As  far as indeterminate sentences
(measures de stretg, Sicherungsmassnahmen) are concerned, their
nature  excludes the question whether  the law  which  is more
favourable to the accused must be applied; only that law must be
applied which is in force at the time when the sentence is passed.

22.  To what extent has a tribunal discretion to declare as criminally
    punishable an  act or omission not specifically covered by the
    penal code in force at the time of that act or omission?
    It is a principle of Swiss Law that old laws do not operate
after they have been abrogated and that new laws have no retro-
active effect. As an exception, the law which is more favourable
to the accused applies retroactively (see No. 21). Thus the courts
have  no powers  to punish  in respect of acts which were  not
punishable when  the act was committed.   This rule follows also
from the principle: nulla poena sine lege (Article 1 StGB).

23. To  what extent has a tribunal discretion to sentence an offender
    to a punishment  (whether as regards kind or measure) which
    is not specifically mentioned by the penal code in force, or if
    mentioned,  is not expressed to be applicable to the offence
    committed?
    The  principle nulla poena sine lege applies in particular to
the kind and measure of the penalty to be imposed in each indivi-
dual case.  Only those may be punished  who commit  acts which
are expressly declared punishable  by  law  (Article 1 StGB).
Consequently, the courts must never impose  penalties which are
not provided by  law for the particular act in question or which
exceed the limits laid down by law.

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