Background
Schreiner was born in Cape Town in 1890. He was the son of William Philip Schreiner, a well-known advocate, civil servant and Prime Minister of the Cape Colony, and his wife, Frances, a sister of President F. W. Reitz.
Schreiner was born in Cape Town in 1890. He was the son of William Philip Schreiner, a well-known advocate, civil servant and Prime Minister of the Cape Colony, and his wife, Frances, a sister of President F. W. Reitz.
Trinity College.
He went to Rondebosch Boys" High School and then the South African College School (Southern Association of Colleges and Schools). An excellent student, he "could have had the Rhodes Scholarship for the asking", but understood, in the light of Rhodes"s involvement in the Jameson Raid and subsequent fallout with William Schreiner, that "no Schreiner took such a gift from such a man". Instead, Schreiner went up to Cambridge University to read law at Trinity College.
After the war Schreiner completed his legal studies and was called to the London Bar, having served pupillage under Wilfred Greene and Geoffrey Lawrence.
He moved to the Transvaal Bar in 1920 and set up practice in Johannesburg, where he also taught at the University of the Witwatersrand in the early years of its law school (which now bears Schreiner"s name). Schreiner"s practice thrived.
He took silk in 1935 and was appointed a judge of the Transvaal Provincial Division on 1 August 1937. In 1945 he was promoted to the Appellate Division, where he served until his retirement in 1960.
During the Coloured Vote Crisis Schreiner steadfastly refused to endorse the attempts of the Nationalist government to remove Coloured voters from the Cape Province"s roll.
Finally, after the Appellate Division had been packed with pliant judges, it approved the government"s reconstitution of the Senate. Schreiner was the lone dissentient. Schreiner was twice passed over for appointment as Chief Justice, despite being the most senior appellate judge.
On the second occasion he lost to L. C. Steyn, who was favoured by the National Party.
Schreiner was later described by Ellison Kahn as "the greatest Chief Justice South Africa never had". After his retirement he served on the Wits Council and as president of the South African Institute of Race Relations.