pran, on Jan 6 2010, 04:52 PM, said:
Fair enough, but may I just post a reminder of Law 11A:
The right to rectification of an irregularity may be forfeited if either member of the non-offending side takes any action before summoning the Director. The Director does so rule, for example, when the non-offending side may have gained through subsequent action taken by an opponent in ignorance of the relevant provisions of the law.
I consider Dummy's action here very ethical for the purpose of avoiding this law to come into effect from a possible premature lead by East.
But the director call is already late, and the OS are potentially already damaged by the lateness. So this is already precisely the kind of situation where a TD might (might, not must) deny the NOS rectification under 11A.
There are two ethical things dummy could have done. They were (1) call the TD at the time Ed drew attention to the irregularity. Or, (2) keep his mouth shut ever thereafter. There is something else dummy might reasonably have done at this point, but it doesn't involve calling the director, and I'll say what it is at the end.
The offending side should be warned of the lead restrictions at the time of correction of the revoke, not a trick later, since it can affect their choice of play, so this is precisely an example of the situation in 11A. TD would have been within his rights to deny to declarer the application of the lead restrictions because of the late call. But whilst that would have been a legal ruling, it isn't necessarily what he should have done, as there could be more to the story. I'll tell you what I would have done later.
I find it inappropriate to call East's lead "premature", purely because he might have done it before the director was called. The director should have been called a trick ago. Things having been allowed to proceed, East is no longer required to call the director "on himself", or wait longer than normal tempo for another to do it, and so shouldn't normally be punished if he carried on in normal tempo. Certainly if East were on lead immediately after the irregularity and led without allowing time for the director to be called, that would be "premature", and director would require its retraction if necessary if called at that point. But in the present case the NOS has allowed events to proceed, and therefore under 11A lose their automatic rights to insist on rectifications. If N/S had called me after East had led, I do not think I would require the lead to be retracted, unless possibly I thought S was a weak player who did not know about the necessity of calling the director at the right time in order to obtain protection.
One might argue that Ed, being a qualified TD, correcting his own revoke and putting out his penalty card, and playing against another qualified TD, had implicitly suggested that his side would suffer the lead restrictions in the laws, and that he was going to mention them at the appropriate point, and did not expect to benefit from the protection in law 11A in relation to earlier mention of the lead restrictions. If you allowed that argument, then you might say that N/S were expecting the lead restrictions to be mentioned by Ed when his partner came on lead, and when they weren't, then they brought it up themselves in an unsurprising manner.
But in general that is not how Ed's actions are interpreted. Ed's actions amount to an offer of a table-made ruling, and NS consented to it. Why should the director disturb this? And if the lead restrictions are not volunteered at the initial point, how can we know whether they were ever intended to be part of the agreed table made ruling? In general, if your opponents offer you a penalty card without the intervention of the director, and no lead restrictions are mentioned, you have agreed to a table-made ruling without any reliance on later obtaining the lead restrictions. And that is what commonly happens when directors are called late to table-made penalty card rulings, as I understand it.
So if I'd been the director here, unless declarer was a lesser player unaware of the need to call the director for protection of his rights, I'd have told NS that they had consented to a table-made ruling, and therefore any consequentials are for negotiation with the other side. I would further tell them I didn't expect to be bothered by either side further on this matter, or there could be trouble.
So the third, reasonable, thing dummy might have done was turn to Ed and say something like "Surely you were intending to tell declarer about the potential lead restrictions at this point". And, since this is Ed, behaving in an uncomplicated matter, I would have expected him to reply "Of course, I temporarily forgot". Even if he didn't like his opponents.