pran, on Jan 6 2010, 08:57 AM, said:
bluejak, on Jan 6 2010, 01:12 PM, said:
Exactly, and if dummy had called the TD when the card was exposed there could be no complaint.
A little thought experiment:
Dummy says nothing. East wins the trick and continues with some card without awaiting Declarer to execute his options.
Is East guilty of any irregularity?
IMO absolutely not. The Director has not been called and East is not expected to know the laws about penalty cards. It is one of the Director's duties to make sure she is aware of both her duties and her rights in all situations.
The irregularity: East leading prematurely when her partner has a penalty card is in this case a consequence of the Director not having been called in time.
If I as Director had been called at this stage (on East's premature lead) I would simply rule that East takes back the card so led
without any rectification and then let Declarer execute his options. I would also warn the players to
always call the Director in penalty card situations.
So back to the original problem: I shall not penalize Dummy for "rectifying" the error of not calling the Director on the revoke before further consequences of this failure become imminent (so long as Dummy's actions do not violate Law 43A1c. (
Dummy must not participate in the play)
However, this law actually continues with
nor may he communicate anything about the play to declarer so the question still remains whether Dummy violated this last part of that law; I tend to say
no in this situation)
In the original case W has committed two irregularities, a revoke and a POOT. Up until W protests dummy’s action these are the only two actionable irregularities.
I am reasonably confident that the facts will bear out [given the assumption that N will assert he/she was making ready to then call the TD if no one else gets in his way] that N’s comment was preparatory to summoning help, which N was entitled to do at that time as W had indeed called attention to a revoke.
What is disconcerting is that the law has much to say about W’s second card in that it says several things, much without conflict while some that conflicts.
Given W’s first card having been played, it then became N’s turn so therefore the second card was not at W’s turn to play. And since this OOT [additional] information comes prior to E’s turn to play to the trick L57 has some fairly gruesome things to say [and rightly so, imo]. I mention this to, if nothing else, provide some food for thought.
One more observation- the drawing attention to the revoke and the irregularity of W’s correction are intertwined such that it is impractical to presume that the TD could be summoned about the first prior to the occurrence of the second. And as far as fairness is concerned it is a bit incongruous that dummy is permitted to call the TD over the first but not the second as attention had not yet been legally drawn to it.
As for the correct course of action at this point, at least in part, should be that the PC lead penalties be enforced; but action against W’s “change of play” , whatever it might be, is forfeited.
But, for the case when E manages to lead before dummy comments, since there had not yet been a correct ruling with regards to the revoke and subsequent correction, the right to enforce at that turn any lead penalty is forfeited, but not at future turns.
And what of the case when dummy is mute while declarer is not when E acts in ignorance? The law states that E may not lead before declarer has acted on his PC option [the law states that the withdrawn card is a PC, there not being mentioned a requirement of a ruling to the effect]. It so states without stipulation requiring a ruling prior. So declarer is entitled to enforce PC options which might lead to E thereby having a PC.
Bridge is a game and I will remember that its place in my life is that of a game. I will respect those who play and endeavor to be worthy of their respect. I will remember that it is the most human of activities which makes bridge so interesting. And in doing so I will contribute my best and strive to conduct myself fairly. -Bridge Player’s Creed