Too many cards dummy ACBL
#1
Posted 2009-September-03, 13:05
This was discovered as declarer led from his hand. I observed that I had 6 cards in my hand and dummy had 8. We tried to reconstruct the play of the cards with directors assistance however the person playing the dummies card had it pretty well fouled up.
What shoud be the correct ruling?
THANK YOU
#2
Posted 2009-September-03, 15:20
dickiegera, on Sep 3 2009, 09:05 PM, said:
This was discovered as declarer led from his hand. I observed that I had 6 cards in my hand and dummy had 8. We tried to reconstruct the play of the cards with directors assistance however the person playing the dummies card had it pretty well fouled up.
What shoud be the correct ruling?
THANK YOU
Declarer is playing dummy's cards; dummy is just handling them on declarer's orders.
Did nobody at the table, not even declarer himself care how dummy handled declarer's orders?
Why was it impossible to reconstruct the few ttricks played when the irregularity was discovered?
Sounds to me as if the players were either
a: (half) asleep, or
b: drunk?
As for a ruling: The way the situation is described, and it being impossible to reconstruct the play, I shall rule the board unplayable with the declaring side fully at fault. (Law 12C2)
regards Sven
#3
Posted 2009-September-03, 15:49
#4
Posted 2009-September-03, 16:13
TylerE, on Sep 3 2009, 11:49 PM, said:
OP said nothing to indicate that any player started off with an incorrect number of cards?
Quote: After 7 cards are played it was discovered that dummy had only played 5 cards.
To me this means that there remained 8 instead of 6 cards in dummy when 7 tricks had been played and that dummy had only 5 cards quitted at this time.
Sven
#5
Posted 2009-September-03, 16:16
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#6
Posted 2009-September-03, 19:18
#1 did not play a card because declarer didn't always indicate a card to be played
#2 or failed to turn over a card that was played.
#3 or failed to play a card that declarer asked for.
This happened once early and nobody caught the problem.
On the declarer's lead to trick 8 it was observed by LHO that
dummy had not played to 2 tricks one of them was probably
trick 7 but no one could be certain.
Thank again
#7
Posted 2009-September-03, 20:07
#8
Posted 2009-September-04, 01:49
Law 67B1 says that each of the two late cards is treated as a revoke, and tricks transferred in accordance with Law 64A2. But since it is a revoke by dummy, 64A2 tells us no trick is automatically transferred. The TD can adjust the score if he believes that the defenders have been damaged by this.
#9
Posted 2009-September-04, 02:06
bluejak, on Sep 4 2009, 12:16 AM, said:
No, I do not find that.
OP wrote: I observed that I had 6 cards in my hand and dummy had 8.
As far as I can figure it out the story-teller had exactly the correct number of cards he should have after seven tricks had been played, but dummy had two cards in excess.
This conforms with everybody starting off with thirteen cards and dummy somehow had failed to play to two of the quitted tricks.
I still consider the declaring side all (and only) at fault.
regards Sven
#10
Posted 2009-September-04, 02:20
iviehoff, on Sep 4 2009, 09:49 AM, said:
Law 67B1 says that each of the two late cards is treated as a revoke, and tricks transferred in accordance with Law 64A2. But since it is a revoke by dummy, 64A2 tells us no trick is automatically transferred. The TD can adjust the score if he believes that the defenders have been damaged by this.
This is the solution I would use, but as it has been stated that it was impossible to reconstruct the play (sufficiently to identify the led suits in the tricks to which dummy has failed to play cards) I must rule Law 12C2 (no result can be obtained).
It is unbelievable to me that it could be impossible to reconstruct the play of the five and only tricks played on a board in progress and I suspect that the players involved may have been in a rather peculiar state (not fit for playing bridge).
However, handling dummy's (and his own) cards is the sole responsibility of declarer and I resent any suggestion on ruling foul (also) on defenders here.
regards Sven
#12
Posted 2009-September-04, 06:42
<mutter> <mutter> He said he had six cards <mutter> <mutter>
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#13
Posted 2009-September-04, 08:12
bluejak, on Sep 4 2009, 02:42 PM, said:
<mutter> <mutter> He said he had six cards <mutter> <mutter>
After seven tricks had been played.
What does that indicate?
Sven