Posted 2011-January-25, 21:55
The laws don't say when a trick ends, only that after all four players play to the trick, each player turns his card face down. BTW, when the laws say a player "does" something, that establishes correct procedure, without suggesting that a violation be penalized. If the law says a player "may do" something, failure to do it is not wrong but that doesn't apply here. A trick starts when a card is led to it, so we're in trick 6, whether or not trick 5 is "finished".
Since the irregularity (lead out of turn) has already occurred, dummy cannot say anything about it until play ends, at which time it won't help, since if declarer played a card after the ♣K, he is deemed to have accepted the irregular lead. If declarer doesn't accept the LOOT, then the TD should be called, and whether the ♣K is a penalty card is up to him. I would say it depends on who called attention to the irregular lead. If it was dummy, we have a problem, although the director is still required to deal with the LOOT (Law 81C3 requires the TD to "rectify an error or irregularity of which he becomes aware in any manner with the correction period specified by Law 79C"). I would think handle it as a LOOT, and perhaps issue a PP to the declaring side ("may not", as in "dummy may not call attention to an irregularity" [Law 43A1{b}] is a pretty strong injunction). It may depend on how quickly things happened.
Proper procedure, and best practice, would have been for dummy to say, as soon as somebody put his card the wrong way, "declarer's trick".
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Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean