Quote
East/West called the Director after the board. West said South had explained 2♣ as a cue-bid, so West had misunderstood 3♣ as natural.
The Director:
Tried to establish the facts, and decided that in all probability, the sequence of events was:
South did not alert 2♣, and passed over 3♣. West asked South what 2♣ was, and before replying,South asked West what 3♣ was. West said 3♣ was natural, and South then explained 2♣ as a cue-bid.
The Director ruled that East/West had been misinformed, and would not have played 3♣. He could not establish what would have happened with correct explanation and applied Law 12C1d.
Ruling:
Score adjusted to Average Plus for East/West, Average Minus for North/South.
Relevant Laws:
Law 40B4
Law12C1d
North/South appealed.
South confirmed that he had not alerted 2♣. He had asked what 3♣ meant, and was told that it showed 18+ with hearts and clubs. He had then passed, and West had asked him what 2♣ meant. Since 3♣ was natural, he had concluded 2♣ was a cue-bid and explained it that way.
South was asked if there was any place in their system where 2♣ was a cue-bid in response to a double, and he could not mention any.
When asked how it could be possible for 2♣ to be a cue-bid when the 3♣ came after it, he could not explain.
West explained that he had waited for an alert of 2♣, but none had come. He was about to pass, when he remembered to ask what 2♣ was. South responded with a question about 3♣, and he had explained that it showed 18+ with the two suits. Then South said 2♣ was a cue-bid, and he had passed.
How would you have ruled if you had been on the Appeals Committee?