|
The Play
PART I PROCEDURE
SECTION ONE CORRECT PROCEDURE
LAW 41 -
COMMENCEMENT OF PLAY
| A. |
Face-down
Opening Lead |
| |
After a bid, double
or redouble has been followed by three passes in rotation, the
defender on presumed declarer's left makes the opening lead
face down . The face-down lead may be withdrawn only upon instruction
of the Director after an irregularity (see Law
47E2); the withdrawn card must be returned to the defender's
hand. |
| B. |
Review of
Auction and Questions
|
| |
Before the opening
lead is faced, the leader's partner and the presumed declarer
each may require a review of the auction, or request explanation
of an opponent's call (see Law
20). Declarer or either defender may, at his first turn
to play a card, require a review of the auction; this right
expires when he plays a card. The defenders (subject to Law
16) and the declarer retain the right to request explanations
throughout the play period, each at his own turn to play. |
| C. |
Opening
Lead Faced |
| |
Following this question
period, the opening lead is faced, the play period begins, and
dummy's hand is spread. After it is too late to have previous
calls restated (see B, above), declarer or either defender,
at his own turn to play, is entitled to be informed as to what
the contract is and whether, but not by whom, it was doubled
or redoubled. |
| D. |
Dummy's Hand |
| |
After the opening
lead is faced, dummy spreads his hand in front of him on the
table, face up, sorted into suits, the cards in order of rank,
in columns pointing lengthwise towards declarer, with trumps
to dummy's right. Declarer plays both his hand and that of dummy.
|
LAW 42 -
DUMMY'S RIGHTS
| A. |
Absolute Rights
|
| |
1. |
Give Information |
| |
|
Dummy is entitled
to give information, in the Director's presence, as to fact
or law. |
| |
2. |
Keep Track of
Tricks |
| |
|
He may keep count
of tricks won and lost. |
| |
3. |
Play as Declarer's
Agent |
| |
|
He
plays the cards of the dummy as declarer's agent as directed
(see Law 45F if dummy
suggests a play). |
| B. |
Qualified
Rights |
| |
Dummy may
exercise other rights subject to the limitations provided in
Law 43. |
|
1. |
Revoke Inquiries |
| |
|
Dummy may ask declarer (but
not a defender) when he has failed to follow suit to a trick
whether he has a card of the suit led. |
| |
2. |
Attempt to Prevent Irregularity
|
| |
|
He may try to prevent any irregularity
by declarer. |
| |
3. |
Draw Attention to Irregularity
|
| |
|
He may draw attention to any
irregularity, but only after play of the hand is concluded. |
LAW 43
- DUMMY'S LIMITATIONS
Except as specified in Law
42:
| A. |
Limitations
on Dummy |
| |
1. |
General Limitations |
| |
|
(a) |
Calling the Director
|
| |
Unless attention
has been drawn to an irregularity by another player, dummy should
not initiate a call for the Director during play. |
| |
|
(b) |
Calling Attention
to Irregularity |
| |
|
|
Dummy may not call
attention to an irregularity during play. |
| |
|
(c) |
Participate in or
Comment on Play |
| |
|
|
Dummy must not participate
in the play, nor may he communicate anything about the play
to declarer. |
| |
2. |
Limitations Carrying
Specific Penalty |
| |
|
(a) |
Exchanging Hands |
| |
|
|
Dummy may not exchange hands
with declarer. |
| |
|
(b) |
Leave Seat to Watch
Declarer |
| |
|
|
Dummy may not leave
his seat to watch declarer's play of the hand. |
| |
|
(c) |
Look at Defender's
Hand |
| |
|
|
Dummy may not, on
his own initiative, look at the face of a card in either defender's
hand. |
| B. |
Penalties
for Violation |
|
1. |
General Penalties
|
| |
|
Dummy is liable
to penalty under Law 90
for any violation of the limitations listed in A1 or A2
preceding. |
| |
2. |
Specific Penalties |
| |
|
If dummy, after
violation of the limitations listed in A2 preceding: |
| |
|
(a) |
Warns Declarer on Lead |
| |
|
|
warns declarer not to lead from
the wrong hand, (penalty) either defender may choose the hand
from which declarer shall lead. |
| |
|
(b) |
Asks Declarer about Possible
Irregularity |
| |
|
|
is the first to ask declarer
if a play from declarer's hand constitutes a revoke, declarer
must substitute a correct card if his play was illegal, and
the penalty provisions of Law
64 apply as if the revoke had been established. |
| |
3. |
If dummy
|
| |
|
after violation
of the limitations listed in A2 preceding is the first to draw
attention to a defender's irregularity, no penalty shall be
imposed. If the defenders benefit directly through their irregularity,
the director shall award an adjusted score to both sides to
restore equity. |
LAW 44 -
SEQUENCE AND PROCEDURE OF PLAY
| A. |
Lead to a
Trick |
| |
The player who leads
to a trick may play any card in his hand (unless he is subject
to restriction after an irregularity committed by his side). |
| B. |
Subsequent
Plays to a Trick |
| |
After the lead,
each other player in turn plays a card, and the four cards so
played constitute a trick. (For the method of playing cards
and arranging tricks see Law
65). |
| C. |
Requirement
to Follow Suit |
| |
In playing
to a trick, each player must follow suit if possible. This obligation
takes precedence over all other requirements of these Laws.
|
| D. |
Inability
to Follow Suit |
| |
If unable to follow
suit, a player may play any card (unless he is subject to restriction
after an irregularity committed by his side). |
| E. |
Tricks Containing
Trumps |
| |
A trick containing
a trump is won by the player who has contributed to it the highest
trump. |
| F. |
Tricks Not
Containing Trumps |
| |
A trick that does
not contain a trump is won by the player who has contributed
to it the highest card of the suit led. |
| G. |
Lead to Tricks
Subsequent to First Trick |
| |
The player who has
won the trick leads to the next trick. |
LAW 45
- CARD PLAYED
| A. |
Play of Card
from a Hand |
| |
Each player except
dummy plays a card by detaching it from his hand and facing
it on the table immediately before him. |
| B. |
Play of Card
from Dummy |
| |
Declarer plays a
card from dummy by naming the card, after which dummy picks
up the card and faces it on the table. In playing from dummy's
hand declarer may, if necessary, pick up the desired card himself. |
| C. |
Compulsory
Play of Card |
| |
1. |
Defender's Card |
| |
|
A defender's card
held so that it is possible for his partner to see its face
must be played to the current trick (if the defender has already
made a legal play to the current trick, see Law
45E). |
| |
2. |
Declarer's Card |
| |
|
Declarer must play
a card from his hand held face up, touching or nearly touching
the table, or maintained in such a position as to indicate that
it has been played. |
| |
3. |
Dummy's Card |
| |
|
A card in the dummy
must be played if it has been deliberately touched by declarer
except for the purpose of arranging dummy's cards, or of reaching
a card above or below the card or cards touched. |
| |
4. |
Named or Designated
Card |
| |
|
(a) |
Play of Named Card |
| |
|
|
A card must be played
if a player names or otherwise designates it as the card he
proposes to play. |
| |
|
(b) |
Correction of Inadvertent
Designation A player may, without penalty, change an inadvertent
designation if he does so without pause for thought; but if
an opponent has, in turn, played a card that was legal before
the change in designation, that opponent may withdraw without
penalty the card so played and substitute another (see Law
47E). |
| |
5. |
Penalty Card |
| |
|
A penalty card,
major or minor, may have to be played, subject to Law
50. |
| D. |
Card Misplayed
by Dummy |
| |
If dummy places
in the played position a card that declarer did not name, the
card must be withdrawn if attention is drawn to it before each
side has played to the next trick, and a defender may withdraw
(without penalty) a card played after the error but before attention
was drawn to it; if declarer's RHO changes his play, declarer
may withdraw a card he had subsequently played to that trick
(see Law 16C2). |
| E. |
Fifth Card
Played to Trick |
| |
1. |
By a Defender |
| |
|
A fifth card contributed
to a trick by a defender becomes a penalty card, subject to
Law 50, unless the Director deems that it was led, in which
case Law 53 or Law
56 applies. |
| |
2. |
By Declarer |
| |
|
When declarer contributes
a fifth card to a trick from his own hand or dummy, there is
no penalty unless the Director deems that it was led, in which
case Law 55 applies. |
| F. |
Dummy Indicates
Card |
| |
After
dummy's hand is faced, dummy may not touch or indicate any card
(except for purpose of arrangement) without instruction from
declarer. If he does so, the Director should be summoned forthwith.
The Director shall rule whether dummy's act did in fact constitute
a suggestion to declarer. When the Director judges that it did,
he allows play to continue, reserving his right to assign an
adjusted score if the defenders were damaged by the play so
suggested. |
| G. |
Turning the
Trick |
| |
No
player should turn his card face down until all four players
have played to the trick. |
SECTION
TWO
IRREGULARITIES IN PROCEDURE
LAW 46
- INCOMPLETE OR ERRONEOUS CALL OF CARD FROM DUMMY
| A. |
Proper Form
for Designating Dummy's Card |
| |
When calling a card
to be played from dummy, declarer should clearly state both
the suit and the rank of the desired card. |
| B. |
Incomplete
or Erroneous Call |
| |
In case of an incomplete
or erroneous call by declarer of the card to be played from
dummy, the following restrictions apply (except when declarer's
different intention is incontrovertible): |
| |
1. |
Incomplete Designation
of Rank |
| |
|
If declarer, in
playing from dummy, calls "high", or words of like import, he
is deemed to have called the highest card: in fourth seat he
may be deemed to have called for the lowest winning card of
the suit indicated; if he directs dummy to win the trick, he
is deemed to have called the lowest winning card; if he calls
"low", or words of like import, he is deemed to have called
the lowest. |
| |
2. |
Designates Suit
but Not Rank |
| |
|
If declarer designates
a suit but not a rank, he is deemed to have called the lowest
card of the suit indicated. |
| |
3. |
Designates Rank
but Not Suit |
| |
|
If declarer designates
a rank but not a suit: |
| |
|
(a) |
In Leading |
| |
|
|
Declarer is deemed
to have continued the suit in which dummy won the preceding
trick, provided there is a card of the designated rank in that
suit. |
| |
|
(b) |
All Other Cases |
| |
|
|
In all other cases,
declarer must play a card from dummy of the designated rank
if he can legally do so; but if there are two or more such cards
that can be legally played, declarer must designate which is
intended. |
| |
4. |
Designates Card
Not in Dummy |
| |
|
If declarer calls
a card that is not in dummy, the call is void and declarer may
designate any legal card. |
| |
5. |
No Suit
or Rank Designated |
| |
|
If declarer indicates
a play without designating either a suit or rank (as by saying,
""play anything'', or words of like import), either defender
may designate the play from dummy. |
LAW 47
- RETRACTION OF CARD PLAYED
| A. |
To Comply
with Penalty |
| |
A card once played
may be withdrawn to comply with a penalty (but a defender's
withdrawn card may become a penalty card, see Law
49). |
| B. |
To Correct
an Illegal Play |
| |
A played card may
be withdrawn to correct an illegal or simultaneous play (see
Law 58 for simultaneous
play; and, for defenders, see Law
49, penalty card). |
| C. |
To Change
an Inadvertent Designation |
| |
A played card may
be withdrawn without penalty after a change of designation as
permitted by Law 45C4(b). |
| D. |
Following
Opponent's Change of Play |
| |
After an
opponent's change of play, a played card may be withdrawn without
penalty (but see Law 62C2)
to substitute another card for the one played. |
| E. |
Change of
Play Based on Misinformation |
| |
1. |
Lead
Out of Turn |
| |
|
A lead out of turn
may be retracted without penalty if the leader was mistakenly
informed by an opponent that it was his turn to lead (LHO should
not accept the lead). |
| |
2. |
Retraction of
Play |
| |
|
(a) |
No One Has Subsequently Played
|
| |
|
|
A player may retract the card
he has played because of a mistaken explanation of an opponent's
call or play and before a corrected explanation, but only if
no card was subsequently played to that trick. An opening lead
may not be retracted after dummy has faced any card. |
| |
|
(b) |
One or More Subsequent Plays
Made |
| |
|
|
When it is too late to correct
a play, under (a) preceding, Law
40C applies. |
| F. |
Illegal Retraction
Except |
| |
as provided in A
through E preceding, a card once played may not be withdrawn. |
PART II
PENALTY CARD
LAW 48
- EXPOSURE OF DECLARER'S CARDS
| A. |
Declarer Exposes
a Card |
| |
Declarer is not
subject to penalty for exposing a card, and no card of declarer's
or dummy's hand ever becomes a penalty card. Declarer is not
required to play any card dropped accidentally. |
| B. |
Declarer Faces
Cards |
| |
1. |
After Opening
Lead Out of Turn |
|
|
When declarer faces
his cards after an opening lead out of turn, Law
54 applies. |
| |
2. |
At Any Other
Time |
| |
|
When declarer faces
his cards at any time other than immediately after an opening
lead out of turn, he may be deemed to have made a claim or concession
of tricks, and Law 68
then applies. |
LAW 49 -
EXPOSURE OF A DEFENDER'S CARDS
Except in the normal course of play
or application of law, when a defender's card is in a position in
which his partner could possibly see its face, or when a defender
names a card as being in his hand, (penalty) each such card becomes
a penalty card (Law 50);
but see the footnote to Law 68
when a defender has made a statement concerning an uncompleted trick
currently in progress.
LAW 50
- DISPOSITION OF PENALTY CARD
A card prematurely exposed (but
not led, see Law 57) by
a defender is a penalty card unless the Director designates otherwise.
The Director shall award an adjusted score, in lieu of the rectifications
below, when he deems that Law
72B1 applies.
| A. |
Penalty Card Remains
Exposed
|
| |
A penalty card must
be left face up on the table immediately before the player to
whom it belongs, until an alternate penalty has been selected. |
| B. |
Major or Minor
Penalty Card? |
| |
A single card below
the rank of an honour and exposed inadvertently (as in playing
two cards to a trick, or in dropping a card accidentally) becomes
a minor penalty card. Any card of honour rank, or any card exposed
through deliberate play (as in leading out of turn, or in revoking
and then correcting), becomes a major penalty card; when one
defender has two or more penalty cards, all such cards become
major penalty cards. |
| C. |
Disposition
of Minor Penalty Card |
| |
When a defender
has a minor penalty card, he may not play any other card of
the same suit below the rank of an honour until he has first
played the penalty card (however, he is entitled to play an
honour card instead). Offender's partner is not subject to lead
penalty, but information gained through seeing the penalty card
is extraneous, unauthorised (see Law
16A). |
| D. |
Disposition
of Major Penalty Card |
| |
When a defender
has a major penalty card, both the offender and his partner
may be subject to restriction, the offender whenever he is to
play, the partner when he is to lead. |
| |
1. |
Offender to Play |
| |
|
A major penalty
card must be played at the first legal opportunity, whether
in leading, following suit, discarding or trumping (the requirement
that offender must play the card is authorised information for
his partner; however, other information arising from facing
of the penalty card is unauthorised for partner). If a defender
has two or more penalty cards that can legally be played, declarer
designates which is to be played. The obligation to follow suit,
or to comply with a lead or play penalty, takes precedence over
the obligation to play a major penalty card, but the penalty
card must still be left face up on the table and played at the
next legal opportunity. |
| |
2. |
Offender's Partner
to Lead |
| |
|
When a defender
has the lead while his partner has a major penalty card, he
may not lead until declarer has stated which of the options
below is selected (if the defender leads prematurely, he is
subject to penalty under Law
49). Declarer may choose: |
| |
|
(a) |
Require or Forbid
Lead of Suit |
| |
|
|
to require the defender
to lead the suit of the penalty card, or to prohibit15 him from
leading that suit for as long as he retains the lead (for two
or more penalty cards, see Law
51); if declarer exercises this option, the card is
no longer a penalty card and is picked up. |
| |
|
(b) |
No Lead Restriction |
| |
|
|
not to require or
prohibit a lead, in which case the defender may lead any card;
the penalty card remains a penalty card. |
LAW 51
- TWO OR MORE PENALTY CARDS
| A. |
Offender to
Play |
| |
If a defender has
two or more penalty cards that can legally be played, declarer
designates which is to be played at that turn. |
| B. |
Offender's
Partner to Lead
|
| |
1. |
Penalty
Cards in Same Suit |
|
|
(a) |
Declarer Requires Lead of That
Suit |
| |
|
|
When a defender has two or more
penalty cards in one suit, and declarer requires the defender's
partner to lead that suit, the cards of that suit are no longer
penalty cards and are picked up; the defender may make any legal
play to the trick. |
| |
|
(b) |
Declarer Prohibits Lead of That
Suit |
| |
|
|
If the declarer prohibits the
lead of that suit, the defender picks up every penalty card
in that suit and may make any legal play to the trick. |
| |
2. |
Penalty Cards
in More Than One Suit |
| |
|
(a) |
Declarer Requires Lead of a
Specified Suit |
| |
|
|
When a defender has penalty
cards in more than one suit, declarer may require15 the defender's
partner to lead any suit in which the defender has a penalty
card (but B1(a) preceding then applies). |
| |
|
(b) |
Declarer Prohibits Lead of Specified
Suits |
| |
|
|
When a defender has penalty
cards in more than one suit, declarer may prohibit15 the defender's
partner from leading one or more of such suits; but the defender
then picks up every penalty card in every suit prohibited by
declarer and makes any legal play to the trick. |
LAW 52 -
FAILURE TO LEAD OR PLAY A PENALTY CARD
| A. |
Defender
Fails to Play Penalty Card |
| |
When a defender
fails to lead or play a penalty card as required by Law
50, he may not, on his own initiative, withdraw any
other card he has played. |
| B. |
Defender Plays
Another Card |
| |
1. |
Play of Card
Accepted |
| |
|
(a) |
Declarer May Accept
Play |
| |
|
|
If a defender has
led or played another card when required by law to play a penalty
card, declarer may accept such lead or play. |
| |
|
(b) |
Declarer Must Accept
Play |
| |
|
|
Declarer must accept
such lead or play if he has thereafter played from his own hand
or dummy. |
| |
|
(c) |
Penalty Card Remains
Penalty Card |
| |
|
|
If the played card
is accepted under either (a) or (b) preceding, the unplayed
penalty card remains a penalty card. |
| |
2. |
Play of Card
Rejected |
| |
|
Declarer may require
the defender to substitute the penalty card for the card illegally
played or led. Every card illegally led or played by the defender
in the course of committing the irregularity becomes a major
penalty card. |
PART III
IRREGULAR LEADS AND PLAYS
SECTION ONE LEAD OUT OF TURN
LAW 53
- LEAD OUT OF TURN ACCEPTED
| A. |
Lead Out
of Turn Treated as Correct Lead |
| |
Any lead
faced out of turn may be treated as a correct lead. It becomes
a correct lead if declarer or either defender, as the case may
be, accepts it (by making a statement to that effect), or if
the player next in rotation plays to the irregular lead, but
see Law 47E1. (If no
acceptance statement or play is made, the Director will require
that the lead be made from the correct hand.) |
| B. |
Wrong Defender
Plays Card to Declarer's Irregular Lead |
| |
If the defender
at the right of the hand from which the lead out of turn was
made plays16 to the irregular lead, the lead stands and Law
57 applies. |
| C. |
Proper Lead
Made Subsequent to Irregular Lead |
| |
If it was properly
the turn to lead of an opponent of the player who led out of
turn, that opponent may make his proper lead to the trick of
the infraction without his card being deemed played to the irregular
lead. When this occurs, the proper lead stands, and all cards
played in error to this trick may be withdrawn without penalty.
(Law 16C2 applies to
a defender.) |
LAW 54
- FACED OPENING LEAD OUT OF TURN
When an opening lead is faced out
of turn, and offender's partner leads face down, the director requires
the face down lead to be retracted, and the following sections apply.
| A. |
Declarer Spreads
His Hand |
| |
After a faced opening
lead out of turn, declarer may spread his hand; he becomes dummy,
and dummy becomes declarer. If declarer begins to spread his
hand, and in doing so exposes one or more cards, he must spread
his entire hand. |
| B. |
Declarer Accepts
Lead |
| |
When a defender
faces the opening lead out of turn declarer may accept the irregular
lead as provided in Law 53,
and dummy is spread in accordance with Law
41. |
| |
1. |
Declarer Plays Second Card
|
| |
|
The second card to the trick
is played from declarer's hand. |
| |
2. |
Dummy Has Played Second Card |
| |
|
If declarer plays the second
card to the trick from dummy, dummy's card may not be withdrawn
except to correct a revoke. |
| C. |
Declarer Must
Accept Lead |
| |
If declarer could
have seen any of dummy's cards (except cards that dummy may
have exposed during the auction and that were subject to Law
24), he must accept the lead. |
| D. |
Declarer Refuses
Opening Lead |
| |
When declarer requires
the defender to retract his faced opening lead out of turn,
Law 56 applies. |
LAW 55 -
DECLARER'S LEAD OUT OF TURN
| A. |
Declarer's
Lead Accepted |
| |
If declarer has
led out of turn from his or dummy's hand, either defender may
accept the lead as provided in Law
53, or require its retraction (after misinformation,
see Law 47E1). |
| B. |
Declarer
Required to Retract Lead |
| |
1. |
Defender's Turn
to Lead |
| |
|
If declarer has
led from his or dummy's hand when it was a defender's turn to
lead, and if either defender requires him to retract such lead,
declarer restores the card led in error to the proper hand without
penalty. |
| |
2. |
Lead in Declarer's
Hand or Dummy's |
| |
|
If declarer
has led from the wrong hand when it was his turn to lead from
his hand or dummy's, and if either defender requires him to
retract the lead, he withdraws the card led in error. He must
lead from the correct hand. |
| C. |
Declarer Might
Obtain Information |
| |
When declarer adopts
a line of play that could have been based on information obtained
through the infraction, the Director may award an adjusted score.
|
LAW 56
- DEFENDER'S LEAD OUT OF TURN
When declarer requires a defender
to retract his faced lead out of turn, the card illegally led becomes
a major penalty card, and Law 50D
applies.
SECTION TWO
OTHER IRREGULAR LEADS AND PLAYS
LAW 57
- PREMATURE LEAD OR PLAY BY DEFENDER
| A. |
Premature
Play or Lead to Next Trick |
| |
When a defender
leads to the next trick before his partner has played to the
current trick, or plays out of turn before his partner has played,
(penalty) the card so led or played becomes a penalty card,
and declarer selects one of the following options. He may: |
| |
1. |
Highest Card
|
| |
|
require
offender's partner to play the highest card he holds of the
suit led, or |
| |
2. |
Lowest Card
|
| |
|
require offender's
partner to play the lowest card he holds of the suit led, or
|
| |
3. |
Card of Another
Suit |
| |
|
forbid offender's
partner to play a card of another suit specified by declarer. |
| B. |
Offender's
Partner Cannot Comply with Penalty |
| |
When offender's
partner is unable to comply with the penalty selected by declarer,
he may play any card, as provided in Law
59. |
| C. |
Declarer Has
Played from Both Hands before Irregularity |
| |
A defender
is not subject to penalty for playing before his partner if
declarer has played from both hands, or if dummy has played
a card or has illegally suggested that it be played. A singleton
in dummy, or one of cards adjacent in rank of the same suit,
is not considered to be automatically played. |
LAW 58
- SIMULTANEOUS LEADS OR PLAYS
| A. |
Simultaneous
Plays by Two Players |
| |
A lead or play made
simultaneously with another player's legal lead or play is deemed
to be subsequent to it. |
| B. |
Simultaneous
Cards from One Hand |
| |
If a player leads
or plays two or more cards simultaneously: |
| |
1. |
One Card Visible |
| |
|
If only one card is visible,
that card is played; all other cards are picked up without penalty. |
| |
2. |
More Cards Visible |
| |
|
If more than one card is visible,
the player designates the card he proposes to play; when he
is a defender, each other card exposed becomes a penalty card
(see Law 50). |
| |
3. |
After Visible Card Withdrawn |
| |
|
After a player withdraws a visible
card, an opponent who subsequently played to that card may withdraw
his play and substitute another without penalty (see
Law 16C). |
| |
4. |
Error Not Discovered
|
| |
|
If the simultaneous play remains
undiscovered until both sides have played to the next trick,
Law 67 applies. |
LAW 59
- INABILITY TO LEAD OR PLAY AS REQUIRED
A player may play any otherwise
legal card if he is unable to lead or play as required to comply
with a penalty, whether because he holds no card of the required
suit, or because he has only cards of a suit he is prohibited from
leading, or because he is obliged to follow suit.
LAW 60
- PLAY AFTER AN ILLEGAL PLAY
| A. |
Play of Card
after Irregularity |
| |
1. |
Forfeiture of
Right to Penalise |
| |
|
A play by a member
of the non-offending side after his RHO has led or played out
of turn or prematurely, and before a penalty has been assessed,
forfeits the right to penalise that offence. |
| |
2. |
Irregularity
Legalised |
| |
|
Once the right to
penalise has been forfeited, the illegal play is treated as
though it were in turn (but Law
53C applies to the player whose turn it was). |
| |
3. |
Other Penalty
Obligations Remain |
| |
|
If the offending
side has a previous obligation to play a penalty card, or to
comply with a lead or play penalty, the obligation remains at
future turns. |
| B. |
Defender Plays
before Required Lead by Declarer |
| |
When a defender
plays a card after declarer has been required to retract his
lead out of turn from either hand, but before declarer has led
from the correct hand, the defender's card becomes a penalty
card (Law 50). |
| C. |
Play by Offending
Side |
| |
before Assessment
of Penalty A play by a member of the offending side before a
penalty has been assessed does not affect the rights of the
opponents, and may itself be subject to penalty. |
SECTION THREE
THE REVOKE
LAW 61
- FAILURE TO FOLLOW
SUIT - INQUIRIES CONCERNING A REVOKE
| A. |
Definition
of Revoke |
| |
Failure to follow
suit in accordance with Law
44 or failure to lead or play, when able, a card or
suit required by law or specified by an opponent in accordance
with an agreed penalty, constitutes a revoke (but see Law
59 when unable to comply). |
| B. |
Right to Inquire
about a Possible Revoke |
| |
Declarer may ask
a defender who has failed to follow suit whether he has a card
of the suit led (but a claim of revoke does not automatically
warrant inspection of quitted tricks - see Law
66C). Dummy may ask declarer (but see Law
43B2(b)). Defenders may ask declarer but, unless the
Zonal organisation so authorises, not one another. |
LAW 62
- CORRECTION OF A REVOKE
| A. |
Revoke
Must Be Corrected |
| |
A player
must correct his revoke if he becomes aware of the irregularity
before it becomes established. |
| B. |
Correcting
a Revoke |
| |
To correct a revoke,
the offender withdraws the card he played in revoking and follows
suit with any card. |
| |
1. |
Defender's Card
|
| |
|
A card so withdrawn
becomes a penalty card (Law
50) if it was played from a defender's unfaced hand. |
| |
2. |
Declarer's or
Dummy's Card, Defender's Faced Card |
| |
|
The card may be
replaced without penalty if it was played from declarer's or
dummy's hand , or if it was a defender's faced card. |
| C. |
Subsequent
Cards Played to Trick |
| |
1. |
By Non-offending Side
|
| |
|
Each member of the non-offending
side may, without penalty, withdraw any card he may have played
after the revoke but before attention was drawn to it (see Law
16C). |
| |
2. |
By Partner of Offender |
| |
|
After a non-offender so withdraws
a card, the hand of the offending side next in rotation may
withdraw its played card, which becomes a penalty card if the
player is a defender (see Law
16C). |
| D. |
Revoke on
Trick Twelve |
| |
1. |
Must Be Corrected |
| |
|
On the twelfth trick, a revoke,
even if established, must be corrected if discovered before
all four hands have been returned to the board. |
| |
2. |
Offender's Partner Had Not
Played to Trick Twelve |
| |
|
If a revoke by a defender occurred
before it was the turn of his partner to play to the twelfth
trick, and if offender's partner has cards of two suits, (penalty)
offender's partner may not choose the play that could possibly
have been suggested by seeing the revoke card. |
LAW 63
- ESTABLISHMENT OF A REVOKE
| A. |
Revoke Becomes
Established |
| |
A revoke becomes
established: |
| |
1. |
Offending Side
Leads or Plays to Next Trick |
| |
|
when the offender or his partner leads or plays to the following
trick (any such play, legal or illegal, establishes the revoke).
|
| |
2. |
A Member of Offending
Side Indicates a Lead or Play |
| |
|
when the offender
or his partner names or otherwise designates a card to be played
to the following trick. |
| |
3. |
Member of Offending
Side Makes a Claim or Concession |
| |
|
when a member of
the offending side makes or acquiesces in a claim or concession
of tricks orally or by facing his hand (or in any other fashion). |
| B. |
Attention
Is Illegally Drawn |
| |
When
there has been a violation of Law
61B, the revoker must substitute a legal card and the
penalty provisions of Law 64
apply as if the revoke had been established. |
| C. |
Revoke May
Not Be Corrected |
| |
Once
a revoke is established, it may no longer be corrected (except
as provided in Law 62D
for a revoke on the twelfth trick), and the trick on which the
revoke occurred stands as played (but see Law
43B2(b)). |
LAW 64
- PROCEDURE AFTER ESTABLISHMENT OF A REVOKE
| A. |
Penalty Assessed |
| |
When a revoke is
established: |
| |
1. |
Offending Player
Won Revoke Trick |
| |
|
and
the trick on which the revoke occurred was won by the offending
player, (penalty) after play ceases, the trick on which the
revoke occurred plus one of any subsequent tricks won by the
offending side are transferred to the non-offending side. |
| |
2. |
Offending Player
Did Not Win Revoke Trick |
| |
|
and the trick on
which the revoke occurred was not won by the offending player,
then, if the offending side won that or any subsequent trick,
(penalty) after play ceases, one trick is transferred to the
non-offending side; also, if an additional trick was subsequently
won by the offending player with a card that he could legally
have played to the revoke trick, one such trick is transferred
to the non-offending side. |
| B. |
No Penalty
Assessed |
| |
The penalty
for an established revoke does not apply: |
| |
1. |
Offending Side Fails to Win
Revoke Trick or Subsequent Trick |
| |
|
if the offending side did not
win either the revoke trick or any subsequent trick. |
| |
2. |
Second Revoke in Same Suit
by Offender |
| |
|
to a subsequent revoke in the
same suit by the same player. |
| |
3. |
Revoke by Failure to Play
a Faced Card |
| |
|
if the revoke was made in failing
to play any card faced on the table or belonging to a hand faced
on the table, including a card from dummy's hand. |
| |
4. |
After Non-offending Side
Calls to Next Deal |
| |
|
if attention was
first drawn to the revoke after a member of the non-offending
side has made a call on the subsequent deal. |
| |
5. |
After Round Has Ended
|
| |
|
if attention was first drawn
to the revoke after the round has ended. |
| |
6. |
Revoke on Twelfth Trick |
| |
|
to a revoke on the twelfth trick. |
| C. |
Director Responsible
for Equity |
| |
When,
after any established revoke, including those not subject to
penalty, the Director deems that the non-offending side is insufficiently
compensated by this Law for the damage caused, he shall assign
an adjusted score. |
PART IV
TRICKS
LAW 65
- ARRANGEMENT OF TRICKS
| A. |
Completed
Trick |
| |
When four cards
have been played to a trick, each player turns his own card
face down near him on the table. |
| B. |
Keeping Track
of the Ownership of Tricks |
| |
1. |
Tricks Won |
| |
|
If the player's
side has won the trick, the card is pointed lengthwise toward
his partner. |
| |
2. |
Tricks Lost |
| |
|
If the opponents
have won the trick, the card is pointed lengthwise toward the
opponents. |
| C. |
Orderliness
|
| |
Each player arranges
his own cards in an orderly overlapping row in the sequence
played, so as to permit review of the play after its completion,
if necessary to determine the number of tricks won by each side
or the order in which the cards were played. |
| D. |
Agreement
on Results of Play |
| |
A player should not disturb the order of his played cards
until agreement has been reached on the number of tricks won.
A player who fails to comply with the provisions of this Law
jeopardises his right to claim ownership of doubtful tricks
or to claim a revoke. |
LAW 66 -
INSPECTION OF TRICKS
| A. |
Current Trick |
| |
So long as his side
has not led or played to the next trick, declarer or either
defender may, until he has turned his own card face down on
the table, require that all cards just played to the trick be
faced. |
| B. |
Own Last Card |
| |
Until a card is
led to the next trick, declarer or either defender may inspect,
but not expose, his own last card played. |
| C. |
Quitted Tricks
|
| |
Thereafter, until
play ceases, quitted tricks may not be inspected (except at
the Director's specific instruction; for example, to verify
a claim of a revoke). |
| D. |
After the
Conclusion of Play |
| |
After
play ceases, the played and unplayed cards may be inspected
to settle a claim of a revoke, or of the number of tricks won
or lost; but no player should handle cards other than his own.
If, after such a claim has been made, a player mixes his cards
in such a manner that the Director can no longer ascertain the
facts, the Director shall rule in favour of the other side. |
LAW 67
- DEFECTIVE TRICK
| A. |
Before Both
Sides Play to Next Trick |
| |
When a player has
omitted to play to a trick, or has played too many cards to
a trick, the error must be rectified if attention is drawn to
the irregularity before a player on each side has played to
the following trick. |
| |
1. |
Player Failed
to Play Card | |