lamford, on 2012-September-16, 05:30, said:
IMP pairs; 2NT was 20-22; 3NT was Baron.
West was too quick off the mark here as the players were a bit short of time. He passed and led the 10
♠ before South's second bid, expecting the auction to end. However, South was taking out the card to alert 3NT, which was Baron, forcing to 4NT in theory (North would have bid 3S with a minimum raise to game). The TD was called, and he ruled that South could bid what he chose. He gambled on 6NT and, of course, guessed the queen of clubs.
West argued that South was always going to pass, but South said that West should have been more careful, and he would wait for the auction to end before leading next time. What is your opinion of South's actions? The TD ruled no adjustment, of course.
TimG, on 2012-September-16, 07:17, said:
There are not "instructions of South" are there? The penalty card gets played at the first legal opportunity whether of not South likes it.
The facts seem to be that after 3NT and a pass from East, West passed out of turn and then "led" the
♠10.
Per Law 22A2, the auction has not ended. Per Law 24, the
♠10 remains face up on the table until the auction period ends. Per Law 29A, North is now given the opportunity to accept West's POOT. If he does so, he calls, and then East must pass (Law 24B). If North passes, we have three consecutive passes, but this does not end the auction. Instead, per Law 17E2, the last three passes (W, N, E) are cancelled and the auction reverts to South. Per Law 16A1{c}, information from West's exposed card is authorized to South, as is information derived from the withdrawn passes (Law 16D1). South, having no UI, can make whatever call he likes. West's presumption that South "was always going to pass" is nonsense, and irrelevant. If North declines to accept the pass out of turn, that pass is canceled and the auction reverts to South, who again can make whatever call he likes. West must pass at his next turn to call (Law 30B1). If North
bids, the auction proceeds normally from there, East must pass once, South and West can bid as they like.
If the auction ends as specified in the OP (all cases except where North bids over the pass out of turn), then West becomes a defender, and his
♠10 becomes a major penalty card (Law 24, Law 50B), and hence the opening lead (Law 50D). This opening lead ends the auction period (Law 22B1) and starts the play period (Law 41C). Play proceeds normally, there is no further rectification.
My opinion of South's actions? South has done absolutely nothing wrong. I wouldn't call West's attempt to get out of trouble by claiming South "was always going to pass" sleazy, either, but it's a lot closer than South's 6NT bid. Law 10C3 is pretty explicit: "
When these Laws provide the innocent side with an option after an irregularity committed by an opponent, it is appropriate to select the most advantageous action". The table result stands.
Except... there seems to have been director error, since he apparently did not give North the option to accept the POOT. I don't think this matters, though, as I would expect investigation to show that North would not have accepted it. So again I would let the result stand.