iviehoff, on 2012-November-07, 06:12, said:
I believe what I said was entirely was not inconsistent with that view of matters, at least in relation to the trick where defender played the misappropriated card. I believe I also recently argued in another thread that it is more than just you who do argue for this interpretation, despite the absurd conclusions it sometimes leads one to.
If you do take that view of matters, and if the played cards had been more carefully examined at the end of the hand, dicovering a card missing from a trick where dummy originally played a trump, then it is that trick with the missing card which is defective. And since dummy's card is the one that is missing from the played cards for that trick, rectification under Law 67 would including deeming dummy to have revoked on that trick. I do hope that no one would argue for such a ridiculous ruling in this case.
I also hope that the laws are fixed so that one would not even contemplate such a ruling if the reason that a trick is defective when the played cards are examined is because the played card has been removed or lost from it.
If you do take that view of matters, and if the played cards had been more carefully examined at the end of the hand, dicovering a card missing from a trick where dummy originally played a trump, then it is that trick with the missing card which is defective. And since dummy's card is the one that is missing from the played cards for that trick, rectification under Law 67 would including deeming dummy to have revoked on that trick. I do hope that no one would argue for such a ridiculous ruling in this case.
I also hope that the laws are fixed so that one would not even contemplate such a ruling if the reason that a trick is defective when the played cards are examined is because the played card has been removed or lost from it.
You apparently overlook two equally important facts:
1: There is no rectification because of a revoke committed with dummy's hand (except rectification necessary to restore equity for NOS)
2: When a defender has "stolen" a card from Dummy then no player can have an incorrect number of cards in his hand and a correspondingly incorrect number of cards among his played cards. Dummy will now have a total of 12 cards while the defender will have a total of 14.
There is still a deficient trick here as a card is missing from dummy's quitted cards, but this deficiendy is caused by the defender somehow violating Law 7B2: [...]No player shall touch any cards other than his own[...].
The laws have no specific rectification or penalty for this irregularity so the natural actiopn by TD will be to apply Law 12A1.