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Tricks agreed, cards folded away, revoke dispute arises Potential revoke ignored?
#1
Posted 2014-September-03, 02:23
I presume that in an ambiguous dispute about tricks taken/revokes, you rule in favour of the pair whose cards are still on the table, in sequence (65D, 66D).
But what if the number of tricks was agreed, a pair folded their cards away, and then the director is called to resolve a dispute about a revoke?
Thanks
But what if the number of tricks was agreed, a pair folded their cards away, and then the director is called to resolve a dispute about a revoke?
Thanks
#2
Posted 2014-September-03, 03:17
hokum, on 2014-September-03, 02:23, said:
I presume that in an ambiguous dispute about tricks taken/revokes, you rule in favour of the pair whose cards are still on the table, in sequence (65D, 66D).
But what if the number of tricks was agreed, a pair folded their cards away, and then the director is called to resolve a dispute about a revoke?
Thanks
But what if the number of tricks was agreed, a pair folded their cards away, and then the director is called to resolve a dispute about a revoke?
Thanks
If the situation is ambiguous you rule against the side that later objects to a result already agreed upon.
#3
Posted 2014-September-03, 11:40
But you try to resolve whether the revoke happened first, even replaying it if you can, before it's "ambiguous"...
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)
#5
Posted 2014-September-03, 12:55
mycroft, on 2014-September-03, 11:40, said:
But you try to resolve whether the revoke happened first, even replaying it if you can, before it's "ambiguous"...
barmar, on 2014-September-03, 12:45, said:
If you're achieved that, it wouldn't be ambiguous and we wouldn't be discussing it.
Precisely!
But there is also a limit on how much time I am willing (as TD) to spend investigating such "late" questionable claims after a result has been agreed upon.
#6
Posted 2014-September-03, 20:32
Thanks, it would definitely be important to try to establish the play before ruling (especially in a congress setting).
#7
Posted 2014-September-04, 08:33
barmar, on 2014-September-03, 12:45, said:
If you've achieved that, it wouldn't be ambiguous and we wouldn't be discussing it.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)
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