Butler IMPs, Opening lead ♦K, table result NS+600
The auction on this hand from a North London Club needs some explaining, and North was one of the club's weakest members, we shall call him RR. He passed out of turn for the third time in only eleven boards, and South, who looks and behaves like SB, called the director in his usual boorish manner. The regular TD was on holiday, but a stand-in who had recently taken the EBU club director course came to the table. "Yet another COOT," started SB. The TD thought for a moment that SB was being rude to him or RR but looked down and saw the Pass by North. "Ah," said the TD, "riffling through his law book". I think that North now has to pass when, er, I think just when it is his next turn to call". "Aren't you missing, something?" retorted SB. "You have to give East the option to accept the pass out of rotation". "Yes, I recall that now," replied the TD. "Do you want to do so?", he asked East. "No, I don't" replied East. "OK," continued the TD,"the bidding reverts to South and he can make any call he wants." "I think you are missing something else," continued SB, who was relishing the obvious discomfort of the new TD. "You need to advise me under Law 16D2 that information from my partner's withdrawn pass is unauthorized. Did they not teach you that on the EBU course that I hear you failed?" The TD found the relevant Law and read it out. SB now decided to open 3NT, as he thought Pass and 1NT could be demonstrably suggested by the UI. RR, North, repeated his pass, and SB, now in full swing, told the TD "That is a further call out of rotation, as West has not called yet". SB knew that it would have no effect, but he was determined to make life as hard as possible for the new TD. The TD ruled that the second pass was cancelled and the auction reverted to West, who decided to pass. North passed as did East. Before West could lead, SB chipped in again, "there was a failure to alert the conventional call of 3NT which systemically shows a solid minor and little outside", he said to East. "I think the TD should allow you your last call again." The TD was now getting out of his depth, as he was unsure whether 3NT was alertable opposite someone obliged to pass, so he consulted with an EBU referee who advised him that it probably was not. Eventually the auction ended and West led the king of diamonds, but SB's guardian angel was watching over him and there was, of course, no defence.
SB asked the TD to consider whether the second pass out of turn was a pass of an artificial call, and asked the TD to consult on that, as he thought it was possible that the TD should have applied Law 31, or even Law 37a, to the second pass. Also, he asked if East should have been given the chance to accept the second pass out of rotation. However as LHO passed, he pointed out that both laws would have produced the same result. West, who was a County TD, asked the TD to consider:
a) whether RR could have been aware that his first COOT could well damage the non-offending side, and whether Law 23 should apply
b) whether the TD considered if Law 12A2 applied, in that the rectification clearly did not permit "normal" play of the board.
c) whether the director considered under 12A1 that the Laws failed to provide indemnity to the non-offending side for the particular type of violation committed by RR.
While the TD was pondering these, and repeating his phone call to the EBU referee, SB turned to West. "Just typical; you let through a contract that is cold off at trick one, and you expect the nanny state to bail you out." And, venting his spleen on the TD, he continued, "As a result of your dithering, we will not have time to play the second board; next time I expect a TD to come, not a locum".
How would you have ruled? Is it just "rub of the green"?