PeterAlan, on 2019-October-25, 11:24, said:
I suggest you reread 20F5(b), or maybe read it for the first time:
(b) The player must call the Director and inform his opponents that, in his opinion, his partner’s explanation was erroneous (see Law 75B) but only at his first legal opportunity, which is:
(i) for a defender, at the end of the play. (ii) for declarer or dummy, after the final pass of the auction.
Maybe I am not looking closely enough, but I don't see "while the lead is face-down" anywhere. In any case, as I stated, if the Laws wanted a pause before the lead is faced they would have so prescribed (or maybe "proscribed" in the US). And pran's claim that this is a "grave" violation is also drivel. Which law is SB alleged to have violated by facing his lead too quickly? He follows uniform and correct procedure in leading, so complies with 74A3. Face down and face up in quick succession. As a very large number of other people do.
The grave violation would be for opening leader's partner to summon the TD at the time you sugggest he does, rather than at the end of play.
pran, on 2019-October-22, 09:39, said:
pran, on 2019-October-25, 09:15, said:
The two quotes above remind me of James Eadie QC being ridiculed by Lord Sumption in the 2016 Supreme Court hearing, on Article 50, for giving "two diametrically oppposed answers to the same question". Although maybe "grave" violations are not often penalized in Norway, unless they involve necrophilia.