"I refuse to show you my remaining cards!" - How d
#1
Posted 2010-May-05, 07:28
South says, "Sorry, since the play of the hand has ended I am not obligated to show you my remaining cards, and I refuse to do so."
West summons the director, and asks him to ask North and South to show him (West) their remaining cards.
How should the director rule, and which specific law(s) justify his ruling?
-Bob
#2
Posted 2010-May-05, 08:05
It is customary to show cards when requested to do so. People have suggested an appeal to Law 74 if someone is not compliant with that custom. But in the present case where both sides have got rather uppity I think I would stick to the formalities.
#3
Posted 2010-May-05, 08:08
#4
Posted 2010-May-05, 08:43
Sometimes it happens that an opponent will concede and his partner has a trick.
Practice Goodwill and Active Ethics
Director "Please"!
#5
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:18
Anyway I may be wrong about that point but you don't have to be an experienced director to know west should have the right to see south's cards.
#6
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:19
Law 72B3 said:
Quote
I do not see that "both sides have got rather uppity". There was an unusual situation, the director may be needed to sort it out, so West called him. That's less "uppity", if you ask me, than arguing about it.
*Even if West is mistaken for example he has miscounted a suit, or thought he saw a discard and a later play of the suit led on the discard trick, but was wrong.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#7
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:34
JoAnneM, on May 5 2010, 03:43 PM, said:
You all say he "should" be able to see the cards, but there isn't clear law to back this up. A sensible person shows his cards at the appropriate point of a claim/concession because that avoids the director being called and having to adjudicate over the obvious. But actually, under the law, if they wish to be cussed and keep their cards covered, and force the director to be called and adjudicate over the concession if necessary, that seems to be their right.
When we previously discussed the issue of players not showing their cards when claiming, the only law that anyone could mention was Law 74, conduct and etiquette, 74A2 in particular. In other words, it is not carefully avoiding annoyance to claim and refuse to show the cards. But there isn't a clear right to see the cards. And there could be some other reasons here why the guy didn't want to show his cards. And since it is possibly going to lead to a huge kerfuffle over nothing, perhaps 74A2 is a relevant quote. But I'm wondering if W is totally innocent here.
The only case I can find where there is a clear right to have the cards revealed is when investigating a possible revoke, as I quoted earlier.
I'm not sure whether "OK" meant "noted" or was an acceptance of the concession, I thought it was the latter. If so, under 69B, it is not a valid reason to withdraw consent to a concession that the other side conceded too many tricks. Although under Law 71 the director should not permit the concession of any tricks that can't be lost by normal play, but I don't think this is the other side's responsibility to refuse to accept them.
#8
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:36
#9
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:38
blackshoe, on May 5 2010, 05:19 PM, said:
Having called the director, west asked the director to make NS show their cards. That is a degree of interference in a polite director call. W should have explained the situation and his concerns, not specify what the director should deliver.
#10
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:44
jdonn, on May 5 2010, 05:36 PM, said:
(1) He is not required to.
(2) Maybe he made a stupid mistake earlier in the play and just wanted to quietly concede and get on with the next hand, rather than endure some post mortem in which his inadequacies were brought to the fore. But rather than accept the concession with good grace, he thought W was trying to enforce his "right" to a post mortem.
#11
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:45
#12
Posted 2010-May-05, 10:48
JoAnneM, on May 5 2010, 10:43 AM, said:
This is a reference to
Law 79A2 said:
Quote
Quote
I don't see any relevance in this declarer has not claimed, a defended has conceded the remaining tricks, so there is no claim. Besides, normally no one asks to see the opponents' cards when declarer claims. If someone did...
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#13
Posted 2010-May-05, 11:47
CONCESSION CANCELED
A concession must stand, once made, except that within the correction period established under Law 79C the Director shall cancel a concession:
1. if a player conceded a trick his side had, in fact, won; or
2. if a player has conceded a trick that could not be lost by any normal* play of the remaining cards. The board is rescored with such trick awarded to his side.
Practice Goodwill and Active Ethics
Director "Please"!
#14
Posted 2010-May-05, 12:41
Quite interestingly the discussion ceased immediately when I posted the following comment:
West needs not claim the possibility of revoke for asking to see the remaining cards.
"To settle . . . . . the number of tricks won or lost" (see Law 66D) is reason as good as any. (Don't overlook Law 79A2!)
#15
Posted 2010-May-05, 13:07
JoAnneM, on May 5 2010, 06:47 PM, said:
L71 makes quite clear that the responsibility for ensuring this lies with the director. It might sometimes be "active ethics" to report to the director your concern that your opponents might have conceded a trick they could not lose by any normal play. But having done that, it is the Director's responsibility to assess that. It still doesn't give you the right to see the opponents' cards. In fact, in this case, you've done your bit by reporting it to the director, and leave it there before you go to far down the road of doing the director's job.
On one occasion, I was defending when a certain declarer made an invalid claim. As soon as we queried it, he saw what he had done, and conceded two tricks, which, on the strength of seeing his holding only, it was possible to lose. In fact, as the cards lay, (we had not exposed our cards at this point), he only needed to concede one trick, which was obvious to us both. My partner could see what I was thinking, and made it clear I should keep my mouth shut. After the opponents left the table, she explained that I only going to make a poisonous situation (between declarer and dummy) worse by doing anything other than magnanimously accepting what he had generously offered by way of compensation for his wrong claim. I don't think that was ethically wrong in that situation to accept the trick. And there was certainly no issue of dumping, or losing interest in play, etc.
In fact, as I think about it, my usual method of conceding the remainder of the tricks is to place the rest of my cards face down on the table saying "they are all yours now". Opponents rarely if ever ask to look at them, except after agreeing the concession, score etc, and then as clearly expressed interest in the overall hand, if there is sufficient time, etc. Saying "OK but I want to look at them" does not seem normal to me.
#16
Posted 2010-May-05, 13:19
pran, on May 5 2010, 07:41 PM, said:
Quite interestingly the discussion ceased immediately when I posted the following comment:
West needs not claim the possibility of revoke for asking to see the remaining cards.
"To settle . . . . . the number of tricks won or lost" (see Law 66D) is reason as good as any. (Don't overlook Law 79A2!)
It is a good reason in general, but it doesn't seem to apply in the present case. In the present case there is no need to settle the number of tricks because there is no uncertainty or disagreement over the number of tricks, or at least west hasn't said so. West just demanded to see the cards for unspecified reasons. He has no right to demand see the cards for unspecified reasons, or just because he is curious. If he has proper reasons, and states them in the proper way, he will get to see the cards. If he just wants to see the cards because he is curious, then he needs to be careful to ask politely at the right time.
#17
Posted 2010-May-05, 13:52
iviehoff, on May 5 2010, 11:44 AM, said:
jdonn, on May 5 2010, 05:36 PM, said:
(1) He is not required to.
(2) Maybe he made a stupid mistake earlier in the play and just wanted to quietly concede and get on with the next hand, rather than endure some post mortem in which his inadequacies were brought to the fore. But rather than accept the concession with good grace, he thought W was trying to enforce his "right" to a post mortem.
1 is not a valid reason to not WANT to show your cards, it just says you don't HAVE to. 2 I understand a little more but it's still a bad reason. Frankly I think it's just immature and childish for south to not want to show his cards, which of course may be a seperate question from whether it's legal.
#18
Posted 2010-May-05, 16:05
I have during my 30 years as licensed Director never met such a behaviour by any player and hope that I never shall.
#19
Posted 2010-May-05, 16:16
Just call the TD, explain what happened and say you have a reason to see declarer's hand. Alternatively, to get around it, ask partner to show his hand so you see yours, partner's and the dummy's hand and the remainder is then declarer's. Or is it allowed to ask partner to show his hand after declarer concedes? I'm not clear on the law about that.
Another place where it would be easy to add a few simple words to the law, that at concession or claim, everyone (or at least the person who conceded or claimed) places his remaining cards face up on the table at the time the claim or concession statement is made.
#20
Posted 2010-May-06, 00:39
peachy, on May 5 2010, 11:16 PM, said:
See Laws 68C and (in particular) 70B3. (These laws apply both to claims and to concessions)