campboy, on 2015-April-17, 07:17, said:
I don't think it is legal to let play of the board go ahead and then stop it part-way through. The TD's has the option "before any call is made" to award an artificial adjusted score (16C2(d)). Once she's chosen option (c) and a call is made, she no longer has the option to go back and choose differently. She should get a table result and then adjust it if she deems it necessary.
I agree.
FrancesHinden, on 2015-April-16, 19:08, said:
Your colleague is called by West, who explains (away from the table) that on his way back from the toilet, he stopped at the next table to collect their next board, and heard the players say 'making 12'
Your colleague tells West to play the Board out, and call her back at the end.
This is a ruling under Law 16C2{c}: "allow completion of the play of the board, standing ready to award an adjusted score if he judges that unauthorized information may have affected the result".
FrancesHinden, on 2015-April-16, 19:08, said:
The auction progresses to a certain point, when your colleague is called back by West:
West now says he can't continue the auction because of the UI. Your colleague tells him that's OK, stop bidding now, and the board will be scrapped.
This is the last match before the dinner break. Your colleague effectively scores the match as if this board were flat, so no imps on the board and it scored as a 7 board match with 6 results.
The opposing captain, who was sitting West at the other table, comes and finds you and your colleague during the break, and asks how you have ruled. Your colleague explains the above. You quickly say 'but we will give both teams +3imps because it wasn't your fault'
The opposing captain asks if you have considered Law 86d, as they had an unusually good result at the other table. You say that you can't give any more than 3 imps, because there is no way of knowing how the auction would have continued. The captain says they were certain to gain far more than that, because their result was 4hx-1, NS+100. You say you will have a look at it and let them know.
How do you rule?
The table director made an error when he told them to stop bidding, and that the board would be "scrapped". Now we're in 82C territory: "If a ruling has been given that the Director subsequently determines to be incorrect, and if no rectification will allow the board to be scored normally, he shall award an adjusted score, treating both sides as non-offending for that purpose."
Aside: West is mistaken. He certainly
can continue the auction and play. The director instructed him to do so. I would not give him a PP or DP for failure to follow the TD's instructions, but I would tell him again to follow them, and also explain that per Law 16A, the overheard remark is extraneous and information from it cannot be used as a basis for any call (TD should have done that already).
Law 86D says "In team play when the Director awards an adjusted score (excluding any award that ensues from application of Law 6D2), and a result has been obtained between the same contestants at another table, the Director may assign an adjusted score in IMPs or total points (and should do so when that result appears favorable to the non-offending side).
Now we have to figure out how to adjust the score. Is there an "offending side"? Well, ordinarily, overhearing something is not under control of the person who hears it, but in this case West departed from correct procedure when he stopped at the other table to pick up their next board. So West (call his team #1) is the offender here. OTOH, 82C tells us to treat everyone as non-offending. So, no offender. Agree with Lanor that team 1 should get +3. Following Aardv's analysis, team #2 getting +11 seems about right.