CHAPTER VI
The Play 
PART IV
TRICKS
LAW 67
- DEFECTIVE TRICK 
- A. Before Both Sides Play to Next Trick
- When a player has omitted to play to a trick, or has played too many
cards to a trick, the error must be rectified if attention is drawn to
the irregularity before a player on each side has played to the following
trick.
- 1. Player Failed to Play Card
- To rectify omission to play to a trick, the offender supplies a card
he can legally play.
- 2. Player Contributed Too Many Cards
- To rectify the play of too many cards to a trick, Law 45E
(Fifth Card Played to a Trick) or Law 58B
(Simultaneous Cards from One Hand) shall be applied.
- B. After Both Sides Play to Next Trick
- After both sides have played to the following trick, when attention
is drawn to a defective trick or when the Director determines that there
had been a defective trick (from the fact that one player has too few or
too many cards in his hand, and a correspondingly incorrect number of played
cards), the Director establishes which trick was defective. To rectify
the number of cards, the Director should proceed as follows.
- 1. Offender Has Too Many Cards
- When the offender has failed to play a card to the defective trick,
the Director shall require him forthwith to face a card, and to place it
appropriately among his played cards (this card does not affect ownership
of the trick); if
- (a) Offender Has Card of Suit Led
- the offender has a card of the suit led to the defective trick, he
must choose such a card to place among his played cards, and there is no
penalty;
- (b) Has No Card of Suit Led
- the offender has no card of the suit led to the defective trick, he
chooses any card to place among his played cards, and (penalty) he is deemed
to have revoked on the defective trick - he may be subject to the one-trick
penalty of Law 64.
- 2. Offender Has Too Few Cards
- When the offender has played more than one card to the defective trick,
the Director inspects the played cards, and requires the offender to restore
to his hand all extra cards
, leaving among the played cards the one faced in playing to the
defective trick (if the Director is unable to determine which card was
faced, the offender leaves the highest of the cards that he could legally
have played to the trick). A restored card is deemed to have belonged continuously
to the offender's hand, and a failure to have played it to an earlier trick
may constitute a revoke.
The Director should avoid, when possible, exposing
a defender's played cards, but if an extra card to be restored to a defender's
hand has been exposed, it becomes a penalty card (see Law 50).
Next: Law 68 - CLAIM OR CONCESSION OF TRICKS
Previous: Law 66 - INSPECTION OF TRICKS/A>
Last modified: Mon Oct 13 17:31:09
1997