jeffford76, on 2012-October-16, 12:23, said:
What do you propose instead? Certain behaviors are punished because people can intentionally use them to gain advantage. By always punishing the behavior, we ensure that all of the people doing it intentionally are punished, and we avoid having to call someone a cheat which could lead to a lawsuit. It's really not that hard as a director to say "this irregularity is punished in this way whether you did it on purpose or not".
One of the disturbing things I find is the abuse of players that arises from law writers that are too lazy to construct good law such as that which balances a prescribed remedy to a particular crime.
It is little comfort to the pure in heart to be punished as if a cheat merely because someone else claims they ‘could have known’.
As I said, the law should be constructed such that by turning the crank on the irregularity there should be no need for the ‘could have known’.
For instance, imagine that E was dealer in the subject case and turning the crank on a properly constructed law:
The TD finds that S had done nothing during the auction period except take his cards from the board. Ruling: the extraneous bidding card does not constitute part of this auction and is removed.
An assertion that W COOT? Ruling: N’s call condoned the putative COOT without penalty and the auction proceeds. If E passes then [there being four consecutive passes, the last being in rotation] the auction is scored as a PassOut.
Commentary- E could have called for a ruling on S’s ostensibly OOT bidding card and did not. Having acted he has no expectation for redress arising from his own such misunderstanding. N & S removed their hands from the board prior to S clearing his previous bidding cards. They have no expectation for redress arising from their own such misunderstanding.
Further commentary- N had the opportunity to penalize W’s putative COOT [ostensibly because of his own misunderstanding arising from his partner’s irregularity] thereby giving S his opportunity to call- but instead, condoned it.