West [space]North East [space]South [space] [space] [space] [space] [space] [space] [space] [space] [space] Pass Pass [space]1NT [space] Pass [space]2[di]* 2[he] [space] [space]X [space] [space] Pass [space]Pass 3[cl] [space] [space]Pass [space]Pass [space]3[di] Pass [space]3[he] [space] [space]Pass [space]4[he] Pass [space]Pass [space]X [space] [space] All Pass
*transfer
From the writeup:
The facts: West explained his 2H bid to South as Michaels. East explained it to
North as "takeout". East led the 3 of clubs to the king. West shifted to the 9 of
diamonds, won by dummy's ten. Declarer led a low spade towards his queen,
won by East who gave his partner a diamond ruff. The final result was down one
doubled.
North claimed that he was afraid to play even one round of trumps for fear of losing control if trumps were 5-0. If he could steal a spade trick, he could then shift to the red suits and emerge with 8 tricks. He said that had he been given West's explanation, he would have drawn at least one round of trumps, but with the likelihood of a 3-suiter looming he wanted to minimize the damage.
The directors polled three players, all of whom said that a trump at trick 3 seemed automatic and that they considered a low spade obscure. As a result, they ruled that the score stood for both pairs. They considered but rejected a procedural penalty against East-West for creating the problem by their differing explanations.
[snip]
Since declarer's play was no better than break even and could lose to the actual distribution, the damage was not a consequence of the misinformation but was only subsequent to it and was caused by declarer's faulty assumptions as to the lie of the cards. Accordingly, the committee upheld the director's ruling as to North-South and agreed that East-West had not earned an unwarranted result or a procedural penalty through their presumed misinformation. The committee also assessed an Appeal Without Merit Warning to North-South. It felt that the appellants should have known not to pursue the appeal, having been told that the peer consultants strongly disagreed with declarer's play and felt it automatic to play a trump at trick 3. They brought no new information to the committee that had not been disclosed to the directors and the consultants. They also probably did not sufficiently consider the alternative results after a trump at trick three. If appellants are going to claim damage from a failed line of play, it is their responsibility to have done a minimum amount of analysis to support their contention.
===================
1) If the committee was considering a PP against E-W, is it really fair to give an Appeal Without Merit Warning?
2) More importantly, it seems to me that the committee is ruling that the (somewhat inferior) line taken by declarer fell in the "serious error" rubric under law 12C. Can it possibly be right that a failure to interpret the nuances of a misexplained auction is now considered to be a serious error?