blackshoe, on Jul 12 2010, 04:14 PM, said:
Yes, but the key point in the 73D1 case is that there was no deception involved, only an erroneous conclusion by the NOS in a situation where the offender failed to be particularly careful about his tempo.
To me, there is a difference between "I was deceived" and "I attempted to deceive". The latter is a deception case, the former is simply an error on the part of the person making the statement. Remember that in most 73D1 cases, the non-offenders make inferences from a break in tempo or the like at their own risk, unless the offending side has breached "particularly careful".
No, not necessarily. The former is either a mistake by the player or it is a failure by his opponent to take sufficient care. According to the Law, if a player is deceived by his opponent taking insufficient care in a tempo-sensitive situation, that is improper deception subject to adjustment, even though not unethical if not intended.
Suppose you lead the
♦J towards KTx in the dummy. LHO hesitates then plays small. There are three possibilities.
1. He is unethical: he has hesitated with a singleton to try to get you to misread the hand. This is a Law 73D2 case. We adjust and consider further action.
2. He has hesitated improperly: he has a singleton but was distracted by the legs of the girl at the next table. This is a Law 73D1 case. We adjust.
3. He has something to think about: he was considering covering with the queen. However, declarer decides to play him for the ace because he does not believe he would cover with the queen. That is not illegal at all: misreading what the hesitation means is tough. We do not adjust.
Deception is something that deceives, whether intentionally or not. All three are deception cases, one unethical, one improper, one legal.
N--E--S--W
1D-1H-P-1S
3C-P--?