bluejak, on 2012-September-30, 19:52, said:
You can not appeal [to an AC anyway] what the Law is or how it is applied.
You can appeal this. The AC cannot change the ruling. Not the same thing as "you can't appeal".
Under the 1997 laws, an appeal on a question of law could be made to the "National Authority". Review of the case by an appeals committee was a pre-requisite, even though the AC, as now, could do nothing other than recommend the TD change his ruling. Under the current laws, Whether an appeal on a matter of law can be made to the Regulating Authority is up to the RA. The ACBL elections on this subject are:
Quote
8. Law 93C1: A further appeal to the Regulating Authority (ACBL) may be allowed only as follows:
a. On a point of law to and at the discretion of the ACBL Laws Commission.
b. On an allegation of bias of a committee member or members to and at the discretion of the ACBL Appeals and Charges Committee. The appellant is required to present evidence that the bias was not known at the time of the hearing.
c. The appeal must be filed within thirty (30) days of the decision of the Bridge Appeals Committee that heard the issue.
9. Law 93C3(a): Except as noted in 7 above, the responsibility of dealing finally with any appeal of a Director’s decision is that of the tournament’s bridge appeals committee.
I believe "7" in item 9 above is a typo: it should be "8". In effect item 8 says "we'll hear an appeal on a point of law if we feel like it". My understanding is that the LC will almost certainly not "feel like it" if the appeal comes from any event below NABC+ level. Also, it seems to me that if an appeal is to go to the RA, they are likely going to require that it has been heard by the Tournament AC already.
I suppose other RAs (the EBU for example) may have set up different procedures, but afaik, none have officially said "you can't appeal a point of law". Not yet, anyway.