Appeals committee at European Open Championships
#81
Posted 2013-June-10, 04:36
#82
Posted 2013-June-10, 05:20
Zelandakh, on 2013-June-10, 04:36, said:
So the TD assembles a group of good players, explains the ruling to them, and asks them to discuss it. What's a good word for a group of knowledgeable people who discuss something and then make a collective decision?
It seems to me that you're suggesting skipping the TD ruling and referring it directly to the committee. I don't see why you think that better than the current system, but anyway you will still need a committee of players, regardless of what you call it.
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The problem isn't ambiguity in the rules. If you want the rules to restore equity, someone has to determine what constitutes equity. To do that, they have to be able to judge what a player would or might have done in particular circumstances. To do that well, they have to be able to think how the player thinks.
#83
Posted 2013-June-10, 05:48
#84
Posted 2013-June-10, 08:49
Zelandakh, on 2013-June-10, 02:15, said:
What money? How much are we talking about here?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#85
Posted 2013-June-10, 08:54
#86
Posted 2013-June-10, 09:05
#87
Posted 2013-June-10, 09:12
19. APPEALS COMMITTEE AND DIRECTORS
In reference to sections 33 - 35 of EBL:s General Conditions of Contest, and pursuant to Laws 81B2(k) and 93C3(b), the appeals procedure at these Championships will be different. Instead of a classic Appeals Committee hearing, appeals will be heard by a Reviewer appointed by the EBL Appeals Committee.
The Reviewer will not engage in a re-evaluation of facts already known to the Tournament Directors at the time of their ruling. The review will be limited to (1) verifying that correct procedures and laws were followed, and/or (2) judging whether new facts presented may reasonably have affected the original ruling. An appeal lodged without new facts, or with no reasonable claim of a flaw in procedures or application of the Laws, will be considered without merit.
The detailed procedure for lodging appeals will be published at the latest in the first Daily Bulletin.
#88
Posted 2013-June-10, 09:17
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#89
Posted 2013-June-10, 09:40
blackshoe, on 2013-June-10, 09:17, said:
Indeed; 93C3(b):
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may authorize the omission or modification of such stages as it
wishes of the appeals process set out in these Laws.
effectively revokes the right to appeal.
With regard to the Ostend notice, canny players will soon resort to saying very little to the TD, so that anything they say to the "reviewer" will be "new".
What is this "reviewer" supposed to do if there is more than one case? Will there be several of these individuals?
What I would really like to know is what the EBL and WBF have against appeals committees.
#90
Posted 2013-June-10, 09:47
Section 19 of the Ostend COC quoted by gnasher, on 2013-June-10, 09:12, said:
In reference to sections 33 - 35 of EBL:s General Conditions of Contest, and pursuant to Laws 81B2(k) and 93C3(b), the appeals procedure at these Championships will be different. Instead of a classic Appeals Committee hearing, appeals will be heard by a "Reviewer" appointed by the EBL Appeals Committee.
The Reviewer will not engage in a re-evaluation of facts already known to the Tournament Directors at the time of their ruling. The review will be limited to (1) verifying that correct procedures and laws were followed, and/or (2) judging whether new facts presented may reasonably have affected the original ruling. An appeal lodged without new facts, or with no reasonable claim of a flaw in procedures or application of the Laws, will be considered without merit.
The detailed procedure for lodging appeals will be published at the latest in the first Daily Bulletin.
- Freezing known facts begs the question. Often, "facts" are in dispute and director "knowledge" of them flawed
- Director rulings are often weighted. Disputed weightings will be even harder to appeal
- Unless the reviewer publishes his review process and explains his reasoning, we will no longer be able to refer to good case-law to verify that justice is done and rulings are improving
- Unless the reviewer comes from a distant planet where Bridge is unknown, there are likely to be suspicions of bias
Nevertheless, we should (grudgingly) suspend judgement until we see how the procedure works in practice
#91
Posted 2013-June-10, 10:10
nige1, on 2013-June-10, 09:47, said:
If the reviewer knows nothing about Bridge, I doubt bias would be a concern. Sometimes on this planet at the club level we have both problems.
#92
Posted 2013-June-10, 14:07
gnasher, on 2013-June-10, 09:05, said:
Vampyr, on 2013-June-10, 09:40, said:
I think gnasher has told you.
Whether the EBL/WBF would be better saving on some of their other hotel/entertainment bills is a different discussion.
#93
Posted 2013-June-10, 16:36
FrancesHinden, on 2013-June-10, 14:07, said:
Whether the EBL/WBF would be better saving on some of their other hotel/entertainment bills is a different discussion.
If it is really a question of cost, (which I think is an appalling reason) they could use players. They could give them a bit of money for giving up their time; it would certainly be a lot less than their entire expenses.
#94
Posted 2013-June-11, 04:54
gnasher, on 2013-June-10, 09:12, said:
19. APPEALS COMMITTEE AND DIRECTORS
In reference to sections 33 - 35 of EBL:s General Conditions of Contest, and pursuant to Laws 81B2(k) and 93C3(b), the appeals procedure at these Championships will be different. Instead of a classic Appeals Committee hearing, appeals will be heard by a Reviewer appointed by the EBL Appeals Committee.
The Reviewer will not engage in a re-evaluation of facts already known to the Tournament Directors at the time of their ruling. The review will be limited to (1) verifying that correct procedures and laws were followed, and/or (2) judging whether new facts presented may reasonably have affected the original ruling. An appeal lodged without new facts, or with no reasonable claim of a flaw in procedures or application of the Laws, will be considered without merit.
This sounds quite like an English judicial review proceding, with one significant exception. In the case of a judicial review proceding, if someone uses the correct rule on the correct facts, and takes an egregiously bad action in relation to those facts and procedures ("no reasonable man could have done it"), they will have it sent back. Here, even egregiously bad rulings will survive, provided they have been related to the correct law and correct facts. It completely changes the role of the AC from playing judgment expert (on which it will now defer to the TD) to legal expert (whereas previously it deferred to the TD for that).
#95
Posted 2013-June-11, 12:58
#96
Posted 2013-June-12, 03:55
barmar, on 2013-June-11, 12:58, said:
The US is 50-odd different jurisdictions, many of them with practices that wouldn't pass scrutiny at the European Court of Human Rights if they were this side of the Atlantic. As this article makes clear, http://en.wikipedia....e_United_States appeal procedures do vary considerably from state to state, so I'm not sure if one can generalise to "the US".
It would be a perverse jurisdiction which did not allow appeal on the grounds of new evidence: it would leave considerably more innocent people mouldering away in prison than are there already. But I expect such perverse jurisdictions can be found. DNA evidence demonstrating innocence has been an important process in releasing the long-jailed innocents (from cases before DNA analysis was routine) in many states of the US, and that is precisely the situation of presenting new evidence in an appeal. However some states, to be found among the usual suspects, have taken measures to prevent convicted people presenting such evidence, no doubt relying on the thought that they only prosecuted people who deserved to be locked up, even if they were innocent of the specific crime they were convicted for.
#97
Posted 2013-June-12, 06:21
iviehoff, on 2013-June-11, 04:54, said:
I wonder how this change fits in with Law 93B3. It sounds like the only thing a "reviewer" can do, given this law, is to recommend that a ruling be changed. And I think that calling an appeal based on disagreement with the TD's bridge judgment "without merit" is way over the top.
In effect this regulation is a big step toward giving us a new Law 92 and a new Law 93:
Law 92: The decision of the table TD is final.
Law 93: deleted.
Simple, precise, and very hard to misinterpret. But I don't think it's the right way to go.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#98
Posted 2013-June-12, 09:10
iviehoff, on 2013-June-12, 03:55, said:
Maybe it depends on jurisdiction, but I thought those were usually "retrials", not "appeals".
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#99
Posted 2013-June-13, 02:21
barmar, on 2013-June-12, 09:10, said:
I think we are quibbling over the meaning of words. The important thing is that there is a mechanism for reviewing the original verdict when new evidence is presented. In a colloquial sense that is an appeal, even if a jurisdiction calls it something else.
Here in England what actually happens when there is new evidence you first have to get the original conviction quashed before it can be retried. You can only do that in an appeal court. You first have to apply for leave to appeal - there is no time limit when the grounds are new evidence. Then the appeal is heard, and the appeal court decides whether in view of the new evidence the original conviction is safe or unsafe. If it is unsafe, it quashes the original conviction. The appeal court may then order a retrial, or it may simply leave the verdict quashed without ordering a retrial if in fact it is clear that the prosecution case is completely destroyed. However even when a retrial is ordered, it only proceeds if the prosecution still thinks there remains a good chance of a guilty verdict given the new evidence - retrials do not always proceed.
#100
Posted 2013-June-13, 09:06
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean