FrancesHinden, on 2015-April-28, 14:34, said:
This is live bridge without screens.
When you made your widget bid, your partner's interpretation (B) is not alertable, hence it wasn't alerted. The opponents did not ask about it, assuming it had the obvious (and only) non-alertable meaning.
Meanings A and C should both be alerted.
Widget was written on the card (by name only), but the opponents either did not look (no alert, no need to look) or also looked and assumed B
I can see three possible positions rather than the two I'd thought of so far:
- The Widgeteers genuinely have 'no agreement'. In that case the opponents have not in fact been misinformed as the Widgeteers had no agreement about the meaning of the bid, and the partner of the bidder was planning to treat it as not alertable; therefore it did not need alerting. The Widget bidder just made something up at the table with no basis in agreement i.e. a psyche or misbid. The logic makes sense to me but I hate the outcome. And it seems to go against assuming MI rather than misbid.
- The Widgeteers agreement was to play Widget, with no further discussion. In a theoretical world, the Widget bid should have been alerted in line with C and there has been MI. Position 2a, the opponents should have been told C and C only (they may also guess B from the lack of alert but it's also possible the player didn't know the alerting rules). Position 2b, the opponents are told only what has been definitely agreed but they should be been alerted to the fact that the agreement was to play Widget only with no discussion and that (inferentially) some possibly meanings should have been alerted.
If (A) knew that his meaning, A, should be alerted then the failure to alert did two things.
One is that it informed (A) that there was a possibility of a misunderstanding having arisen, a possibility strengthened by (A)'s knowledge that they hadn't actually discussed widget.
The other is that the opps have been induced to think that whatever widget meant, it wasn't alertable, thus significantly narrowing what it might be.....perhaps natural.
Assume the widgeteers declare: (A) has to announce the failure to alert, whereupon in the usual course (B) would proffer the explanation that it was B and B didn't need alerting, making it clear to (A) that a misunderstanding had arisen. The TD would then learn that there was no agreement.
When there was no agreement in fact, then there can be no adjustment other than as a penalty for failing to know methods.
If the widgeteers are defending, then (A) says nothing until the end of the hand, altho it is possible that the declaring side will figure out a problem and start asking questions earlier. In any event, once again the TD discovers that there was no agreement. However, the TD will be aware that (A) ought to know that A should have been alerted, and will give heightened scrutiny to (A)'s conduct after the failure to alert, to determine whether, viewed objectively, there is any basis to conclude that (A) chose an action that would have been made more attractive by virtue of the non-alert. Regardless of that, there has been no express misinformation with because there had been no agreement. Adjustments would still be possible as a penalty.
What about the drawing of inferences by the defenders due to the non-alert? I think that is rub of the green as well. (B) didn't have an agreement that widget was alertable, if intended as he thought it was, so he didn't 'fail to alert' an agreement.
If (A) plausibly says he didn't know that A was alertable, the same analysis should apply, even to the extent of examining (A)'s conduct post widget, not because he might be lying but because objective facts must be looked at rather than subjective statements.
At the end of the day, I continue to think that it makes no sense to invoke C at any stage. Not one player at the table understood C to apply, and nobody used widget in that sense.
Since there was no agreement in fact as to what widget meant, and no explanations offered, there was no misinformation. One is never required to inform the opps about one's partner's misunderstanding...one only needs to explain one's agreements. Here, we had none...yes, we had said 'widget' but in doing so one of us thought it was a grape and the other a banana. Both meanings were conventions in the same sense as grapes and bananas are fruit, but when asked to describe what we meant, we'd give very different descriptions.
Again, that doesn't end the matter, since penalties can, in some circumstances, be levied.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari