When the Director determines that there has been a defective trick (from the fact that one
player has too few or too many cards in his hand, and a correspondingly incorrect number
of played cards); both sides having played to the next trick, he proceeds as follows:
- When the offender has failed to play a card to the defective trick, the Director shall require
him forthwith to expose a card face-up in front of him and then place it appropriately among
his played cards (this card does not affect ownership of the trick); if
- the offender has a card of the suit led to the defective trick; he must choose such a
card to place among his played cards. He is deemed to have revoked on the defective trick and is subject to
the loss of one trick transferred in accordance with Law 64A2.
- the offender has no card of the suit led to the defective trick; he chooses any card
to place among his played cards. He is deemed to have revoked on the defective trick and is subject to the loss of
one trick transferred in accordance with Law 64A2.
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- When the offender has played more than one card to the defective trick, the Director inspects the
played cards and requires the offender to restore to his hand all extra cards, leaving among the played cards the
one faced in playing to the defective trick (if the Director is unable to determine which
card was faced, the offender leaves the highest ranking of the cards that he could legally have played
to the trick). Ownership of the defective trick does not change.
- A restored card is deemed to have belonged continuously to the offender's hand, and a failure to have
played it to an earlier trick may constitute a revoke.
- When the Director determines that the offender did play a card to the trick, but that card was not placed among the quitted
tricks, the Director finds the card and places it correctly among the offender's played cards.
The Director shall award an adjusted score if the same card was played to a subsequent
trick and it is too late to correct the illegal play.