| 
      
        | THE PLAY  CORRECT PROCEDURE LAW 41OPENING LEAD, REVIEW, QUESTIONS
 
           After the auction closes*  
          declarer's LHO makes the opening lead. After the opening lead, dummy 
          spreads his hand in front of him on the table, face up, sorted into 
          suits, the cards in order of rank in columns pointing lengthwise 
          towards declarer, with trumps, if any, to dummy's right. Declarer 
          plays both his hand and that of dummy.
         
           Declarer, before making any 
          play, or either defender at his first turn to play, may require a 
          restatement of the auction in its entirety.
         
           After it is too late to have 
          previous calls restated, declarer or either defender is entitled to be 
          informed what the contract is and whether, but not by whom, it was 
          doubled or redoubled.
         
           Either defender may require an 
          explanation of the partnership understanding relating to any call made 
          by an opponent (see Proprieties 4 ), 
          but only at that defender's own turn to play. Declarer may at any tune 
          require an explanation of the partnership understanding relating to 
          any call or play made by a defender.
           
 
          * After the final pass, either defender has 
          the right to ask if it is his opening lead.
         
 LAW 42DUMMY'S RIGHTS
   
           Dummy is entitled to give 
          information as to fact or law, but may not initiate the discussion; 
          and provided he has not forfeited his rights (see Law 
          43 ) he may also
         
           (a) ask declarer (but not a 
          defender), when he has failed to follow suit, whether he has a card of 
          the suit led.
         
           (b) try to prevent any 
          irregularity*  by declarer.
         
           (c) draw attention to any 
          irregularity, but only after play is concluded. 
  
 
          * He may, for example, warn declarer against 
          leading from the wrong hand.
           LAW 43DUMMY'S LIMITATIONS
 
           Dummy may not participate in the 
          play (except to play the cards of dummy's hand as directed by 
          declarer), or make any comment on the bidding, play, or score of the 
          current deal; and if he does so,
          Law 16  
          may apply. During play, dummy may not call attention to an 
          irregularity once it has occurred.
         
           Dummy forfeits the rights 
          provided in (a), (b) and (c) of Law 42  if he 
          exchanges hands with declarer, leaves his seat to watch declarer play, 
          or, on his own initiative, looks at the face of a card in either 
          defender's hand; and if, thereafter,
         
           (a) he is the first to draw 
          attention to a defender's irregularity, declarer may not enforce any 
          penalty for the offense.
         
           (b) he warns declarer not to 
          lead from the wrong hand, (penalty) either defender may choose the 
          hand from which declarer shall lead.
         
           (c) he is the first to ask 
          declarer if a play from declarer's hand constitutes a revoke, declarer 
          must substitute a correct card if his play was a revoke, and (penalty) 
          unless Law 64(d)  applies, one trick is 
          transferred to the defending side.
           LAW 44SEQUENCE AND PROCEDURE OF PLAY
 
           The player who leads to a trick 
          may play any card in his hand.*  After the 
          lead, each other player in turn plays a card, and the four cards so 
          played constitute a trick.
         
           In playing to a trick, each 
          player must follow suit if possible. This obligation takes precedence 
          over all other requirements of these Laws. If unable to follow suit, a 
          player may play any card.* 
           A trick containing a trump is 
          won by the player who has contributed to it the highest trump. A trick 
          that does not contain a trump is won by the player who has contributed 
          to it the highest card of the suit led. The player who has won the 
          trick leads to the next trick. 
  
 
          * Unless he is subject to restriction after 
          an irregularity committed by his side.
           LAW 45CARD PLAYED
 
           Each player except dummy should 
          play a card by detaching it from his hand and placing it, face up, on 
          the table where other players can easily reach and see it. Dummy, if 
          instructed by declarer to do so, may play from his hand a card named 
          or designated by declarer. * 
           A card must be played
         
           (a) if it is a defender's card 
          held so that it is possible for his partner to see its face.
         
           (b) if it is a card from 
          declarer's hand that declarer holds face up, touching or nearly 
          touching the table, or maintains in such a position as to indicate 
          that it has been played.
         
           (c) if it is a card in dummy 
          deliberately touched by declarer except for the purpose of arranging 
          dummy's cards or of reaching a card above or below the card or cards 
          touched.
         
           (d)  if the 
          player who holds the card names or otherwise designates it as the card 
          he proposes to play. A player may, without penalty, change an 
          inadvertent designation if he does so without pause for thought; but 
          if an opponent has, in turn, played a card that was legal before the 
          change of designation, that opponent may, without penalty, withdraw 
          any card so played and substitute another.
         
           (e) if it is a penalty card, 
          subject to Law 50 .
         
           A card played may not be 
          withdrawn except as provided in Law 47 . 
  
 
          * If dummy places in played position a card 
          declarer did not name, the card must be withdrawn if attention is 
          drawn to it before each side has played to the next trick, and a 
          defender may withdraw (without penalty) a card played after the error 
          but before attention was drawn to it (see Law 47 ).
           LAW 46PARTIAL DESIGNATION OF A CARD TO BE PLAYED FROM DUMMY'S HAND
 
           When declarer instructs dummy to 
          play a card from dummy's hand, as permitted by Law 45 , 
          but names only a suit or only the rank of a card, or the equivalent, 
          without fully specifying the card to he played, declarer must complete 
          his partial designation. Dummy must not play a card before declarer 
          has completed Isis partial designation.
           LAW 47RETRACTION OF A CARD PLAYED
 (Club Law 47)
 
           A card once played may be 
          withdrawn only
         
           (a) to comply with a penalty, or 
          to correct an illegal play, or to correct the simultaneous play of two 
          or more cards (see Law 58 ); if a defender's card 
          that has been exposed is withdrawn under this subsection, it becomes a 
          penalty card (see Law 50 ); or
         
           (b) after a change of 
          designation as permitted by Law 45(d) , or
         
           (c)  after 
          an opponent's change of play, to substitute a card for one played
          * , or
         
           (d ) to 
          correct a play*  after misinformation by an 
          opponent. A lead out of turn may be retracted without penalty if the 
          leader was mistakenly informed by an opponent that it was his turn to 
          lead. 
  
 
          * The offending side must not base any 
          subsequent plays on information gained from such a withdrawn play. 
  PENALTY CARD LAW 48EXPOSURE OF DECLARER'S CARDS
 
           Declarer is not subject to 
          penalty for exposing a card, and no card of declarer's or dummy's ever 
          becomes a penalty card. Declarer is not required to play any card 
          dropped accidentally.
         
           When declarer faces his cards 
          after an opening lead out of turn, Law 54  
          applies. When declarer faces his cards at any other time, he may be 
          deemed to have made a claim or concession of tricks, in which case
          Law 68  applies. 
  LAW 49EXPOSURE OF A DEFENDER'S CARDS
 
           Whenever a defender faces a card 
          on the table, holds a card so that it is possible for his partner to 
          see its face, or names a card as being in his hand, before he is 
          entitled to do so in the normal course of play or application of the 
          law, (penalty) each such card becomes a penalty card (Law 
          50 ).* 
 
          * Exposure of a card or cards by a defender 
          who is making a claim or concession of tricks is subject to
          Law 70 .
           LAW 50DISPOSITION OF A PENALTY CARD
 
           A defender's card is a penalty 
          card when prematurely exposed. It must be left face up on the table 
          until it is played or until an alternate penalty has been selected.
         
           A single card below the rank of 
          an honor and exposed inadvertently (as in playing two cards to a 
          trick, or in dropping a card accidentally) becomes a minor penalty 
          card. Any penalty card of honor rank, or any card exposed through 
          deliberate play (as in leading out of turn, or in revoking and then 
          correcting) becomes a major penalty card; when one defender has two or 
          more penalty cards, all such cards become major penalty cards.
         
           When a defender has a minor 
          penalty card, he may not play any other card of the same suit below 
          the rank of an honor until he has first played the penalty card. 
          (However, he is entitled to play an honor card instead of the minor 
          penalty card.) There is no further penalty, but the offender's partner 
          must not base any subsequent play on information gained through seeing 
          the penalty card.
         
           When a defender has a major 
          penalty card, such card must be played at the first legal opportunity, 
          whether in leading, following suit, discarding or trumping. If a 
          defender has two or more penalty cards that can legally be played, 
          declarer may designate which is to be played. The obligation to follow 
          suit or to comply with a lead or play penalty takes precedence over 
          the obligation to play a penalty card, but the penalty card must still 
          be left face up on the table and played at the next legal opportunity.
         
           When a defender has the lead 
          while his partner has a major penalty card, declarer may choose to 
          impose a lead penalty at this point: he may require that defender to 
          lead the suit of the penalty card or may prohibit that defender from 
          leading that suit (a prohibition continues for as long as he retains 
          the lead). If declarer does impose a lead penalty, the penalty card is 
          picked up at once. If declarer does not, the defender may lead any 
          card; but the penalty card remains a penalty card. The defender may 
          not lead until declarer has indicated his choice. 
  LAW 51TWO OR MORE PENALTY CARDS
 
           When a defender has two or more 
          penalty cards in one suit, and declarer requires or prohibits the lead 
          of that suit, the defender may pick up every penalty card in that suit 
          and may make any legal play to the trick.
         
           When a defender has penalty 
          cards in more than one suit, declarer may prohibit the defender's 
          partner from leading every such suit or require him to lead one such 
          suit, but the defender may then pick up every penalty card in every 
          suit required or prohibited by declarer and may make any legal play to 
          the trick.
           LAW 52FAILURE TO LEAD OR PLAY A PENALTY CARD
 
           When a defender is required by
          Law 50  to play a penalty card but instead plays 
          another card, he must leave the illegally played card face up on the 
          table and
         
           (a) declarer may accept the 
          defender's lead or play, and must do so if he has thereafter played 
          from his or dummy's hand, but the unplayed penalty card remains a 
          penalty card; or
         
           (b) declarer may require the 
          defender to substitute the penalty card for the card illegally played, 
          in which case the illegally played card becomes a major penalty card.
           LEAD OUT OF TURN LAW 53LEAD OUT OF TURN ACCEPTED
 
           Any lead out of turn may be 
          treated by an opponent as a correct lead. It becomes a correct lead if 
          an opponent accepts it by making a statement to that effect, or if 
          that opponent next to play plays a card to the irregular lead.* 
           However, the player whose turn 
          it was to lead - unless he Is the offender's partner - may make his 
          proper lead subsequent to the infraction without his card being 
          treated as played to the irregular lead. The proper lead stands, and 
          all cards played in error to this trick may be withdrawn without 
          penalty. 
  
 
          * When such a play is made by a defender who 
          is not next to play after the irregular lead, Law 57  
          applies.
           LAW 54OPENING LEAD OUT OF TURN
 
           When a defender makes the 
          opening lead out of turn,
         
           (a) declarer may accept the 
          irregular lead as provided in Law 53 . Dummy's 
          hand is spread in accordance with Law 41 , and the 
          second card to the trick is played from declarer's hand; but if 
          declarer first plays to the trick from dummy's hand, dummy's card may 
          not be withdrawn except to correct a revoke.
         
           (b) declarer must accept the 
          irregular lead if he could have seen any of dummy's cards (except 
          cards exposed during the auction, subject to
          Law 23 ). 
          He is deemed to have accepted the irregular lead if he begins to 
          spread his hand as though he were dummy and in so doing exposes one or 
          more cards; declarer must spread his entire hand, and dummy becomes 
          declarer. * 
           (c) declarer may accept the 
          irregular lead by spreading his hand and becoming dummy; his partner 
          becomes the declarer.
         
           (d) declarer may require the 
          defender to retract his irregular lead (except as provided in (b) 
          above), and then Law 56  applies. 
  
 
          * If cards are so exposed from both 
          declarer's and dummy's hands, the player who was regularly to become 
          declarer remains declarer. 
  LAW 55DECLARER'S LEAD OUT OF TURN
 (Club Law 55)
   
           When declarer leads out of turn 
          from his or dummy's hand,
         
           (a) either defender may accept 
          that lead as provided in Law 53 .
         
           (b) either defender may require 
          declarer to retract that lead. Then,
          
 
          
            | (i) | if it was a defender's turn to lead, declarer 
            restores the card led in error to his or dummy's hand, without 
            penalty.  |  
            | (ii) | if declarer has led from the wrong hand when it 
            was his turn to lead from his or dummy's hand, he withdraws the card 
            led in error; he must lead a card from the correct hand.  |  
            | (iii) | if declarer adopts a line of play that could have 
            been based on information obtained through his infraction, the 
            offenders should redress the damage in accordance with
            Proprieties 1.
             |  |  
      
        | LAW 56DEFENDER'S LEAD OUT OF TURN
 
           When a defender leads out of 
          turn,
         
           (a) declarer may accept that 
          lead as provided in Law 53 .
         
           (b) declarer may require the 
          defender to retract that lead; the card illegally led becomes a major 
          penalty card (see Law 50  - note that lead 
          penalties are provided).
           IRREGULAR LEADS AND PLAYS LAW 57PREMATURE LEAD OR PLAY BY A DEFENDER
 
           When a defender leads to the 
          next trick before his partner has played to the current trick, or 
          plays out of turn before his partner has played, (penalty) declarer 
          may
         
           (a) require offender's partner 
          to play his highest card of the suit led; or
         
           (b) require offender's partner 
          to play his lowest card of the suit led; or
         
           (c) prohibit offender's partner 
          from playing any card of one different suit specified by declarer.
         
           Declarer must select one of 
          these options, and if the offender's partner cannot comply with the 
          penalty selected he may play any card, as provided in Law 59 .
         
           When, as a result of the 
          application of the penalty, the offender's partner wins the current 
          trick, he leads to the next trick, and any card led or played out of 
          turn by the other defender becomes a major penalty card (Law 
          50 ).
         
           A defender is not subject to 
          penalty for playing before his partner if declarer has played from 
          both hands; but a singleton or one of two or more equal cards in dummy 
          is not considered automatically played unless dummy has played the 
          card. 
  LAW 58SIMULTANEOUS LEADS OR PLAYS
 
           A lead or play made 
          simultaneously with another player's legal lead or play is deemed to 
          be subsequent to it.
         
           If a defender leads or plays two 
          or more cards simultaneously, and if only one such card is visible, he 
          must play that card; if more than one card is exposed, he must 
          designate the card he proposes to play and each other card exposed 
          becomes a penalty card (Law 50 ).
         
           If declarer leads or plays two 
          or more cards simultaneously from either hand, he must designate the 
          card he proposes to play and must restore any other card to the 
          correct hand. If declarer withdraws a visible card and a defender has 
          already played to that card, such defender may, without penalty, 
          withdraw his card and substitute another (see footnote to Law 47 ).
         
           If the error remains 
          undiscovered until both sides have played to the next trick,
          Law 67  applies. 
  LAW 59INABILITY TO LEAD OR PLAY AS REQUIRED
 
           A player may play any otherwise 
          legal card If he is unable to lead or play as required to comply with 
          a penalty, whether because he holds no card of the required suit, or 
          because he has only cards of a suit he is prohibited from leading, or 
          because he is obliged to follow suit.
           LAW 60PLAY AFTER AN ILLEGAL PLAY
 
           A play by a member of the 
          non-offending side after his RHO has played out of turn, and before a 
          penalty has been imposed, forfeits the right to penalize the offense. 
          The illegal play is treated as though it were in turn (but
          Law 53  applies to the player whose turn it was). 
          If the offending side had a previous obligation to play a penalty card 
          or to comply with a lead or play penalty, the obligation remains at 
          future turns.
         
           When a defender plays after 
          declarer has been required to retract his lead out of turn from either 
          hand, but before declarer has led from the correct hand, the 
          defender's card becomes a penalty card (Law 50 ).
         
           A play by a member of the 
          offending side before a penalty has been imposed does not affect the 
          rights of the opponents and may itself be subject to penalty.
           THE REVOKE LAW 61FAILURE TO FOLLOW SUIT - INQUIRIES CONCERNING A REVOKE
 
           Failure to follow suit in 
          accordance with Law 44 , or failure to lead or 
          play, when able, a card or suit required by law or specified by an 
          opponent in accordance with a penalty, constitutes a revoke. Any 
          player may ask a player who has failed to follow suit whether he has a 
          card of the suit led, and may demand that an opponent correct his 
          revoke, except that dummy*  may ask of 
          declarer, but not of a defender. (A claim of revoke does not warrant 
          inspection of quitted tricks, except as permitted in Law 66 .) 
  
 
          * Unless he has forfeited his rights, as 
          specified by Law 43 . 
  LAW 62CORRECTION OF A REVOKE
 
           A player must correct his revoke 
          if he becomes aware of it before it becomes established (see
          Law 63 ). To correct a revoke, the offender 
          withdraws the card he played in revoking and follows suit with any 
          card. A card so withdrawn becomes a major penalty card (Law 
          50 ) if it was played from a defender's unfaced hand. The card may 
          be replaced without penalty if it was played from declarer's or 
          dummy's hand*  or if it was a defender's 
          faced card. Each member of the non-offending side may, without 
          penalty, withdraw any card he may have played after the revoke but 
          before attention was drawn to it (see footnote to Law 
          47 ). After a non-offender so withdraws a card, the hand of the 
          offending side next in rotation may withdraw a played card, which 
          becomes a major penalty card if played from a defender's hand.
         
           On the 12th trick, a revoke, 
          even if established, must be corrected if discovered before the cards 
          have been mixed together. If the revoke was committed by a defender 
          before his partner has played to the 12th trick, and if offender's 
          partner holds cards of more than one suit, (penalty) declarer may then 
          require the offender's partner to play to that trick either of the two 
          cards he could legally have played. 
  
 
          * Subject to Law 43 . A 
          claim of revoke does not warrant inspection of quitted tricks except 
          as permitted in Law 67 . 
  LAW 63ESTABLISHMENT OF A REVOKE
 
           A revoke becomes established 
          when the offender or his partner leads or plays (whether legally or 
          illegally) to the following trick, or names or otherwise designates a 
          card to be so played, or makes a claim or concession of tricks orally 
          or by facing his hand. The revoke may then no longer be corrected 
          (except for a revoke on the 12th trick - see Law 62 ), 
          and the trick on which the revoke occurred stands as played. 
  LAW 64PROCEDURE AFTER ESTABLISHMENT OF A REVOKE
 (Club Law 64)
 
           When a revoke has become 
          established,
         
           (a) if the offending player*  
          won the trick on which the revoke occurred, (penalty) that trick and 
          one of any subsequent tricks won by the offending side are transferred**  
          to the non-offending side (if no subsequent trick was won by the 
          offending side, only the revoke trick is transferred).
         
           (b)  if the 
          offender's partner won the trick on which the revoke occurred, 
          (penalty) that trick is transferred**  to the 
          non-offending side and if the offending player himself won a 
          subsequent trick with a card that could legally have been played to 
          the revoke trick one additional trick (but no more) is transferred**  
          to the non-offending side.
         
           (c) if the non-offending side 
          won the trick on which the revoke occurred, and if the offending side 
          won any trick after the revoke, (penalty)
          
 
          
            | (i) | the first such trick is transferred** 
            to the non-offending side, and  |  
            | (ii) | if the offending side won two or more tricks 
            after the revoke, any of which was won by the offending player with 
            a card he could legally have played to the revoke trick, an 
            additional trick is transferred** to the 
            non-offending side.  |  |  
      
        | 
           (d)  there 
          is no trick penalty for the established revoke if
          
 
          
            | (i) | the offending side did not win either the trick 
            on which the revoke occurred or any subsequent trick; or if  |  
            | (ii) | the revoke was a subsequent revoke in the same 
            suit by the same player; or if  |  
            | (iii) | the revoke was made in failing to play any card 
            faced on, or belonging to a hand faced on, the table, including a 
            card from dummy's hand; or if  |  
            | (iv) | attention was first drawn to the revoke after all 
            players had abandoned their hands and permitted the cards to be 
            mixed together; or if  |  
            | (v) | the revoke was on the 12th trick (see
            Law 62).  |  |  
      
        | 
           N.B. When any established 
          revoke, including one not subject to penalty, causes damage to the 
          non-offending side insufficiently compensated by the law, the 
          offending side should, under Proprieties 1 , 
          transfer additional tricks so as to restore equity. 
  
 
          * If declarer revokes but wins the trick on 
          which the revoke occurred in dummy, subsection (b)  
          applies.
         
          ** For the scoring of transferred tricks, see
          Law 77 .
           TRICKS LAW 65COLLECTION AND ARRANGEMENT OF TRICKS
 
           The cards constituting each 
          completed trick are collected by a member of the side that won the 
          trick and are then turned face down on the table. Each trick shall be 
          identifiable as such, and all tricks taken by a side shall be arranged 
          in sequence in front of declarer or of one defender, as the case may 
          be, in such manner that each side can determine the number of tricks 
          it has won and the order in which they were taken. 
  LAW 66INSPECTION OF TRICKS
 
           Declarer or either defender may, 
          until a member of his side has led or played to the following trick, 
          inspect a trick and inquire what card each player has played to it. 
          Thereafter, until play ceases, quitted tricks may be inspected only to 
          account for a missing or surplus card. After play ceases, the tricks 
          and unplayed cards may be inspected to settle an allegation of a 
          revoke, of honors, or of the number of tricks won or lost. If, after 
          an allegation has been made, a player on one side makes verification 
          of the allegation impossible, as by mixing the cards or merging the 
          tricks, the issue must be decided in favor of the other side. 
  LAW 67TRICK EITHER APPROPRIATED IN ERROR OR DEFECTIVE
 
           A trick appropriated by the 
          wrong side must, upon demand, be restored to the side that has in fact 
          won it* .
         
           A trick containing more or fewer 
          than four cards is defective. When one player is found, during play, 
          to have fewer or more cards than all the other players, the previous 
          tricks should be forthwith examined, face down; if a defective trick 
          is discovered, the player with a correspondingly incorrect number of 
          cards is held responsible. The defective trick is inspected face up 
          and
         
           (a) until the responsible player 
          has played to a subsequent trick, the defective trick is rectified as 
          follows:
          
 
          
            | (i) | if the offender has failed to play a card to the 
            defective trick, he adds to that trick a card he can legally play.
             |  
            | (ii) | if the offender has played more than one card to 
            the defective trick, he withdraws all but one card, leaving a card 
            he can legally play.  |  
            | (iii) | the non-offending side may, without penalty, 
            withdraw any cards played after the irregularity and before 
            attention was drawn to it (see footnote to Law 47); 
            but the offending side may not withdraw cards that constitute legal 
            plays, and any cards they withdraw may become penalty cards (Law 
            50).  |  |  
      
        | 
           (b) after the responsible player 
          has played to a subsequent trick, the ownership of the defective trick 
          cannot be changed and
          
 
          
            | (i) | if the offender has failed to play a card to the 
            defective trick, he forthwith faces and adds a card to that trick, 
            if possible one he could legally have played to it.  |  
            | (ii) | if the offender has played more than one card to 
            the defective trick, he withdraws all but one card, leaving the 
            highest card he could legally have played to that trick. A withdrawn 
            card may become a penalty card (Law 50); such a 
            card is deemed to have belonged continuously to the offender's hand 
            and failure to have played it to an earlier trick may constitute a 
            revoke.  |  |  
      
        | 
 
          * If calls have been made on a subsequent 
          deal, see Law 
          78 .
           CLAIMS AND CONCESSIONS LAW 68DECLARER'S CLAIM OR CONCESSION OF TRICKS
 
           Declarer makes a claim or a 
          concession whenever he announces that he will win or lose one or more 
          of the remaining tricks, or suggests that play be curtailed, or faces 
          his hand. Declarer should not make a claim or concession if there is 
          any doubt as to the number of tricks to be won or lost. 
  LAW 69PROCEDURE FOLLOWING DECLARER'S CLAIM OR CONCESSION
 (Club Law 69)
 
           When declarer has made a claim 
          or concession, play is temporarily suspended and declarer must place 
          and leave his hand face up on the table and forthwith make a 
          comprehensive statement as to his proposed plan of play, including the 
          order in which he will play the remaining cards.
         
           Declarer's claim or concession 
          is allowed, and the deal is scored accordingly, if both defenders 
          agree to it. The claim or concession must be allowed if either 
          defender has permitted any of his remaining cards to be mixed with 
          another player's cards; otherwise, if either defender disputes 
          declarer's claim or concession, it is not allowed. Then, play 
          continues.
         
           When his claim or concession is 
          not allowed, declarer must play on, leaving his hand face up on the 
          table. At any time, either defender may face his hand for inspection 
          by his partner, and declarer may not impose a penalty for any 
          irregularity committed by a defender whose hand is so faced.
         
           The objective of subsequent play 
          is to achieve a result as equitable as possible to both sides, but any 
          doubtful point must be resolved in favor of the defenders. Declarer 
          may not make any play inconsistent with the statement he may have made 
          at the time of his claim or concession. And if he failed to make an 
          appropriate statement at that time, his choice of plays is restricted 
          thereby:
         
           (a) if declarer made no relevant 
          statement, he may not finesse*  in any suit 
          unless an opponent failed to follow in that suit before the claim or 
          concession, or would subsequently fail to follow in that suit on any 
          conceivable sequence of plays.
         
           (b) if declarer may have been 
          unaware, at the time of his claim or concession, that a trump remained 
          in a defender's hand, either defender may require him to draw or not 
          to draw the outstanding trump.
         
           (c) if declarer did not, in his 
          statement, mention an unusual plan of play, he may adopt only a 
          routine line of play.
         
           If declarer attempts to make a 
          play prohibited under this law, either defender may accept the play 
          or, provided neither defender has subsequently played, require 
          declarer to withdraw the card so played and substitute another that 
          conforms to his obligations. 
  
 
          * For these purposes, a finesse is a play the 
          success of which depends on finding one defender rather than the other 
          with or without a particular card, 
  LAW 70DEFENDER'S CLAIM OR CONCESSION OF TRICKS
 (Club Law 70)
 
           A defender makes a concession 
          when he agrees to declarer's claim, or when he announces that he will 
          lose one or more of the remaining tricks.
         
           A defender makes a claim when he 
          announces that he will win one or more of the remaining tricks, or 
          when he shows any or all of his cards for this purpose. If
         
           (a) the claim pertains only to 
          an uncompleted trick currently in progress, play proceeds normally; 
          cards exposed or otherwise revealed by the defender in making his 
          claim do not become penalty cards, but
          Law 16 , 
          Unauthorized Information, may apply to a claimer's partner.
         
           (b) the claim pertains to 
          subsequent tricks, play is temporarily suspended; the claimer must 
          place and leave his hand face up on the table and make a comprehensive 
          statement as to his proposed plan of defense. The claim is allowed and 
          the deal scored accordingly if declarer agrees to it. If declarer 
          disputes the claim, the defenders must play on with the claimer's hand 
          face up on the table. Those cards do not become penalty cards. 
          However, declarer may prohibit claimer's partner from making any play 
          that could be suggested to him by seeing the faced cards. 
  LAW 71CONCESSION WITHDRAWN
 
           A concession may be withdrawn
         
           (a) if a player concedes a trick 
          his side has, in fact, won; or if declarer concedes defeat of a 
          contract he has already fulfilled; or if a defender concedes 
          fulfillment of a contract his side has already defeated. (If the score 
          has been entered, see Law 78 .)
         
           (b) if a trick that has been 
          conceded cannot be lost by any probable sequence of play of the 
          remaining cards, and if attention is drawn to the fact before the 
          cards have been mixed together.
         
           (c) if a defender concedes one 
          or more tricks and his partner immediately objects, but
          Law 16  
          may apply.
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