Quote
7. Law 40B3: A partnership, by prior agreement,may not vary its understanding during the auction or play following a question asked, a response to a question or any irregularity.
For quite a while I tried in vain to figure out situations where this law would be useful and necessary. The contemplations about the meanings of "vary" and "change" finally led me on what I think is the right track. I now believe that the purpose of the law is to prevent situations such as these:
a) W opens 2
♠ weak two. N doubles. E bids 3
♠, pre-emptive.
b) W opens 2
♠ weak two. N doubles. E asks what this means, hears the response and bids 3
♠, now invitational!
This is a variation of the understanding following a question, and in order to work it needs prior agreement (and it's not a change of the understanding, by the way).
Similar:
a) W opens 1NT, N bids 2
♥ Cappelletti (two-suiter with
♥ and a minor).
b) W opens 2NT, N bids 1
♥, has himself corrected to 2
♥ which is now natural!
On the other hand we know the following is perfectly legal:
W opens 1
♣, N bids 1
♠ or 2
♠, E bids 2NT. Obviously the meaning of the 2NT bid may depend on the strength or distribution of the opponent's hand or, nonwithstandng these, on the level of the opponent's overcall; and the right to have different meanings of this bid depending on the situation is not removed by asking the opponents about the meaning of their bid. Now this is certainly "by prior agreement" but it is obviously not what the law means by "varying the understanding [...] following a question".
In analogy to the paragraph before, if (W) 1NT, (N) 1
♦ can become a legal bidding sequence after accepting the insufficient bid, there should not be unusual restrictions to assign meanings to the follow-up bids; no matter what you bid over two-level overcalls and no matter what you bid without interference, because those are different situations. (However, over (W) 1NT, (N) 1
♥ corrected to 2
♥ you may have to play the same as over (W) 1NT, (N) 2
♥ at least in ACBL land and many other countries, though not in NZ as we have seen.) Unfortunately this is just my personal opinion and it is not binding to your next TD
.
@Shugart23: My suggestions for 1-over-1NT, keep it simple and useful
- 2-level and higher as if opponent had passed: Stayman and Jacoby for 5-cards suits, 2NT invitational if that's what you play.
- 1 in a suit and double: bids and follow-up auction as if partner had opened 1
♣, including negative double, so you can find a 4-4 fit in a major with a weak hand.
- 1NT: for takeout, as you prefer: maybe a long minor (opener bids 2
♣ to pass or correct - make sure this is valid in your country) or maybe both minors 4-4(+), opener selects.
- pass: you want the opponents to play, you have any very weak hand or you hold their suit in an up-to-medium hand.