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I was particularly surprised to see 10C referenced. I would have thought the consultation that was prohibited was at the table, not prior to the game. To clarify here, does this mean that when I told my partner that I always accept opening bids out of turn to avoid having a random auction, that means the next time it happens at the table I have retroactively violated this law?
As to 40A2, isn't the insufficient bid part of the legal auction once it is accepted? (27A1)
In response I received the following, which makes the much more broad claim that I was unaware of that *all* agreements over *all* irregularities are illegal in the ACBL.
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An insufficient bid is only legal once it is accepted. That said, you may not have conventional agreements which apply when an insufficient bid occurs.
As to your added comment: So you think it is okay to have the agreement that whenever your LHO makes an opening lead out of turn you can have the agreement that your partner will always allow you to play the hand? You can't really think this is legal . . . No, you cannot have prearranged agreements over irregularities.
As an ACBL director I will rule in accordance with their wishes, but this seems bizarre to me. Why would the law give you the right to accept irregularities without the right for partner to know what you mean when you do so?
As to the "you can't really think", I always did think this was legal. I know that when I play with my wife, she will *always* make herself dummy after a lead out of turn. I don't even know whether we explicitly talked about this at some point or not, but it seems hard to believe that the legality of it depends on whether we did or didn't.