blackshoe, on 2011-April-24, 16:04, said:
Declarer calls for the ♠3 from dummy. The ♠3 ends up, not amongst dummy's quitted tricks, but on the floor. Is there a defective trick?
Put it another way: once a card has been played, is it always a part of the trick, still in play or quitted, regardless where it (the card) is? Or if it is somewhere else (i.e., not in front of the player in the played position, in the case of a trick still in progress, or amongst the player's quitted tricks, for tricks no longer in progress) is the trick to which that card "belongs" defective?
As far as I'm concerned, 14B is a red herring here. There are three questions; please provide an answer to each one.
A deck of cards that contains less than 52 cards is defective, the handling of this deck is completely (and uniquely) specified in Law 14. No other law applies to this deck of cards whether the error is discovered before the auction, during the auction or during the play. Where the missing card is placed is irrelevant, it may be found on the floor, within another board which in case contains more than 52 cards or it may not be found at all.
A defective trick is most often discovered by a player noticing that he holds an incorrect number of cards in his hand, early during the play also often by anybody noticing that one of the players has an incorrect number of cards positioned as played in front of him. Whenever that happens the Director should be called and he shall right away proceed as specified in Law 67 (after verifying that the deck of cards itself is not defective). If the Director finds that a player has a total of thirteen cards at his disposal, but that the number of cards found among his played cards and in his hand respectively is inconsistent with the number of tricks played then Law 67 instructs the Director to proceed as if the player has failed to play to a trick or has played more than one card to a trick as the case may be.
If the player has too many cards in his hand (and correspondingly too few cards among his played cards) possibly as the result of incorrectly picking up a played card and restoring it to his hand then that card is no longer considered played to the trick in which it was originally played. Just imagine the consequences if that player subsequently plays the same card to another trick.
So the trick to which the
♠3 belongs is not defective while the
♠3 remains missing (Law 14 applies), but it becomes defective if the player restores the
♠3 to his hand instead of placing it among his played cards (Law 67 applies).
Although this appears to be only two answers I believe I have answered all your questions? (And Law 14 is certainly no red herring here.)