Zelandakh, on 2013-November-21, 09:24, said:
Why is that? If I have ♠AK32 ♥AK32 ♦- ♣2 opposite ♠- ♥- ♦5432 ♣AK543 with 2 clubs out and claim saying "the clubs are good", I would hope it is obvious that the intent is to cash the major suit AKs first before playing clubs (would anyone object?). Similarly, if I claim "4 spades, 5 hearts, 3 diamonds and a club", this is probably not a statement defining the order in which the cards are cashed. There is plenty of case law establishing this principle.
The law requires claimer to state the order in which he proposes to take his tricks. If he does not do so, also says the law, the benefit of the doubt goes to his opponent.
If there's case law that says, in general, that "four spades, five hearts, three diamonds, and a club" does not state the order in which the player proposes to take his tricks, IMO that case law is wrong. It assumes that the claimer did not follow the law, when he may well have. I think the TD needs to investigate, and not rely on flawed precedent.