Sally Blane complains to her uncle, J. Farrell MacDonald, that she has problems. MacDonald scoffs and takes her to a session of night court he is running. There he finds John Darrow, who's up for beating a man who assaulted his sister, Betty Grable (in her first role under that name). MacDonald puts him on probation under the supervision of Miss Blane as her chauffeur. She tries to knock off some of his rough edges, but he resists, and offends her by hustling a drunken date of hers who tries to get handsy. Matters come to a head when she gets engaged to the man who assaulted his sister.
It's a Chesterfield movie, like most of them a little too solemn and monotonous to be really good, but ambitious in its intentions. Under the direction of Richard Thorpe it moves at a good clip, but only MacDonald is really good. Darrow and Miss Blane are too tentative in their performances.
Chesterfield would disappear into the merger that created Republic Pictures. Miss Blane would continue on at the B level for the rest of the decade. Darrow would eventually give up acting and become an agent. With Clara Kimball Young and Matty Kemp.