Newmac/Bud Light Team Bass Circuit, Inc. v. Swint

486 So. 2d 255
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1986
Docket85-110
StatusPublished

This text of 486 So. 2d 255 (Newmac/Bud Light Team Bass Circuit, Inc. v. Swint) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newmac/Bud Light Team Bass Circuit, Inc. v. Swint, 486 So. 2d 255 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

486 So.2d 255 (1986)

NEWMAC/BUD LIGHT TEAM BASS CIRCUIT, INC., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Gregory L. SWINT and Mark Miller, Defendants-Appellants, and
Jack Adams and Bubba McGown, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 85-110.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

April 9, 1986.

*256 Onebane & Associates, Mark L. Riley, Lafayette, for defendants-appellants.

Robert W. Thomas, of Thomas & Hardy, Lake Charles, Henry H. Lemoine, Pineville, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before GUIDRY and FORET, JJ., and HOOD, J. Pro Tem.

WARREN E. HOOD, Judge Pro Tem.

This case arises out of a dispute over who the winning team should have been in the Newmac/Bud Light Team Bass Circuits, Inc., Mystery Lake Tournament. The contest was undisputably won, in terms of poundage, by the team of Gregory L. Swint and Mark Miller, who brought in a total of over forty (40) pounds of bass. The second place team, consisting of Jack Adams and Bubba McGown, brought in approximately nineteen (19) pounds of bass.

After the contest was over, Jack Adams and Bubba McGown complained to the tournament director, Les Golmon, that they felt that Swint and Miller should be disqualified because they thought that Swint and Miller were professional fishermen. It was their contention that the contest rules prohibited professional fishermen from participating in the contest.

At that time Golmon indicated to Adams and McGown that only "professional guides" were prohibited by the rules and not professional fishermen. Upon subsequent investigation, Golmon found out that Swint and Miller had actually served as guides for pay on Toldeo Bend at various times during 1984, the year of the tournament. After making this finding, Golmon determined that Swint and Miller were, in fact, "professional guides", and on that basis he disqualified them from the contest. Once Swint and Miller were disqualified, the second place winners, Adams and McGown, were then declared to be the winners *257 of the tournament grand prize, consisting of a fully rigged Skeeter Starfire bass boat with motor and accessories.

After this series of events, Swint and Miller made demand upon Newmac/Bud Light Team Bass Circuits, Inc. for the grand prize. Newmac/Bud Light then filed a rule to show cause why the defendants, Swint and Miller, should not be disqualified and the defendants, Adams and McGown, declared the grand prize winners. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Newmac/Bud Light, upholding the tournament director's decision disqualifying defendants-appellants, Swint & Miller, and declaring defendants-appellees, Adams and McGown, the winners.

It further rendered judgment: recognizing the decision of the tournament director, Les Golmon, as the final authority in determining the disposition of the prizes involved in the tournament, including, but not limited to, the bass boat, trailer and accessories; ordering Gregory L. Swint to return the $740.00 won as the big bass award in the Mystery Lake Tournament on September 16, 1984; and ordering the plaintiff to return to Gregory L. Swint and Mark Miller their application fees for entering the tournament.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Appellants, Swint and Miller, now assert the following assignments of error:

1) The court erred in holding that the tournament director's decision was binding unless shown to be arbitrary and capricious.
2) The court erred in not finding that the tournament director's decision—that the rules prohibited professional guides from competing—was arbitrary and capricious.
3) The court erred in finding that the tournament director's decision that Swint and Miller were professional guides was not arbitrary and capricious.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 1

Appellants' first assignment of error is based on the theory that by entering the contest they entered into a contract with Newmac/Bud Light and that the contract contained a potestative condition. The pertinent contest rule states:

"TOURNAMENT RULES: The following rules have been established for the best interest of all concerned. In the event of necessity any rule may be altered at the discretion of the tournament director. In any event all interpretation of rules and final decisions will rest with the tournament director."

It is appellants' contention that this provision gives the tournament director unbridled discretion to make any decision he chooses using only his personal whim or caprice as a guide. They argue that Golmon is not a neutral third party but is directly associated with the sponsor as its director, and that since he can arbitrarily relieve the sponsor of its obligation to a contestant, the contract is potestative.

Appellants rely on the case of Jones v. Fowler, 185 So. 40 (Orl.App.1938).

In that case, Fowler, the operator of a shooting gallery, offered a prize of $300.00 to any person, after payment of a fee, who could shoot out and obliterate a red "5" on a target with only three shots from a .22 caliber rifle. Jones, the plaintiff therein, was successful in obliterating the red "5", at least insofar as the naked eye could see. However, with a magnifying glass, a small amount of red ink could be discerned. The court held that the reservation by Fowler, a contracting party, of the right to be the sole judge of the contest was void as a potestative condition. It observed that while Civil Code Article 1799 grants to the contracting parties the right to appoint an arbiter to settle any disputes, the party chosen to act as such must not be either the obligor or the obligee.

Thus, the court made its own determination of the rules without reference to Fowler's prior decision. The court determined that the intent of the rules was that a contestant who could obliterate the red "5" to the naked eye would win the prize, and *258 in this particular case, Jones was entitled to the $300.00.

Appellants contend that the decision in Jones mandates a similar result in the case at bar. They argue that the trial judge should have decided this case without deference to the tournament director's decision, rather than upholding that decision on a finding that it was not an arbitrary or capricious decision.

Jones is readily distinguishable from the present case. In Jones, the operator of the shooting gallery stood to gain by his decision. In the present case, the sponsor, Newmac/Bud Light, did not stand to gain by whatever decision Golmon made. All prizes were to be awarded, regardless of who the winners might be. And, of course, Golmon did not stand to profit by his decision. He has no association with the sponsor other than having agreed to act as the tournament director for the Bass Circuit tournaments. He is the national sales manager at KALB television. He has an outdoor show on television, and is involved in tournament fishing of all types. These are, in part, the reasons he was requested to act as tournament director. Contrary to the situation in Jones, the arbiter in the present case had no personal interest in the dispute, and he was not a contracting party.

Jones is further distinguishable in that under the contest rules in that case, the operator of the gallery was given the authority to make an arbitrary decision. In the present case, Golmon did not have the power to simply refuse to award the contest prizes or award them to whomever he should wish, on his mere whim, or in accordance with his own desires.

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Related

Franks v. Louisiana Health Serv. & Indem. Co.
382 So. 2d 1064 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Jones v. Fowler
185 So. 40 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
486 So. 2d 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newmacbud-light-team-bass-circuit-inc-v-swint-lactapp-1986.