State Ex Rel. Douglas v. Ledwith

281 N.W.2d 729, 204 Neb. 6, 1979 Neb. LEXIS 1080
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1979
Docket42226
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 281 N.W.2d 729 (State Ex Rel. Douglas v. Ledwith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Douglas v. Ledwith, 281 N.W.2d 729, 204 Neb. 6, 1979 Neb. LEXIS 1080 (Neb. 1979).

Opinion

Clinton, J.

This appeal arises from the granting of an order permanently enjoining the defendant, Bette Bonn Ledwith, hereinafter referred to by her trade name of Bette Bonn, from engaging in certain trade practices in the course of recruiting students for and operating a school to train fashion models and requiring her to file quarterly reports with the Attorney General for 4 years. The proceedings were initiated by the Attorney General, acting pursuant to authority granted by section 87-303.05 (1), R. R. S. 1943, which is a part of the Nebraska codification of the Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act. §§ 87-301 through 87-306, R. R. S. 1943. In his petition, the Attorney General described several trade practices allegedly engaged in by Bette Bonn, stated the practices were deceptive, and requested temporary and permanent injunctive relief and restitution to the victims of such deceptive practices.

After a hearing, the court granted a temporary injunction in July 1976, restraining Bette Bonn from advertising for students in the “Help Wanted” section of certain newspapers and from advertising in a manner which would lead individuals reading the advertisements to believe that paid employment as a model was being offered.

Following an extensive trial on the merits, the court made findings of fact and issued its permanent order in May 1978. Details of the findings and the order will be discussed later in this opinion. Bette *8 Bonn appealed, making numerous assignments of error. We affirm.

The Attorney General’s evidence consisted primarily of the testimony of many former students and some instructors at the Bette Bonn schools. In addition, Bette Bonn was called as a witness and examined at some length. The evidence established a virtually unvarying pattern of behavior which may be generally summarized without specific reference to the testimony of individuals.

For a number of years, Bette Bonn ran the Bette Bonn Schools of Modeling and Charm in Nebraska and elsewhere. There were two schools in Nebraska, one of which was in Lincoln and the other in Omaha. The business was almost entirely confined to instruction; Bette Bonn did not make a practice of finding employment for professional models who were not enrolled in her schools.

Bette Bonn regularly ran advertisements in the “Help Wanted” section of the classified advertisements of Omaha and Lincoln newspapers which varied from the following only in minor details:

“MODELS - BETTE BONN STATE DIRECTOR World Modeling Association OUR 28TH YEAR OMAHA-LINCOLN
All ages, sizes. No training fee for professionals. See our models ‘Lincoln Home Show,’ ‘ETV Auction, Channels 12 and 13,’ beginning soon. 342-7560 New Paxton 346-3330” (Emphasis supplied. )

Most students’ initial contact with Bette Bonn came about because they were reading the “Help Wanted” section of the classified advertisements. Some students responded to the advertisement because they wanted to become professional models on a full or part-time basis while others believed the advertisement was offering paid employment.

*9 Those calling for information were given an appointment for an interview with Bette Bonn. The interviews, which Bette Bonn always conducted personally, generally lasted from % hour to 1 hour. During the interview, Bette Bonn described the courses and fees and made a number of representations concerning the nature and value of the courses.

Three courses of instruction were available, but most or all of the students chose to enroll in the professional modeling course. This course was to consist of 92 lessons. Its price during the time period at issue was $345 initially and $445 later in the period if paid in full before starting the course. There was a $45 surcharge if the price was to be paid in installments. Students were given the option of paying half the installment price and working off half through modeling jobs which they were assured they would obtain while they were students.

Prospective students were led to believe they would earn back all of the tuition money on modeling assignments and probably make a profit while they were still students. They were told there was a great demand for models in Lincoln and Omaha, and they would have no trouble obtaining full or part-time employment upon completion of the course. They also believed Bette Bonn would obtain jobs for them after they completed their training.

Students were promised a “model’s card” upon completion of the course which they were told they could show at any modeling agency in the country. It is clear the students believed the card would be at least the equivalent of a diploma in that it would provide nationally recognized certification of completion of an approved course of study.

All of these representations were false in various respects. Most students were given the opportunity to do a few modeling jobs while in school, although many of the jobs involved work such as passing out sample cigarettes on a street corner or acting as a *10 hostess at a trade show. Such jobs were systematically assigned first to students who had signed up to pay half the tuition and work off half. Where students who had paid the tuition in full or who had completed working off their tuition were assigned such jobs, they generally found it impossible to get paid for doing them, although many had specifically inquired as to whether there would be payment for doing the work and had been assured there would be. No student testified she “earned” enough, even considering hours worked for which no payment was forthcoming, to recover the cost of the tuition.

The classes had little if any content, were haphazardly scheduled, and were frequently canceled without notice. Some students quit the course in disgust after arriving at the school several times, finding no one there, and being unable to have their calls returned.

Most students who completed the course were unable to obtain the modeling card. It would have done them no good to obtain it, because the card was worthless for obtaining employment in Nebraska or anywhere else. One of Bette Bonn’s own exhibits, a letter from the World Modeling Association, stated: “An association is not capable of accrediting its members. ... If any association in the modeling field is claiming to give accreditation, this is not true.” Thus, the card had no value even as a diploma.

Nancy Bounds Scounce, the owner of the Nancy Bounds School of Modeling in Omaha, was called by the plaintiff and qualified as an expert. She testified that Omaha and Lincoln simply could not support full-time professional models. Instructors from the Bette Bonn schools who testified could not recall that any student who completed the professional modeling course had become a full-time professional model. Bette Bonn, when called as a witness for the plaintiff, could name only two or three people who *11 had obtained full-time employment as a model after completing her course.

It is inferable from the record that most students never saw Bette Bonn again after they paid their tuition.

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W.2d 729, 204 Neb. 6, 1979 Neb. LEXIS 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-douglas-v-ledwith-neb-1979.