[1] William Hobbs and Claude Horton own a drug-manufacturing company and continuously bicker with each another.
Their lawyer George Dilwig suggests a wrestling match between the two men, with the winner gaining full ownership of the company and the loser serving as the winner's butler for one year.
The film is based on the 1914 play A Pair of Sixes by Edward Peple.
Robert Woolsey was suffering from kidney disease throughout production of the film and experienced constant pain.
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Thomas M. Pryor wrote: "The new opus is no better and, perhaps, no worse than most of their previous excursions in the realm of low comedy.