The treaty had several goals. None of the three parties were serious about their support for the Portuguese count. The agreement had provisions for all three powers agreeing that it was in their best interest that their common neighbour, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, did not undertake any reforms that might strengthen it, and that its elected monarch should be friendly towards them. In addition to the obvious - increasing the influence of the three powers over the Commonwealth - Austria and Russia also wanted to damage the possibility of a French-Prussian-Saxon alliance.
The political situation changed rapidly, and the treaty - brainchild of the diplomats of 1730 - was mostly forgotten soon after it was signed; soon after the death of Augustus II in February 1733, Austria and Russia distanced themselves from the treaty, claiming it was never ratified. Their primary goal, disruption of the French-Saxon-Prussian alliance, has already been achieved, and they had secured support from various Polish and Saxon factions. Therefore in 1733 not a single one of the three powers decided to oppose the candidacy of Augustus of Saxony, who became Augustus III of Poland.
The interference of various foreign powers - France, Austria, Russia and Prussia - into Polish election led to the War of the Polish Succession (1733-1738), between supporters of Stanisław Leszczyński, Augustus III and their foreign allies.