This is an action for personal injuries received by plaintiff. He recovered in the trial court.
The evidence tended to show that plaintiff, a boy four years old, was playing in the street over which defendant’s street railway ran. That in attempting to cross over the *44track the car ran over him, inflicting serious injury. A part of his scalp was torn down over his face. The evidence further tended to show that the motorman was not attentive to his duties at the time and that if he had been, he would have discovered the child in time to have stopped the car and averted the injury. We are satisfied that the case was properly left to the jury on the facts.
Damages : personal injury: mental anguish: instruction. The principal question relates to the instructions. It is contended that that given for plaintiff on the measure of damages was improper in that it assumed that plaintiff suffered bodily pain and mental anguish. If the injury is of such nature that pain and anguish must necessarily follow its infliction, then it is not error to assume that there was such pain and anguish. Prewitt v. Railway, 134 Mo. 615, 623; Fullerton v. Fordyce, 144 Mo. 519, 532. The cases of Comer v. Taylor, 82 Mo. 347, and Walters v. Cox 67 Mo. App. 302, were seduction cases, and the instruction in the former assumed that the father, and in the latter, that the woman herself, suffered in their feelings, affections and wounded pride. In the variety of human character are found persons who do not suffer in their affections, or from family or wounded pride, as the result of seduction, and it was therefore improper in those cases to assume that such injury existed in those eases. But in serious bodily hurt, of a permanent -kind, pain and anguish necessarily follow.
—: boy/s labor: jury. The next objection to the instruction is that there was no evidence of what the value of the boy’s labor would be after he arrived at the age of twenty-one. Direct proof establishing matter of this character can not be had. It necessarily results that much must be left to the sound judgment and conscience of the jury guided, as best they can, by the facts and circumstances developed in the case. Schmitz v. Railway, 119 Mo. 256. It could scarcely be denied that plaintiff is *45entitled to such damage as a recompense for his injury and if direct proof of such loss is required, it would, practically, deny him relief for a confessed right.
—: maturity of of í¡'fe.ncertainty It is also objected that there was no proof that plaintiff would live to be twenty-one years old. This is a matter that could not be established. It must be left to the uncertainty which goes with the uncertainty of life. Plaintiff was present before the jury, his condition was a matter of contest at the trial and it must be left to the jury to say what the probabilities are.
_: elements of: instruction. It was next objected that the instruction did not tell the jury what were the proper elements of damage. Defendant, in support of this point, relies on McGowan v. Ore & Steel Co., 109 Mo. 532. That case is authority for the point suggested, but it has not been followed by the supreme court in later cases. The instruction was not improper as far as it went and if defendant wished more specific direction it should have asked it.
Instruction (5) for plaintiff properly submitted to the jury the issues involved in the case. An examination of the record showsthat the objections to the judgment are mostly technical and without substantial merit. There was no error substantially affecting the merits of the controversy and w© should therefore affirm the judgment.
All concur.