Plaintiff obtained a judgment for $23,400 damages for injuries to his person received in a collision of two street cars of defendant. The defendant appeals.
The plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendants street cars on what is called the Bellefontaine line, and as the car was crossing another track of defendant, called the Fourth street line, a car on the last-named track, aiming for the same crossing, struck the ear in which plaintiff was riding, in consequence of which the plaintiff was thrown out of the seat and received severe injuries. The suit was begun in St. Louis, hut taken by change of venue to Franklin county, where it has been twice tried. On the first trial there was a verdict for the plaintiff for $35,000, hut the court sustained defendant’s motion for a new trial, and the cause was tried again. On the second trial the verdict was for $23,400, and the court overruled defendant’s motion for a new trial, whereupon the defendant took this appeal.
I. It appears from the respondent’s abstract that when the appellant presented its hill of exceptions to the trial judge for his signing the plaintiff insisted that the argument of Mr. Hocker, the defendant’s attorney, to the jury should he inserted in the bill.of exceptions and for that purpose presented to the court the stenographer ’s report of that argument, hut the court refused the plaintiff’s request and signed the hill as it was offered by the defendant. Then the plaintiff excepted to that ruling and the court thereupon signed a hill of exceptions for the plaintiff which contained the argu*417ment, and respondent now asks that his bill of exceptions be taken as a part of the record in the case. The significance of this request is that in the argument of the defendant’s counsel he frankly admitted to the jury that the accident was the result of defendant’s negligence and that the only point on which the plaintiff and defendant could not agree was the amount of damages the plaintiff should have to compensate him for his injury — that he was injured to some extent, but not to the extent claimed by him.
Respondent contends, on the authority of what is said in Darrier v. Darrier, 58 Mo. 222, that this court should cause the defendant’s bill of exceptions to be amended or corrected, by inserting the contents of the plaintiff’s bill into it, or consider it done without going through the formality of doing it or requiring it to be done. We do not understand the case referred to as being a precedent for amending appellant’s bill of exceptions in the manner proposed. But it would not materially alter the case if the bill of exceptions contained the admission referred to, because the admission was nothing more than what the uncontradicted evidence showed was the fact, and the counsel in frankly making the statement was not only discharging his duty to the court, but also discharging his full duty to his client, by presenting the case to the jury in the very best light in which it could be presented.
The evidence showed that the plaintiff was a passenger in one of defendant’s cars which was struck by another -of defendant’s cars and he was thereby injured; it was therefore in legal contemplation the defendant’s own hand that struck the plaintiff. YThen those facts were shown a prima facie case was made for the plaintiff and the burden of accounting for the collision was shifted to the defendant, but defendant offered, no evidence on that point. The only evidence of*418fered by defendant was that of experts relating to the degree of the plaintiff’s injuries.
II. - The petition alleges that the defendant received the plaintiff on its car as a passenger, and for a valuable consideration paid by plaintiff undertook to carry him safely to his point of destination. In the instructions. given for plaintiff the jury are told that if they should find certain facts, among them that “the defendant received the plaintiff as a passenger to be carried for hire,” they should find for the plaintiff. There was no evidence that plaintiff paid any fare or that fare was demanded. The submitting of that question to the jury is assigned for error. The argument in support of the asignment is that the relation of passenger and carrier is created only by contract, and that under the general denial the burden was on the plaintiff to prove the contract alleged, and failing to offer any proof on that point there was nothing to go to the jury — citing in support of that proposition: Schepers v. Railroad, 126 Mo. 665; Schaefer v. Railroad, 128 Mo. 64.
Those cases do hold that the relation of passenger and carrier grows only out of contract, but they also hold that the contract is either express or implied. The evidence in this case shows that the plaintiff boarded one of defendant’s street cars at Lucas avenue and was carried in it as far as the crossing of Park avenue and Gratton street where the accident occurred. The facts that he was received in the vehicle of a public carrier and was being carried in the manner of a passenger and nothing else appearing were sufficient for the inference that he was there under the implied contract that created the relation between him and the defendant of passenger and carrier. There was no error in submitting that question to the jury.
III. The petition alleges that while the plaintiff was in a car of the defendant, its servants so carelessly *419and negligently managed another one of its cars by a “negligent and violent rate of speed” that it was brought into violent collision with the one in which plaintiff was being carried and the accident resulted therefrom. In an instruction for the plaintiff the jury were told that if they should find certain facts, among them that the defendant ‘ ‘ so negligently ran and operated said cars or either of them” as to cause the collision, the verdict should be for the plaintiff. It is assigned for error that the words in quotation rendered the instruction erroneous, as authorizing a recovery on the finding of an act of negligence different from that stated in the petition, that is to say, on the finding that the car in which plaintiff was riding was negligently managed.
If the instruction was broader than it should have been the error does not reach the merits of the case. According to the uncontradicted evidence the accident was caused by the negligence of defendant’s servants, either, those on the Fourth street car which crushed into the Bellefontaine car, or those on the latter in not avoiding the collision. Error not affecting the merits of the action is not. to be regarded on appeal. [Sec. 865, R. S. 1899.]
IV. Appellant complains of the instruction given for plaintiff on the measure of damages. The testimony for the plaintiff tended to show that his injuries were such as caused great suffering, physical and mental; that they disabled him from pursuing his avocation, and they were likely to be permanent. The instruction complained of is as follows:
“If under the law and evidence you find the issues in this cause for the plaintiff, the damages which you may award him should be compensatory only, and in estimating such damages you will take into consideration and allow him for expenses for doctor’s bill incurred, if any, in treating his injuries. Also, compen*420sation for the time lost, if any, during his illness occasioned by his injury. And while the evidence may not prove any specific sum in dollars and cents that plaintiff may have been damaged by reason of physical pain and mental anguish, yet you may allow him what you believe to be just and fair to compensate him for such sufferings, if any. You will also take into consideration, in estimating his damages, his diminished capacity for earning money, if you so believe from the evidence, and on account thereof make him such allowance as you may believe to be fair and just for any loss that you may believe from the evidence he has sustained in the past by reason thereof, and for any loss you may believe from the evidence he may sustain in his future earnings by reason of such diminished earning capacity as may be occasioned by his injury. ” '
The criticism of plaintiff’s instruction is that it authorizes a recovery for loss of time and also for diminished earning capacity during the same period and for loss of what he may sustain in the future, with emphasis on the word “may.”
The instruction does direct the jury to consider the plaintiff’s loss of time and diminution of his earning capacity past and future, and possibly one reading that instruction might construe it to mean that plaintiff was to be compensated for time lost in the past and wages lost in the same past period by reason of diminished earning capacity, but that would be a strained construction and an unreasonable one. The value of his lost time could be estimated only by the value of his lost wages. During some of the time he might be entirely incapacitated and in some his earning capacity be only diminished. In view of this criticism we see how the instruction might have been •worded so as to render it more accurate, but that may be said of almost every instruction when viewed under the microscope.
The learned counsel for appellant do not attach *421much, importance to that point, but do attach importance to another point in the instruction; they say: ‘1 The vital error in this instruction, however, is that it directs a recovery for loss of future earnings that the plaintiff may sustain by reason of diminished earning capacity that may be occasioned by his injury.” The counsel give to the word “may” in that connection the meaning of the term, possibly might, and they say “this instruction violates the rule that future damages for injuries, pain or suffering must be confined to such as the evidence renders it reasonably certain will result from the injury. ” That is the correct rule as shown by the numerous cases cited in its support, among which are: Russell v. Columbia, 74 Mo. 480; Bradley v. Railroad, 138 Mo. 301; Chilton v. St. Joseph, 143 Mo. 192.
The word “may” used as an auxiliary verb has a wide scope of meaning, into which the idea of mere possibility enters, but it also comprehends the idea of probability and also the thought of what is with more or less certainty to be expected, and whether it is to carry the one thought or the other often depends on the context.
The word “may” is used in this instruction nine times; if we should erase it whenever it occurs and write in its place “possibly might,” wé would convert it into an intruction conveying a very different meaning from that which a casual reading of it now conveys.
This instruction is an almost literal copy of one approved by this court in Rodney v. Railroad, 127 Mo. 676, where the word “may” is used in the same sense..
The term “may sustain in the future” in reference to the same subject has been approved in other cases by this court. [O’Connell v. Railroad, 106 Mo. 484; Duerst v. Stamping Co., 163 Mo. 617.]
A' safer word than may could be used to express the idea of probability or reasonable certainty, but we will not hold an instruction erroneous where the context *422in the light of the facts of the case to which the instruction is applied shows that it is used to imply reasonable probability or reasonable certainty.
"V. Lastly it is insisted that the damages are excessive. The testimony for the plaintiff tended to show that at the time of the accident he was 42 years old, in the prime of life, strong and healthy, weighing 190 pounds. By the collision he was thrown to the other side of the car in which he was seated, his back striking the edge of a seat on that side, inflicting a painful injury, and he was carried home in an ambulance; that he has never been able to stand or walk since that time; he has lost 40 or 50 pounds of weight; is required constantly to take purgatives to move his bowels; he has diabetes and paralysis of both his legs; and he has manifestation of progressive nervous decay; he is a helpless cripple and there is little hope of any improvement.
The expert testimony on the part of the defendant tended to show that the plaintiff’s injuries were not as severe as he represented them to be; that the condition of his legs was due to hysterical anasthesia, which is a disturbance in the function of the central nervous system; and such cases usually get well. When recovery comes it is- spontaneous. A physician who examined the plaintiff by order of the court found no evidence of diabetes nor ankylosis. Another learned witness testified that traumatic neurosis was not a disease but was a condition. “The nervous system is in a bad condition; that is, does not act in a proper manner, and they are mentally disturbed more easily, and they are very miserable, irritable, little things worry them, and they may lose flesh or else they may become weak as far as their muscular system is concerned. . . . Under proper conditions they recover sometimes very promptly, sometimes with time. They may run for the course of a year or two. . . . They do not die of *423traumatic neurosis. . . . It is called hysterical paralysis; it is not a paralysis based upon a defined lesion of the spinal cord. . . . The recovery of sensation may be rapid or it may be slow — it may be blood or it may be paralysis. ’ ’
The award of tbe jury was $23,400.00. That award in onr opinion is excessive. We recognize the difficulty in laying down a rule for the measure of damages in such cases and it is always with great hesitancy that we interfere with the verdict of a jury on this question, but we feel constrained to do so in this instance. In our opinion $15,000 would be a fair compensation to the plaintiff for the injuries he has suffered. If, therefore, the plaintiff sees fit within ten days to remit $8,400 of his award we will affirm the judgment; otherwise, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
All concur, except Marshall, J., not sitting.