In sustaining defendants’ motions for a new trial “on all issues,” the Circuit Court of Butler County specified “of record” *154 (Rule 78.01) that it was doing so because plaintiff’s verdict directing instructions numbered 2 and 3 “are erroneous in that they both deviate substantially, and to prejudice of both the defendants from the forms provided in M.A.I.” Being aggrieved by this deprivation of the $15,000 verdict-judgment that had been returned and entered in her favor, plaintiff appealed and we affirm. 1
The October 1968 casualty in question occurred at nighttime where north-south Highway 51 and east-west Highway 72 intersect at right angles in Bollinger County, Missouri. Plaintiff was a front-seat passenger in a Ford driven north on Highway 51 by defendant Janet Clark; defendant Ira Pete Bonds was operating his Mercury westward on Highway 72 when the front of it collided with the right side of the Ford. The paved surfaces of the roads are 18 to 20 feet wide, but at their crossing the two highways “fan out to one hundred and eighty feet” to form a lozenge-shaped intersection. A stop sign, intended for observance by northbound motorists, was located on the east side of Highway 51 some ' 130 feet south of Highway 72. In fine, the most favorable evidence to plaintiff disclosed that defendant Clark “drove straight through the stop sign [and into the intersection] without stopping,” and that although defendant Bonds could have stopped “within twenty feet * * * [i]f [he] had known [defendant Clark] was coming across,” defendant Bonds did not swerve the Mercury nor apply its brakes to create any skid marks until the Mercury was nine feet shy of the point of impact.
Instruction No. 2 charged the jury to find for plaintiff and against defendant Janet Clark “if you believe: First, defendant Janet Clark either: failed to stop at the stop sign on Highway 51 at the intersection of Highway 51 and Highway 72, or failed to yield right of way, and Second, defendant Janet Clark’s conduct in any one or more of the respects submitted in Paragraph First was negligent, and Third, such negligence directly combined with the acts of defendant Ira Pete Bonds to cause damage to plaintiff Bettie Brittain. PLAINTIFF MAI — 17.02 19.01 Modified.”
Instruction No. 3 told the jury to find for plaintiff “and against defendant Ira Pete Bonds * * * if you believe: First, defendant Ira Pete Bonds either: failed to keep a careful lookout, or defendant Ira Pete Bonds knew or by the use of the highest degree of care could have known that there was a reasonable likelihood of collision in time thereafter to have stopped, swerved, slackened his speed, slackened his speed and swerved, and thereby have avoided the accident; but defendant Ira Pete Bonds failed to do so, and Second, defendant Ira Pete Bonds conduct in any one or more of the respects submitted in Paragraph First, was negligent, and Third, such negligence directly combined with the acts of defendant Janet Clark to cause damage to plaintiff. Plaintiff MAI-17.02, 19.01 Modified.” 2
*155
Ere proceeding to specifics, it is well to note pertinent rudiments which necessarily accompany a review of instructions since the advent of MAI. For our purposes here, we consider two categories of instructions. First, there is the
applicable
instruction to be found in MAI, and second, the almost-applicable instruction in MAI which must be modified in some respect to fairly submit the issues in a given case. The first classification is governed by Rule 70.01 (b); the second falls within the jurisdiction of Rule 70.01(e) (Slagle v. Singer, Mo.,
Re: Instruction No. 2
As narrated in her brief, it is defendant Clark’s position that “Instruction No. 2 violates [Rule 70.01(a)] in setting out that ‘First, defendant Clark neither: failed to stop at the stop sign on Highway 51 or at the Intersection of Highway 51 and 721 4 *156 * * * It would have been simpler for [plaintiff] merely to have recited the mandatory instruction in [MAI] 17.01 that defendant [Clark] failed to obey a traffic signal” 5 without describing its location. To the contrary, plaintiff argues that MAI 17.01, as it relates to Instruction No. 2, had to be modified because there is a difference between a traffic signal and a stop sign. Plaintiff asseverates the modification was accomplished in the manner required by Rule 70.01(e), but alternately contends that if we do not agree, the deviation “is so trivial and inconsequential as not to prejudice any defendant” for the reason that defendant Clark admitted running the stop sign and the additional words complained of were simply descriptive of the location of the stop sign.
There is a real, generally understood and accepted distinction between a “stop sign” and a “traffic signal.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged (and most any other dictionary, for that matter) defines “stop sign” (p. 2251) as an “octagonal sign requiring vehicles to stop before entering or crossing a thoroughfare; ” a “traffic signal” (p. 2423) is said to be an “electrically operated signal (as a system of colored lights) for warning and controlling traffic.” Employment of the term “traffic controls” in Notes on Use under MAI 14.02 and 14.03 (both editions), indicates the composers and adopters of MAI were aware that motorists are supposedly controlled by and observant of devices other than traffic signals, and there are numerous statutory provisions to illustrate that a stop sign and a traffic signal are not considered to be one and the same thing.
6
Although the courts, abetted by MAI and its associated rules, moil toward the unlikely accomplishment of reducing the instruction loquacity of judges and lawyers, we presently know of no tribunal intent upon penalizing a party with sapience sufficient to emend a MAI form in order to endow an object with its correct and proper appellation. Cf. Jurgeson v. Romine, Mo. App.,
The existence of the stop sign was not disputed; neither was it questioned that the stop sign was located “on Highway 51 at the intersection of Highway 51 and Highway 72.” Consequently, there was no call to hypothesize such facts in Instruction No. 2. Gottlieb v. Hyken, Mo.,
Re: Instruction No. 3
Hopefully, plaintiff’s instructions will not be in their present form on retrial, and for that reason it is not necessary to discuss in detail all of defendant Bonds’ complaints anent Instruction No. 3.
7
However, as to his assertion that the word “would,” rather than the word “could,” should have been used in paragraph First of Instruction No. 3 to conform with illustrative instruction No. 4 in MAI 31.04, we are aware of the ado made over these particular words in Burrell v. Mayfair-Lennox Hotels, Inc., Mo.,
*158
Of more serious concern is the addition of the words “and thereby have avoided the accident” (which do not appear in MAI 17.04) to the second disjunctive submission in paragraph First of Instruction No. 3. Plaintiff argues that the instruction was correctly given in this fashion because “there is no exact [MAI] to cover the plaintiff’s instant case,” or if the added words were a deviation from an applicable MAI, it was not prejudicial and simply added a burden on plaintiff greater than that imposed by MAI 17.04. To answer plaintiff’s first argument is rather simple: MAI 17.04 is the applicable MAI formulated and adopted for submission of the particular issue posed by plaintiff in this cause (Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co. v. Thomas Grain Fum. Co., Mo.App.,
Whether submission of a particular instruction is authorized takes on considerations differing from the elements to be included in the charge. An instruction on lookout may be in the exact form authorized by MAI, yet if the facts show that defendant could not have seen the plaintiff in time thereafter to take effective precautionary action to avoid the collision, the case is not submissible on that claim of primary negligence. Shelton v. Bruner, Mo.App.,
Re: New Trial On All Issues
Plaintiff lastly contends the order for a new trial should have been limited to the issue of liability only.
In their motions for a new trial, both defendants asserted that the trial court had erred in permitting plaintiff to testify and argue regarding loss of wages and “various elements of plaintiff’s alleged damages,” when such testimony and argument (for stated reasons) was improper. The failure of the trial court to include these matters as reasons for its order granting a new. trial, did not eliminate them as a partial basis for its ruling [Artstein v. Pallo, Mo. (banc),
The judgment of the trial court granting a new trial on all issues is affirmed and the cause is remanded for that purpose.
Notes
. References herein to MAI, unless stated otherwise, are to the 1964 edition; references to rules and statutes are to Missouri Supreme Court Rules of Civil Procedure, V.A.M.R., and to RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S.
. We are not advised what particular deviations from MAI the trial court considered to be prejudicially erroneous. Aside from the special complaints posed by defendants in their briefs, infra, we observe, sua sponte, the omission of two commas from paragraph Second of Instruction No. 2 which appear in MAI 17.02 and the addition of three commas to paragraph First in Instruction No. 3 which are missing from MAI 17.04. The word “the” is absent from the phrase “failed to yield the right of way” in paragraph First of Instruction No. 2 as written in MAI 17.08. Also, the noun “Bonds” is not possessive in paragraph Second of Instruction No. 3 and the word “paragraph” is capitalized in paragraph Second of both instructions, all contrary to the mode adopted in MAI 17.02. If these observations be considered a picayune exercise, the interested reader is referred to Jackson v. Cherokee Drug Company, Mo.App.,
. For other cases upholding the rigid rule requiring strict adherence to the pattern forms in MAI see: Cash v. Bolle, Mo. (banc),
. Emphasis is ours to illustrate that in attempting to quote from Instruction No. 2, defendant Clark made five errors: namely, she (1) omitted her given name, (2) substituted the word “neither” for the word “either,” (3) added the word “or,” (4) capitalized the word “intersection,” and (5) left out the word “Highway” before the figure “72.”
. MAI 17.01 uses the term “violated the traffic signal,” rather than “failed to obey a traffic signal,” as stated by defendant Clark.
. Sections 300.010(17) ; 300.130 ; 300.-135; 300.155; 300.165; 300.175 ; 300.-260; 300.270 ; 304.015 ; 304.022-5(2); 304.281; 304.321; 304.331; 304.351. Also see “Traffic Signs” and “Traffic Signals” in the Missouri Driver’s Guide, Revised December 1967, pp. 10-12; 60A O.J.S. Motor Vehicles §§ 360(4) and (5), pp. 552-557.
. Sweatman v. McClure, Mo.App.,
. The difference between an instruction submitting: primary negligence and causal connection, and one involving a humanitarian situation, is explained in Fortner v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.,
