Plaintiff Rachel Brunson sued to re7 cover for personal injuries and property damages resulting from a collision between her car and one driven by the defendant Judy Strong. A jury returned a verdict for car repairs, $414; and. for personal injuries, $515 special and $1000 general damages. Plaintiff moved for a new trial on the ground that the award of general damages was grossly inadequate; and upon its denial, she appealed to this court bn that issue.
The question of liability is not of concern on this appeal. Briefly, the facts are these: the accident occurred at about 7 a. m. on March 5, 1964, on Foothill Boulevard in Salt Lake City. The plaintiff was driving southward in her car at about 1900 South when the defendant, traveling northward, lost control of her car on the ice-covered highway, bolted over the raised divider and collided with the plaintiff’s automobile.
The principal injury plaintiff complains of was to her back. Her physician, Thomas A. Clawson, Jr., identified it as involving vertebrae in the cervical area. It was also brought out that she had been suffering from what the doctor termed a “mild to moderate hypertrophic arthritis in the cervr ical spine for a number of years.” Plaintiff asserts that it was only after the collision that she experienced any substantial pain or discomfort. The doctor testified that the collision may have “lighted up” or' aggravated her previous arthritic condition, but that this would only be revealed to any degree of certainty by successive x-rays over a period of time.
In connection with her argument as to the inadequacy of the general damages awarded the plaintiff charges that the trial court committed error in instructing the jury to the effect that she could not recover for any previous “condition” not caused by the accident, but if the accident was the proximate cause of aggravating a pre-existing “disability” they could consider that in fixing' damages. She urges specifically that the word, “disability” is misleading because the evidence showed only a prior arthritic' “condition.” We agree that the two terms are synonymous only in a limited sense.' A “disability” is a “condition,” but the latter is a much broader term than the former. A “condition” can be a “disability,” and it can also be a lot of other things, good, bad or indiffer *367 ent. Nevertheless the use óf the terms interchangeably in the instruction does not necessarily result in prejudicial error. 1
The instructions should be read in their entire context and given meaning in accordance with the ordinary and usual import of the language as it would be understood by lay jurors, 2 rather than by resorting to undue niceties of meaning or technical distinctions in terms. More important than that, they should be looked .at from the viewpoint of the jury in application to the facts as shown by the evidence. In that light the instructions which were given could relate only to the physical .-state of the plaintiff’s back as the testimony showed it existed prior to the accident, whether it be regarded as a “condition” or a “disability”; and it may well bave been something of both.
Our view of the basic issue here is that even though it is true that one who injures another takes him as he is, 3 nevertheless the plaintiff may not recover damages for any pre-existing condition or -disability she may have had which did not result from any fault of the defendant, but that she is entitled to recover damages for any injury she suffered, including any -aggravation or lighting up of such a preexisting condition or disability, which was proximately caused by the defendant’s negligence. 4 If the instructions are considered as a. whole and in relation to the facts shown by the evidence, as they should be, that is the fair import of what the trial court told the jury.
We do not question the sincerity of plaintiff’s belief that the award of only $1,000 is inadequate compensation for the injury she claims to have suffered to her back. But it is something about which there is room for a difference of opinion. It is well known that the back is the source of a great deal of human pain and suffering. Equally so that its cause is often an enigma to the patient, and even more so to others. The facts of the existence of pain and its severity are largely subjective, known mostly to the one afflicted. Objective symptoms and the physical basis of such an ailment are often difficult to discover, analyze and demon *368 strate to others. This appears to he true in the instant case. That Mrs. Brunson had pre-existing- arthritis in the cervical area of her hack is unquestioned. It is hard to tell on any objective basis to what extent this accident may have aggravated her difficulty. This determination must rest largely upon her testimony. Its evaluation and the conclusion to be drawn therefrom is peculiarly within the province of the jury. 5 Due to its acknowledged prerogatives, its advantaged position, and the desirability of safeguarding the integrity of the jury system, the courts are and should be reluctant to interfere with a jury verdict and will not do so as long as there is any reasonable basis in the evidence to justify it.
We re-affirm our commitment to the principle that under our liberalized concept of procedure no error or irregularity will justify the reversal of a judgment unless it affects the substantial rights of the parties. 6 When both sides have been given an opportunity to present their evidence and contentions to a jury, and a verdict has been rendered, all presumptions support its validity. Consequently it must stand unless the appellant shows that error was committed which had such an adverse effect upon the trial that there is a reasonable likelihood that the result would have been different in its absence. 7 With these considerations in mind we are not persuaded either that the instructions gave the jury any such mis-impression as to deprive the plaintiff of a fair trial, or that any greater damage than was awarded was proved so conclusively as to warrant upsetting the verdict.
Affirmed. Costs to defendant (respondent) .
Notes
. See BAJI, § 171-C, 432; Taylor v. Sims,
. See Startin v. Madsen,
. That tort feasor takes victim as he finds him, see Rideau v. Los Angeles Transit Lines,
. See Matern v. Phillips,
. Concerning the advantages of a lay jury of varying viewpoints and experiences and latitude of judgment properly accorded them, see statement in Wilson v. Oldroyd,
. See statement in Startin v. Madsen,
. See Gordon v. Provo City,
