OPINION
The issue presented is whether it was error to define the word “permanent” in jury instructions which required an affirmative or negative finding of “permanent injury within reasonable medical probability.” KRS 304.39-060(2)(b). In the event we determine that the giving of such a definitional instruction was error, we must also say whether the error was prejudicial requiring a new trial.
Appellant brought this personal injury action against appellee for damages arising out of a motor vehicle аccident. Prior to trial appellee admitted liability and the only issue for trial was the amount of appellant’s damages, providing she met the threshold required by KRS 304.39-060(2)(b). The only basis upon which appellant claimed to have met the threshold was permanent injury and on this point, the evidence was contradictory. Two physicians who testified on behalf of appellant confirmed that she had suffered cervical strain in the collision and stated that while her injuries would be permanent, she would have pain only on an episodic basis. Another physician who examined appellant at appellee’s request acknowledged an acute cervicаl strain but expressed the view that there was no permanent injury. Thus, on the question of whether appellant had suffered permanent injury, an issue of fact was established for resolution by the jury.
In its instructions to the jury the court stated that the jury would need to know the meaning of the word “permanent.” It then quoted a definition from Black’s Law Dictionary 1025 (5th ed. 1979), a definition this Court recognized in
Smith v. Higgins,
Ky.,
Continuing or enduring in the same state, status, place, or the like, without fundamental or markеd change, not subject to fluctuation, or alteration, fixed or intended to be fixed; lasting; abiding; stable; not temporary or transient. Generally opposed in law to “temporary, but not always meaning perpetual.”
Id. at 711. Aftеr deliberating, and in response to an interrogatory which asked whether the jury believed that as a result of the accident appellant had sustained permanent injury in reasonable medical probability, the jury answered no. In due course judgment was entered thereon and appellant’s claims against appellee were dismissed with prejudice.
Prior to the court’s instructions, appellant objected to any definition of the word “permanent.” She further objected on grounds that the definition proposed to be given, quoted hereinabove, contained an element not required by the law, that her injury be “not subject to fluctuation.” Appellant contеnded that the definition required her to prove more than the law required.
In the Court of Appeals appellant made similar arguments, first, that words of ordinary meaning and general usage do not need to be defined becаuse common knowledge and understanding is sufficient, and second, that the definition used did not allow for normal fluctuation in the condition of a permanently injured person.
The Court of Appeals acknowledged the general rule with respect to defining words of ordinary meaning but based on
Smith v. Higgins, supra, Aetna v. Shemwell,
In numerous cases this Court has held that words or expressions which are commonly understood and are generally simple and well-known should not be defined.
Hardin v. Savageau,
Ky.,
Rarely is a comprehensive and infallible summary of the law on a particular topic possible, and such is surely the case here. However, the statement which most nearly describes our view on this issue is found in
Commonwealth v. Callahan,
Ky.,
The removal of the definition of reasonable doubt from the instructions in the Commonwealth is well founded in case and textbook law. In 9 Wigmore, Evidence, Section 2497 (Chadbourn rev.1981), there is contained an excellent annotation on the subject, оne quote, at page 412, reading: “We do not think that the phrase ‘reasonable doubt’ is of such unknown or uncommon signification that an exposition by the trial judge is called for. Language that is within the comprehension of persons of ordinary intelligence can seldom be made plainer by further defining or refining. All persons who possess the qualifications for jurors know that a doubt of the guilt of the accused, honestly entertained, is a reasonable doubt.”
Id. at 393. Callahan further quoted Wig-more as follows:
The effect to perpetuate these elaborate unserviceable definitions is a useless one and serves today chiefly to aid the purpose of the tactician. It should be abandoned.
Id.
(quoting 9 Wigmore,
Evidence,
Sectiоn 2497 (Chadbourn rev.1981) at 408). We recently adhered to this view in
Hardin v. Savageau,
Ky,
As with the foregoing phrases, the word “permanent” as used herein needs no definition in the instructions. In the context here, where the jury was required to determine whether appellant’s undoubtedly modest injuries were permanent, any definition would impermissibly impose upon the jury’s understanding and application of the term. An instruction which asks the jury to find from the evidence whether appellant suffered “permanent injury within reasonable medical probability” aсcompanied by arguments of counsel suggesting which evidence supports or opposes the conclusion of permanence would be sufficient to permit a reliable jury verdict.
Prior to leaving this issue, we feel сonstrained to directly address what appears to have been the decisional basis of the trial court and the Court of Appeals. Our decision in
Smith v. Higgins,
Ky.,
In Smith the injury which appellant claimed to constitute permanent disfigurement was five small scars upon her knees. *35 The injury claimed to be a “permanent injury within reasonable medical probability” here is a cervical strain which mаy produce episodic bouts of pain and stiffness on a permanent basis. In our view, the threshold requirements and the injuries under review differ sufficiently to prevent having an analysis of one control the other. Blacks Law Dictiоnary separately defines “permanent injury” in a manner which differs significantly from the definition of “permanent.” Moreover, while we did direct utilization of the dictionary definition, with certain modifications, in the determination of disfiguremеnt, no such directions were given with respect to permanence. While we believe Smith v. Higgins, supra, to have been correctly decided on matters it addressed, it should not have been interpreted to broadly authorize the definition of otherwise conventional terms.
Our examination of
Aetna v. Shemwell,
As an alternative in the event we believe the court’s instruction to have been erroneous, appellee has argued that the instructional error was harmless. For our bеnefit, he has quoted CR 61.01 and other authorities which we have duly considered.
In this jurisdiction it is a rule of longstanding and frequent repetition that erroneous instructions to the jury are presumed to be prejudicial; that an appellеe claiming harmless error bears the burden of showing affirmatively that no prejudice resulted from the error. This view was recently expressed in
Drury v. Spalding,
Ky.,
The rule is that generally an erroneous instruction is presumed to be prejudicial tо appellant, and the burden is upon appellee to show affirmatively from the record that no prejudice resulted; and when the appellate court cannot determine from the record that the verdiсt was not influenced by the erroneous instruction, the judgment will be reversed.
See also Barrett v. Stephany,
Ky.,
It is a general rule that an error in the instructions is ground for reversal, unless it affirmativеly appears that it was not prejudicial.
Id.
at 718-19, and
Louisville Railway Co. v. Lenehan,
“The decided weight of authority is to the effect that the giving of erroneous instructions will be presumed to be prejudicial to appellant, and that the burden of proof rests on appellee to show affirmatively from the record that no prejudice resulted, and when an appellate court cannot determine from the record that a verdict was not probably influenced by an erroneous charge, the judgment will be reversed.”
Id. at 1018 (quoting 4 C.J. p. 914 § 2883, as amended and extended in its annotations of 1921, p. 379).
We are unconvinced by appellee’s harmless error argument. The definitional instruction which was given embodied concepts which may well have differed from the jury’s common sense, everyday understanding of what is meant by the term “permanent.” Certainly there is a possibility the jury read the phrase “not subject to fluctuation” to exclude permanent injury with only episodic pain. In such circumstances
Drury v. Spalding,
Ky.,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is reversed and this cause remanded for a new trial.
