Opinion
The issue in this certified appeal is whether a plaintiff in a negligence action must be awarded nominal damages, thereby making the defendant potentially liable for costs, when the defendant admits liability but denies having caused the alleged injury, and the fact
*366
finder thereafter concludes that the plaintiff failed to prove that he suffered any injury as a result of the defendant’s conduct. This case affords us an opportunity to address this court’s statement in
Keller
v.
Carone,
The record discloses the following relevant facts and procedural history. In May, 2000, the plaintiff had stopped his automobile at a red traffic light when it was struck from behind by a vehicle driven by the defendant. There was minor damage to the plaintiffs vehicle, but no physical injuries were reported at the accident scene. Thereafter, the plaintiff brought this action, alleging that, as a result of the defendant’s negligence, he had suffered bodily injury leading to both economic and noneconomic damages. 1 In her answer, *367 the defendant admitted that the vehicle she was operating had struck the plaintiffs vehicle. She denied, however, the plaintiffs allegation that “[t]he injuries and damages suffered by the [p]laintiff were a result of the negligence and carelessness of the [defendant ” 2
At trial, the plaintiff presented evidence concerning his injuries that allegedly had resulted from the impact of the collision. Because the defendant contended that the plaintiffs injuries were the result of various other automobile accidents, the plaintiff also presented evidence concerning accidents in which he had been involved prior to the May, 2000 collision with the defendant—a 1989 head-on collision, an incident in the early 1990s in which he backed a vehicle into a pole, and a 1995 high impact collision in which the plaintiffs vehicle was hit from behind on the highway—as well as accidents that occurred after the May, 2000 collision— a 2001 rear impact collision, and a 2002 low impact collision. Using a verdict form provided by the plaintiff, the jury returned a verdict of zero economic damages and zero noneconomic damages, and the trial court accepted the verdict.2 3
*368 The plaintiff then filed motions to set aside the verdict and for additur, arguing that, under Connecticut case law, he was entitled to at least nominal damages because he had suffered a technical legal injury that admittedly had been caused by the defendant. The defendant objected to the motions, arguing that the verdict should be allowed to stand because it did not shock the conscience and stating that, although she had admitted to causing the collision, she had denied the causal relationship between the collision and the plaintiffs alleged injuries. The trial court granted the plaintiffs motions, setting aside the jury’s verdict and awarding the plaintiff $1, “based upon the abundant appellate case law cited, premised upon the defendant’s admission of negligence.”
The plaintiff filed a bill of costs pursuant to General Statutes § 52-257, requesting $3150 in medically related costs and $467.10 in nonmedical costs. The trial court awarded the plaintiff the $467.10 in nonmedical costs, in addition to the $1 nominal damage award, but denied the request for medically related costs. 4
The defendant appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court, claiming that the trial court had acted improperly when it: (1) set aside the jury verdict in her favor; and (2) awarded costs to the plaintiff. The Appellate Court affirmed the trial court’s judgment, observing that, “[cjonfusion occurred during the trial because it repeatedly was stated that the defendant had ‘admitted liability.’ The [trial] court apparently believed that this admission by the defendant was equivalent to the granting of summary judgment as to liability .... That belief was incorrect. Although the defendant admitted that she caused the accident, she denied
*369
that she was the cause of the plaintiffs alleged injuries. The court and both parties acknowledged that the elements of causation and actual injury had yet to be proven by the plaintiff and were issues to be presented to the jury for its determination.”
Right
v.
Breen,
supra,
The Appellate Court then noted that, nonetheless, under
Keller,
“the effect of the defendants’ admission of liability [in a negligence action] was to establish the fact that a technical legal injury had been done by them to the plaintiff, and this entitled the plaintiff to at least nominal damages.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Right
v.
Breen,
supra,
The defendant essentially concedes that the Appellate Court properly applied
Keller
v.
Carone,
supra,
The plaintiff responds that there is no need to revisit Keller because General Statutes § 52-195 (b) 6 affords protection against an award of costs for claims involving technical legal injury. Specifically, the plaintiff contends that, by filing an offer of judgment of $1 under § 52-195, a defendant may protect herself from an award of costs based on a technical legal injury and a consequent award of nominal damages. We agree with the defendant that a plaintiff must establish all of the elements of a negligence claim, including causation and actual injury, in order to recover and, therefore, the technical legal injury concept does not apply to a negligence action.
Before we turn to the merits of the appeal, we first address the proper standard for this court’s review.
*371
“Generally, we review a decision of the trial court setting aside the verdict and ordering an additur to determine whether the trial court properly exercised its discretion. . . . When, however, the trial court concludes, as a matter of law, that it is compelled to act in a particular fashion, plenary review is appropriate.” (Citations omitted.)
Wichers
v.
Hatch,
We begin our review with a discussion of
Keller
v.
Carone,
supra,
In
Keller
v.
Carone,
supra,
More than thirty years later, this court explicitly addressed whether Connecticut common law requires proof of actual damages to support a cause of action sounding in negligence or whether proof of an invasion of a legal right is adequate to support the action and an award of nominal damages when actual damages cannot be proven. See
Green
v.
Donroe,
“The statement, ‘every invasion of a legal right imports damage,’ appears in several early cases involving intentional acts, some of which also relate to an intrusion upon an interest in real estate.
Beattie
v.
New York, N.H. & H. R. Co.,
“Although the rule making actual damage an element of a cause of action in negligence may have originated in the common law distinction between trespass and trespass on the case, we are not inclined to obliterate the distinction between intentional and unintentional conduct in terms of legal consequences which it serves to implement. Where the plaintiffs right has been intentionally invaded, its vindication in a court of law and the award of nominal and even exemplary damages serves the policy of deterrence in a real sense. It is difficult to imagine what purpose would be furthered by permitting anyone who is jostled in a crowd or otherwise suffers some unintended contact with his person or injury to his dignity to set in motion the judicial machinery necessary for a recovery of nominal damages. See 1 Restatement (Second), Torts § 18, comment [g] [1965]. That judges and juries have more important business to occupy them is as true today as it was in ancient times when the rule originated. There is nothing arcane about the wisdom of not cluttering the courts
*376
with trivia.”
10
(Citations omitted.)
Green
v.
Donroe,
supra,
Thus, in Green this court clarified our common law to reflect the different treatment accorded to intentional and negligent acts—allowing recovery of nominal damages where a plaintiffs right intentionally has been invaded, but allowing recovery only upon proof of causation and of actual damages where a plaintiffs right negligently has been invaded.* 11 Although neither the majority nor the partially dissenting opinion in Green cited Keller, it is clear that the court implicitly disavowed the statement in Keller that a defendant’s admission of liability in an action for negligence establishes a technical legal injury for which the plaintiff is entitled *377 to at least nominal damages. Therefore, we now explicitly overrule that portion of Keller. 12
Such a result is consistent with our case law holding that the “essential elements of a cause of action in negligence are well established: duty; breach of that duty; causation; and actual injury.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Jagger
v.
Mohawk Mountain Ski Area, Inc.,
supra,
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the case is remanded to that court with direction to reverse the judgment of the trial court and to remand the case to the trial court with direction to render judgment for the defendant and to modify the order of costs accordingly.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
Neither the plaintiffs complaint nor his amended complaint sought recovery for the damage done to his automobile.
Although both parties agree that the defendant “admitted liability,” the form of 1 his admission is not clear from the record. In his opening statement, the plaintiff asserted that the defendant’s “lawyers filed paperwork denying responsibility for the accident until . . . the week before trial.” The trial began on April 29, 2003. The record, however, does not contain a filing that reflects that such an admission was made shortly before the trial. The defendant filed her answer on May 4, 2001, almost two years before the trial and, as we have noted, admitted to having caused the collision, but denied negligently having caused the plaintiffs alleged bodily injury.
The jury was given aform entitled “Plaintiffs Verdict” that provided blank spaces for amounts to reflect economic damages, noneconomic damages and total damages. The trial court informed the jury that it had been given a plaintiffs verdict form because the defendant had admitted that she negligently had caused the collision. The court went on to instruct the jury that, “should you conclude that [the] plaintiff hasn’t persuaded you to the probabilities, you can put zeros in there. . . . You can make a defendant’s verdict out of a plaintiffs verdict form by saying no compensation is to flow.” The jury returned the form with zeroes in each blank.
In light of the jury's verdict in her favor; see footnote 3 of this opinion; the defendant also filed a bill of costs, pursuant to § 52-257, requesting $681. The trial court implicitly denied this request when it awarded costs to the plaintiff.
This court granted the defendant’s petition for certification to appeal to this court limited to the following questions: “(1) Did the Appellate Court properly conclude that the plaintiff was entitled to nominal damages and costs? [and] (2) If the answer to question one is ‘yes,’ should this court overrule
Keller v. Carone,
[supra,
General Statutes § 52-195 addresses offers of judgment and provides in subsection (b) that, “[ujnless the plaintiff recovers more than the sum named in the offer of judgment, with interest from its date, he shall recover no costs accruing after he received notice of the filing of such offer, but shall pay the defendant’s costs accruing after he received notice. Such costs may include reasonable attorney’s fees in an amount not to exceed three hundred fifty dollars.”
Section 52-195 was amended in 2005 by the substitution of “offer of compromise” for “offer of judgment” and other minor technical changes. See General Statutes (Sup. 2006) § 52-195. Those changes are not relevant to this appeal. We refer herein to the 2005 revision of the statute.
In
Keller
v.
Carrone,
supra,
Notably, and consistent with this court’s subsequent opinion in
Green
v.
Donroe,
Por example, the trial judge in the present case remarked: “I have bridled against this notion of nominal damages [in cases similar to the matter presently before the court] for all the years I’ve been a judge . . . .” He explained that he saw difficulty with: (1) suggesting nominal damages in 1he jury charge before a verdict was rendered; (2) ordering a jury that had returned a verdict of zero damages to go back and make a nominal award; (3) finding “intellectual purity” in asking a jury to render a verdict and then to award nominal damages despite that verdict; and (4) treating a plaintiff who was awarded nominal damages due to a defendant’s admission of liability as a “prevailing party” for purposes of awarding costs. With respect to the last point, the trial judge further noted the effect of this would be to discourage defendants from admitting to an obvious breach of duty, thereby lengthening trial proceedings, because such an admission will lead to an assessment of costs. The trial judge also noted that this creates an incentive for plaintiffs to hire many physicians in order to prove a questionable case, knowing that their costs will be charged to the defendant. See also
Preston
v.
Cestaro,
Superior Court, judicial district of New Haven, Docket No. CV 96-0389327S (March 1,2001) (
In his partially dissenting opinion in
Green,
Justice Parsky argued against the validity of such a distinction, reasoning: “[T]he different treatment of intentional and negligent acts in the old common law is due neither to logic nor experience but rather to procedural history. Actions of trespass were treated differently from actions of trespass on the case. As [Justice] Holmes cogently observed in The Common Law (Howe Ed.) (p. 64) ‘[i]n place of a theory of tort, we have a theory of trespass. And even within that narrower limit, precedents of the time of the assize and jurata have been applied without a thought of their connection with a long forgotten procedure.’ While legal history should not be sloughed off, neither should it command our slavish obedience. To replace our own soundly reasoned law on the basis of ancient pronouncements founded on arcane common law concepts of forms of action is to replace reason with rote.”
Green
v.
Donroe,
supra,
We note that this court recently has cited
Keüer
and its progeny in dicta, quoting
Taylor
v.
Sugar Hollow Park, Inc.,
We do not find persuasive the plaintiffs contention that we should not revisit Keller because § 52-195 (b), which was amended after Keller, affords protection against claims involving technical legal injury in that a defendant may protect herself from an award of costs based upon a finding of technical legal injury and the consequent award of nominal damages by filing an offer of judgment of $1. Our interest is in clarifying the law, not in affording either party any particular protection. To the extent that the plaintiff suggests that the legislature, in amending § 52-195 (b), was endorsing Keller, he has failed to demonstrate that the legislature’s actions with respect to this statute were related in any way to Keller.
