Gottlieb v. Amica Mutual Insurance Company ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 22-1074
    PETER GOTTLIEB, individually and on
    behalf of all persons similarly situated,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    AMICA MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Denise J. Casper, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Kayatta, Lipez, and Thompson,
    Circuit Judges.
    John Peter Zavez, with whom Noah Rosmarin, Brendan M.
    Bridgeland, and Adkins, Kelston & Zavez, P.C., were on brief, for
    appellant.
    Christopher Michael Reilly, with whom Laura Meyer Gregory,
    Anthony Antonellis, and Sloane and Walsh, LLP, were on brief, for
    appellee.
    December 30, 2022
    KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.        Peter Gottlieb claims that the
    price he agreed to pay Amica Mutual Insurance Company to insure
    his home was $16 too high because it was based on an excessive
    coverage limit.     Claiming as well that other Amica insureds paid
    too much to insure their homes, he filed this putative class
    action.     After the district court dismissed part of Gottlieb's
    complaint for failure to state a claim and entered summary judgment
    disposing of the remainder of his claims, he filed this appeal.
    For the following reasons, we affirm the judgments of the district
    court.
    I.
    Gottlieb owns a home in Burlington, Massachusetts.            In
    2015, he purchased a homeowners insurance policy from Amica that
    covered him from March 10, 2015, through March 10, 2016.                  The
    coverage limit for replacing his house in the event of a loss was
    $311,000, for which Gottlieb paid a $730 premium.            The policy also
    contained an endorsement providing additional coverage of up to
    130%   of   the   coverage   limit    if     Gottlieb   agreed   to   certain
    conditions, including that Amica could adjust the coverage limit
    and the premium "in accordance with" "property evaluations [Amica]
    make[s]" and "[a]ny increases in inflation."            The policy contained
    no other language allowing Amica to increase coverage limits.
    No loss occurred during the one-year term of the policy.
    With the expiration of the policy term approaching, Amica sent
    - 2 -
    Gottlieb a proposed renewal policy, which contained the same
    endorsement, along with a cover letter.              The proposed premium for
    the renewal policy was $795 ($65 more than the premium for the
    original policy).        Sixteen dollars of the increase was due to a
    higher    coverage      limit   for    Gottlieb's    house   ($321,000    versus
    $311,000).       Amica arrived at that coverage limit based on a
    multiplier calculated by a company called E2Value, Inc., which
    projected costs for Gottlieb's zip code based on various data
    sources.      The rest of the increase in the premium was due to
    changes in the base rate and other changes in Amica's public rate
    filing.
    The cover letter accompanying the renewal pointed out
    that the increased coverage limit was partially attributable to
    higher reconstruction costs, which it stated had "risen steadily
    since [Amica's] last survey of [Gottlieb's] home," along with
    "various other factors . . . that impact the dwelling amount."
    The letter noted that Gottlieb was ultimately responsible for
    determining the proper dwelling limit for his home.               After calling
    Amica    to   clarify    how    much   coverage     he   would   get   under   the
    endorsement, Gottlieb accepted the 2016-2017 renewal policy, and
    Amica issued the policy.
    Gottlieb then sued Amica, claiming that the increased
    coverage limit on his house and premium in the 2016-17 violated
    the terms of his contract with Amica.               Gottlieb argues that the
    - 3 -
    endorsement in his original policy limited how Amica could set the
    coverage limit in the renewal policy; namely, Amica could change
    the original limit only if it did a new home inspection, or
    accounted for an increase in inflation.                   Because Amica did not
    reinspect Gottlieb's home and because his coverage limit allegedly
    increased more than the rate of inflation, Gottlieb contends that
    Amica breached the policy.
    Gottlieb        also    argues       that   even    if   Amica   did   not
    explicitly breach the policy, it breached the implied covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing.            In his view, Amica acted in bad faith
    by adjusting his coverage limit based on impermissible factors
    (including projected future inflation and reconstruction costs),
    attempting to rewrite the contract, and deceiving him about why
    the limit was increasing.              As to the claimed deception, Gottlieb
    contends that Amica lied to him by stating in the cover letter
    that one reason for the proposed increase in his dwelling limit
    was a rise in reconstruction costs.                According to Gottlieb, those
    costs had not increased, or at least not as much as reflected in
    the   proposed    increase        to   Gottlieb's      coverage;    thus,   Gottlieb
    contends Amica's statement was untrue and deceptive.                   As a result
    of this allegedly fraudulent adjustment to his coverage limit,
    Gottlieb asserts that Amica sold him illusory coverage he could
    never   use,     because    Amica       would    never   pay    more   than   actual
    replacement costs and his replacement costs would always be less
    - 4 -
    than Amica's estimate.            Because Amica received the benefit of
    Gottlieb's additional premium but provided no additional practical
    benefit to Gottlieb, he argues, he is also entitled to relief for
    unjust    enrichment,     money     had    and    received,    and   violation   of
    Massachusetts law prohibiting deceptive business practices, Mass.
    Gen. L. c. 93A ("Chapter 93A").
    Gottlieb      filed    his    complaint    in     Middlesex   Superior
    Court.    Amica then removed the case to the United States District
    Court for the District of Massachusetts.                      The district court
    dismissed the breach of contract and implied covenant of good faith
    and fair dealing claims.            The court found that the 2015-16 and
    2016-17 policies were two separate contracts, so setting the
    initial coverage limit in the latter could not have violated the
    former.    Moreover, the initial contract imposed no restrictions on
    how the new coverage limit in the renewal contract could be set.
    Likewise, the court ruled, no covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing extended or created a freestanding obligation to use the
    within-term rules contained in the first policy for selecting the
    starting point of the renewal policy.               Following discovery and an
    amendment to the complaint, the district court granted summary
    judgment    for   Amica    on     the    unjust   enrichment,     money   had    and
    received,   and Chapter 93A claims.                The court found        that the
    equitable claims were unavailable because there was an adequate
    remedy at law and a valid contract.               It also concluded that there
    - 5 -
    was no Chapter 93A violation because although Gottlieb had been
    charged a higher premium, he had received the benefit of additional
    coverage.    Gottlieb appeals from both the denial of the motion to
    dismiss and the grant of summary judgment for Amica.
    II.
    We review a district court's grant of a motion to dismiss
    de novo.    Legal Sea Foods, LLC v. Strathmore Ins. Co., 
    36 F.4th 29
    , 34 (1st Cir. 2022).     In doing so, we take all of Gottlieb's
    well-pled allegations as true and view the facts in the light most
    favorable to him.   
    Id.
       We affirm if, having done so, the complaint
    does not provide "enough factual detail to make the asserted claim
    plausible on its face."       
    Id. at 33
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting Cardigan Mountain Sch. v. N.H. Ins. Co., 
    787 F.3d 82
    , 84 (1st Cir. 2015)).     We also review a district court's
    grant of summary judgment de novo, drawing all inferences in favor
    of Gottlieb.    Noonan v. Staples, Inc., 
    556 F.3d 20
    , 25 (1st Cir.
    2009).   Following the lead of both parties, we apply Massachusetts
    law.
    A.
    Gottlieb's breach of contract claim begins with the
    original policy's limitation on Amica's unilateral ability to
    change the coverage limit of $311,000 and the corresponding premium
    upon which the parties had agreed when they entered the contract.
    Such a limitation makes sense:     A homeowner who agrees to receive
    - 6 -
    one year of coverage for a set premium hardly expects that, during
    that year, the insurer could jack up the premium for that year's
    coverage beyond that to which the homeowner agreed by declaring a
    unilateral increase in the coverage limit.
    Amica, though, did no such thing.       After agreeing to
    issue the original policy with a one-year term, Amica provided a
    full year of coverage for the agreed-upon premium without making
    any adjustments that would increase the premium (even those that
    would have been allowed under the policy endorsement).      Had the
    parties gone their separate ways upon expiration of the policy, it
    is clear that no breach could have been claimed.
    The parties did not go their separate ways.      Instead,
    they entered into a new policy -- the renewal policy.   In so doing,
    they agreed upon a new, slightly higher coverage limit of $321,000
    (as compared to $311,000 in the prior year) and a corresponding
    premium of $795.     During the term of that renewal policy, Amica
    never sought to charge Gottlieb more than that agreed-upon $795.
    Nor did it ever deny him any promised coverage.
    Gottlieb nevertheless contends that Amica wronged him
    when it proposed a coverage limit of $321,000 in negotiating the
    renewal policy.    His principal argument is that the limitation for
    adjusting the coverage limit in the original policy applied to the
    setting of the coverage limit in the renewal policy.       Like the
    district court, we disagree.
    - 7 -
    The 2015-16 policy was a separate contract from the 2016-
    17 renewal.     See Epstein v. Nw. Nat'l Ins. Co., 
    166 N.E. 749
    , 750–
    51 (Mass. 1929) (renewal policies are new contracts).                  Nothing in
    the 2015-16 policy's terms indicated that anything in that policy
    prevented Amica from proposing a new coverage limit for the 2016-
    17 policy.      Gottlieb attempts to evade this hole in his breach of
    contract claim by highlighting abstract references to renewal
    policies   in    the    2015-16     agreement.1      He     claims    that   these
    references show that his initial policy governed the terms of any
    renewal.        But    the    references    to   renewals    govern     different
    procedures for canceling the contract depending on whether the
    contract is an initial policy or a renewal.                They do not suggest
    that the first policy governs any future renewals.                   Rather, they
    simply indicate that some terms of a particular policy apply
    differently depending on whether the policy itself is a renewal or
    an initial policy.
    Nor    does       it   help   Gottlieb   that    the   cover      letter
    accompanying the proposed renewal policy referred to the new
    1  For example, the policy provides that it may be cancelled
    for certain reasons "[w]hen this policy has been in effect for
    60 days or more, or at any time if it is a renewal with us." Other
    references to renewal or nonrenewal indicate what will happen if
    there is a nonrenewal, e.g., "[i]f we decide to cancel or not renew
    this policy, that loss payee will be notified in writing," and
    procedures for renewal or nonrenewal, e.g., "[o]rdinarily we will
    renew this policy automatically" and "[w]e may elect not to renew
    this policy . . . by delivering to you . . . written notice."
    - 8 -
    coverage limit as an adjustment. That reference says nothing about
    whether the initial policy itself limited Amica in setting the
    coverage limit for a subsequent policy.              The language in the cover
    letter sent along with the renewal policy does not turn the
    renewal, which is clearly a new policy, into an "adjust[ment]" as
    that phrase is used in the language of the endorsement in the first
    policy.
    Gottlieb also claims in passing that "[t]he Homeowners
    Information Insurance Digest included in Plaintiff's policy also
    expressly provides the terms of the Endorsement apply to renewal
    policies."        In describing various coverage options, the Digest
    (which is not a part of the contract) states that policyholders
    will get the benefit of the endorsement's increased coverage if
    they   "[a]llow     [Amica]     to   issue    your   policy   (and   subsequent
    renewals)    in    accordance    with   a    current   property   evaluation."
    Gottlieb did not mention this Digest in either his initial or
    amended complaint, nor did he mention it in his briefing on the
    motion to dismiss.      As such, we consider it waived when evaluating
    his appeal of the district court's decision on the motion to
    dismiss.     See, e.g., P.R. Hosp. Supply, Inc. v. Bos. Sci. Corp.,
    
    426 F.3d 503
    , 505 (1st Cir. 2005).             Even if we were to consider
    Gottlieb's argument, we see no breach of contract.                The Digest's
    language does not require Amica to base the premium of a renewal
    policy on a current property evaluation.               Rather, it states that
    - 9 -
    an insured will get the benefit of the endorsement if they "comply
    with" three conditions, including "[a]llow[ing] [Amica] to issue
    [the] policy (and subsequent renewals) in accordance with a current
    property evaluation."         That the insured may allow Amica to do that
    does not mean that Amica must do it.
    In sum, because the original policy did not limit Amica's
    freedom in proposing a coverage limit for the renewal policy,
    Gottlieb's breach of contract claim fails.                      Gottlieb was not
    entitled under the initial contract to a proposed renewal coverage
    limit reflecting only inflation or a new property evaluation.2
    B.
    Gottlieb's claim for breach of the implied covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing fares no better.                The covenant of good
    faith     and     fair   dealing    is    implied    in   all     contracts    under
    Massachusetts law.          Guldseth v. Fam. Med. Assocs. LLC, 
    45 F.4th 526
    , 537 (1st Cir. 2022).           It provides that "neither party shall
    do anything that will have the effect of destroying or injuring
    the   right      of   the   other   party   to    receive   the    fruits     of   the
    contract."        Latson v. Plaza Home Mortg., Inc., 
    708 F.3d 324
    , 326
    (1st Cir. 2013) (quoting Anthony's Pier Four, Inc. v. HBC Assocs.,
    
    583 N.E.2d 806
    , 820 (Mass. 1991)).                The implied covenant is not,
    however, a catch-all for altering the terms or scope of a contract.
    2 We therefore do not address Gottlieb's various claims that
    Amica used the wrong measure of inflation.
    - 10 -
    "Because   the   implied   covenant   is   all   about   the   expectations
    concerning the obligations actually in the contract, the scope of
    the covenant is only as broad as the contract that governs the
    particular relationship."     Guldseth, 45 F.4th at 537; see also Uno
    Rests, Inc. v. Bos. Kenmore Realty Corp., 
    805 N.E.2d 957
    , 964
    (Mass. 2004) ("The covenant may not, however, be invoked to create
    rights and duties not otherwise provided for in the existing
    contractual relationship, as the purpose of the covenant is to
    guarantee that the parties remain faithful to the intended and
    agreed expectations of the parties in their performance.").
    As we concluded above, the limitation on Amica's changes
    to the dwelling limit during the term of the original policy did
    not apply to the setting of the initial coverage limit in the
    renewal policy.    Given that conclusion, Gottlieb cannot claim to
    have had any reasonable expectation to the contrary.           Guldseth, 45
    F.4th at 537–38.     The covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    therefore does not secure this benefit that the contract never
    guaranteed in the first place.         Nor did Amica do anything to
    deprive Gottlieb of the reasonably expected benefits of the policy.
    Gottlieb lists several other acts that he contends show
    that Amica breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing.   As an initial matter, some of these contentions have no
    footing in either the complaint or the response filed in the
    district court to the motion to dismiss, so those arguments are
    - 11 -
    not part of our review of the dismissal of Gottlieb's claim for
    breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
    But the rest merely restate Gottlieb's claim that the contract
    guaranteed a specific methodology to set his renewal coverage
    limit, and that Amica failed to follow that methodology.                  Having
    rejected the first premise, we also reject the second.
    In particular, we do not find (as Gottlieb argues) that
    any    contractual   language        obligated    Amica   to   set    Gottlieb's
    coverage limit for an upcoming policy year based only on "current"
    inflation (i.e., not based on any projection of future inflation).
    Gottlieb points to the language in the endorsement allowing Amica
    to increase the Coverage A limit based on "any increases in
    inflation," but the word "current" does not appear in this excerpt.
    He also points to the Digest, which he says requires Amica to issue
    the Coverage A limit in accordance with "'current' reconstruction
    costs."    But as we have already concluded, the Digest does not
    require Amica to do anything.           And the absence of any restriction
    on    Amica's   ability   to   use    future     projections   in    calculating
    coverage limits makes sense, because Amica must insure the covered
    dwelling up to the end of the coming policy year.                   So we cannot
    say it was a breach either of the contract or the implied covenant
    of good faith and fair dealing for Amica to set the limit using a
    projection for the anticipated year.
    - 12 -
    Finally, Gottlieb contends that Amica sold him illusory
    coverage that he could never use.              We will address this argument
    in analyzing Gottlieb's remaining claims, to which we turn next.
    We begin with Gottlieb's claims for unjust enrichment and money
    had and received, and then move to his claim for unfair trade
    practices in violation of Chapter 93A.
    C.
    Gottlieb's        equitable        claims     must     fail   as     well.
    Massachusetts law "does not allow litigants to override an express
    contract by arguing unjust enrichment."                Reed v. Zipcar, Inc., 
    883 F. Supp. 2d 329
    , 334 (D. Mass. 2012) (quoting Platten v. HG Bermuda
    Exempted Ltd., 
    437 F.3d 118
    , 130 (1st Cir. 2006)); Guldseth, 45
    F.4th at 541 (unjust enrichment not available as a remedy when a
    valid contract governs the relationship between the parties and
    sets out their obligations).           This also applies to money had and
    received   claims,      which   have     "the    same     elements"      as   unjust
    enrichment,     but    are   limited     to    enrichment       by   money    or   its
    equivalent.     Jelmoli Holding, Inc. v. Raymond James Fin. Servs.,
    Inc., 
    470 F.3d 14
    , 17 n.2 (1st Cir. 2006).                      Despite Gottlieb's
    argument   to    the    contrary,      the     policy     plainly     governs      the
    relationship between the parties and the subject matter of the
    dispute (Gottlieb's premium), so Gottlieb's equitable claims are
    foreclosed here.
    - 13 -
    D.
    That leaves Gottlieb's Chapter 93A claim.                  Chapter 93A
    prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices in trade and
    commerce.       In determining whether a practice is unfair, courts
    look to "(1) whether the practice . . . is within at least the
    penumbra    of    some    common-law,    statutory,      or   other    established
    concept    of    unfairness;     (2) whether     it    is   immoral,    unethical,
    oppressive,       or     unscrupulous;     [and]       (3) whether     it    causes
    substantial      injury     to   consumers       (or    competitors     or   other
    businessmen)." Mass. Eye & Ear Infirmary v. QLT Phototherapeutics,
    Inc., 
    412 F.3d 215
    , 243 (1st Cir. 2005) (alterations in original)
    (quoting PMP Assocs., Inc. v. Globe Newspaper Co., 
    321 N.E.2d 915
    ,
    917 (Mass. 1975)).         Courts consider "[a]n act or practice . . .
    deceptive if it 'has the capacity to mislead consumers, acting
    reasonably under the circumstances, to act differently" than they
    otherwise would have.        Tomasella v. Nestlé USA, Inc., 
    962 F.3d 60
    ,
    71 (1st Cir. 2020) (quoting Aspinall v. Philip Morris Cos., 
    813 N.E.2d 476
    , 488 (Mass. 2004)).           To succeed on a claim based on a
    deceptive act or practice, a consumer must show "(1) a deceptive
    act or practice on the part of the seller; (2) an injury or loss
    suffered by the consumer; and (3) a causal connection between the
    seller's deceptive act or practice and the consumer's injury."
    
    Id.
     (quoting Casavant v. Norwegian Cruise Line, Ltd., 
    919 N.E.2d 165
    , 169 (Mass. App. Ct. 2009)).              Importantly, in order to obtain
    - 14 -
    relief under this statute for either an unfair or a deceptive act,
    plaintiffs must show that they were injured by the conduct at
    issue, and that the conduct caused some loss beyond the mere fact
    that a violation occurred.   Shaulis v. Nordstrom, 
    865 F.3d 1
    , 10
    (1st Cir. 2017); Hershenow v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co. of Bos.,
    
    840 N.E.2d 526
    , 528 (Mass. 2006).
    The only arguably deceptive statement by Amica to which
    Gottlieb points is Amica's statement that "[r]econstruction costs
    have risen steadily since our last survey of your home."   Gottlieb
    claims that Amica's consultant reported a decrease in costs rather
    than an increase, rendering false the statement that costs had
    risen, and the district court credited this statement in its order
    on the motion granting summary judgment.   Thus, Amica's statement
    in the cover letter that reconstruction costs had "risen steadily"
    may well have been deceptive.3
    3  Gottlieb also claims that Amica's statements in the cover
    letter   to   him  would   violate   Massachusetts   General   Laws
    Chapter 176D, § 3(1)(a), which classifies "[m]isrepresent[ing] the
    benefits, advantages, conditions, or terms of any insurance
    policy" as an "unfair or deceptive act[] or practice[] in the
    business of insurance." The district court correctly noted that
    there is no private right of action for violations of Chapter 176D,
    § 3(1)(a). However, courts have held that plaintiffs may "attempt
    to state a claim under Chapter 93A, section 2 by alluding to
    conduct that is impermissible under chapter 176D." United States
    ex rel. Metric Elec., Inc. v. Enviroserve, Inc., 
    301 F. Supp. 2d 56
    , 70 (D. Mass. 2003) (quoting M. DeMatteo Constr. Co. v. Century
    Indem. Co., 
    182 F. Supp. 2d 146
    , 163 (D. Mass. 2001)); see also M.
    Dematteo Constr. Co., 
    182 F. Supp. 2d at 160
     (concluding that
    although there is no private right of action under Chapter 176D,
    that does not end the inquiry as to whether a plaintiff can recover
    - 15 -
    However, Gottlieb has not shown that he was injured by
    this statement.     He argues that he has been injured because the
    higher coverage he purchased was illusory.            Amica, he claims,
    overestimated     his   reconstruction     costs   and    charged    him   a
    correspondingly higher premium, but would only ever pay actual
    reconstruction    costs   far   below   this   overestimate.    It    could
    therefore pocket the difference, enriching itself and harming
    Gottlieb.    He asserts that Amica would never pay the full amount
    of the coverage limit, because the actual reconstruction costs
    would never be that high. In so arguing, however, Gottlieb assumes
    that Amica's very first estimate of reconstruction costs was
    correct, and that such costs not only decreased during the year
    covered by that policy (or, at the very least, increased less than
    the increase represented by the new coverage limit), but could not
    possibly rise during the year to be covered by the second policy.
    Without evidence that such a risk was essentially nonexistent at
    the time of contracting, he cannot prove that insurance coverage
    protecting him from that risk was illusory.              And Gottlieb has
    failed to show that he was entitled to a policy accounting only
    for changes in costs in the previous year, as opposed to changes
    through the upcoming year for which he would be insured.
    under Chapter 93A for a violation of Chapter 176D). However, we
    decline to determine whether Amica's statements would violate
    Chapter 176D, § 3(1)(a) because Gottlieb's failure to show injury
    would nonetheless prove fatal to a Chapter 93A claim.
    - 16 -
    Gottlieb attempts to sidestep the gap in his evidence by
    claiming   that   the   approximately    $16    increase   in   his   premium
    resulting from the allegedly wrongfully calculated increase in his
    Coverage A liability limit represents his damages from Amica's
    wrongful acts.     But this merely states the amount by which his
    premium increased due to the higher coverage limit.             It does not
    itself show why Amica's estimate was so high that it would never
    have to pay the full amount of the coverage limit.
    The    closest   Gottlieb    comes    to   estimating   what   his
    coverage limit should have been is to assume that his "correct"
    reconstruction costs were the original coverage limit, to which he
    adds "any increase due to inflation allowed under the terms of the
    Policy."    But as we have already explained, Gottlieb is not
    entitled to such a calculation under the Policy.           And there is no
    evidence that this calculation would have produced the "true" cost
    of reconstruction.
    Gottlieb also points to Amica's rate filing with the
    Massachusetts Department of Insurance, which reported a "premium
    trend factor" of approximately 1%.         At oral argument, Gottlieb's
    counsel argued that this estimate premium trend factor represented
    inflation, and he pointed out that it was far lower than the amount
    by which Gottlieb's premium had increased.              This argument was
    raised for the first time on reply, and thus, absent exceptional
    circumstances, we consider it waived.          See, e.g., Alamo-Hornedo v.
    - 17 -
    Puig, 
    745 F.3d 578
    , 582 (1st Cir. 2014).     We see no exceptional
    circumstances here.   Moreover, Amica's counsel explained that the
    premium trend factor measures Amica's losses across the board,
    rather than general reconstruction cost increases or inflation.
    We cannot find any indication in the record that this premium trend
    factor estimates inflation.    And, in any event, evidence that
    replacement costs may have increased less than Amica's estimate
    does not suffice to show that Gottlieb's coverage limit was so
    high as to provide illusory coverage.
    Finally, to the extent Gottlieb argues that he was
    fraudulently induced to renew the policy based on the deceptive
    statement that reconstruction costs had risen, he has not pointed
    to any evidence that he would have done anything differently, such
    as seeking alternative coverage or forgoing coverage altogether
    absent this statement.
    In sum, we are unable to conclude that Amica by deception
    sold Gottlieb coverage he could never use.   He has thus not shown
    that he was injured as required for a 93A claim.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the orders of the
    district court.
    - 18 -