On March 24, 2026, in Arana v. Molta, plaintiff Isabel Arana brought an action under Chapter 93A, Section 9, seeking to recover for personal injuries she sustained after falling through the pool deck of a vacation rental property in Dennis, Massachusetts. The property is owned by Robert Molta and Catherine Molta. The plaintiff also sued WeNeedAVacation.com, LLC (WNAV), the website the Moltas used to list their property. The U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts granted summary judgment in defendants’ favor on the Chapter 93A claims. This decision reinforces several limits on Chapter 93A, including statutory inapplicability, the requirement of non-speculative injury and causation, and the protection afforded to online platforms under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

First, the court rejected the plaintiff’s theory that the defendants violated Chapter 93A by failing to comply with the $1 million liability insurance requirement under Massachusetts General Law 175, Section 4F. That decision arose from the Moltas’ decision to enter into a 32‑day rental agreement, which was structured to avoid the COVID‑era ban on “short‑term rentals” of 31 days or fewer and therefore fell outside Section 4F. As a result, the insurance mandate in Section 4F (requiring insurance of not less than $1,000,000) did not apply as a matter of law, and any Chapter 93A claim predicated on failing to comply with that statute failed. Also, the court held that, even if Section 4F applied, the plaintiff failed to establish the required causal connection between the alleged statutory noncompliance and her injuries. Her physical injuries from falling through the deck were not caused by the amount of insurance coverage maintained (or not maintained), and her theory of economic harm (based on the possibility of a future verdict beyond $500,000 that would exceed the available insurance coverage) was deemed impermissibly speculative. The court emphasized that Chapter 93A requires a concrete, non-speculative injury, not a contingent or inchoate risk of future loss.

Second, the court granted summary judgment to WNAV on the plaintiff’s Chapter 93A claim alleging misrepresentations and omissions concerning the safety of the pool deck. The court held that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act barred any state-law liability against WNAV based on statements or photographs provided by homeowners in online listings. Because WNAV did not draft, edit, or contribute to the content of the listing here, it could not be treated as the publisher or speaker of that information. This ruling foreclosed any attempt to repackage alleged listing inaccuracies as Chapter 93A violations against the hosting platform.

Third, the court addressed whether WNAV’s own website statements — including generalized marketing language about providing “professional” services and helping homeowners be “effective and responsible landlords” — could constitute actionable deception under Chapter 93A. It concluded that no reasonable jury could interpret such broad, promotional statements as representations that WNAV had inspected or verified the structural integrity of the Moltas’ pool deck. The court characterized these statements as general descriptions of services, not specific factual assurances about the safety of any particular property. Likewise, the plaintiff’s omission theory failed because there was no evidence that WNAV knew of any defect in the pool deck. Generally, there is no liability under Chapter 93A for failure to disclose information a party does not possess and did not have a duty to obtain. In short, the court held that the record lacked evidence of any deceptive act, unfair practice, or knowing omission by WNAV.

Taken together, the decision highlights several principles in Chapter 93A litigation:

(1) Not every alleged regulatory violation supports a 93A claim, i.e., there is no “per se” injury under Section 9.
(2) Causation and actual injury remain indispensable elements, and speculative economic theories will not suffice.
(3) Generalized marketing statements, absent specific factual misrepresentations or knowledge of undisclosed defects, do not rise to the level of unfair or deceptive acts.

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Photo of David G. Thomas David G. Thomas

David advises on individual and corporate disputes during the entire dispute-resolution life cycle, including through strategic negotiation, mediation, other forms of alternative dispute resolution, and adjudication through trial when needed or required. David has experience with many subject matters, including unfair or deceptive…

David advises on individual and corporate disputes during the entire dispute-resolution life cycle, including through strategic negotiation, mediation, other forms of alternative dispute resolution, and adjudication through trial when needed or required. David has experience with many subject matters, including unfair or deceptive business practices disputes in individual and putative class action settings, including under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 93A—the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act. Boston magazine selected David as a “Top Lawyer—Class Action” in 2022 and 2023. Also, David works with clients on avoiding disputes proactively by identifying and ameliorating existing or potential dispute risks in business policies and practices.

Photo of Angela C. Bunnell Angela C. Bunnell

Angela Bunnell is a member of the Litigation Practice in Greenberg Traurig’s Boston office. Her practice focuses on defending companies against unfair or deceptive business practices claims in individual and putative class action settings. She also represents companies and individuals responding to civil…

Angela Bunnell is a member of the Litigation Practice in Greenberg Traurig’s Boston office. Her practice focuses on defending companies against unfair or deceptive business practices claims in individual and putative class action settings. She also represents companies and individuals responding to civil investigative demands under various regulatory schemes, including federal and state false claims acts and related enforcement actions brought by federal and state regulatory agencies. Angela also has experience with complex eDiscovery matters, and has been responsible for preservation, collection, review, and production of ESI in state and federal lawsuits. Angela also has experience in representing clients in connection with data security and privacy matters.

Before joining the firm, Angela served as a federal law clerk, providing valuable insight and understanding of the court system and litigation process.

Photo of Abby Druhot Abby Druhot

Abby M. Druhot is a member of the Litigation Practice in Greenberg Traurig’s Boston office. Abby represents clients in federal and state litigation and government and internal investigations. She has experience defending companies against unfair or deceptive business practices claims in individual and…

Abby M. Druhot is a member of the Litigation Practice in Greenberg Traurig’s Boston office. Abby represents clients in federal and state litigation and government and internal investigations. She has experience defending companies against unfair or deceptive business practices claims in individual and putative class action settings. She also represents companies responding to civil investigative demands under various regulatory schemes and managing their investigations. In addition, Abby has worked on commercial litigation matters involving trade secrets, restrictive covenants, employment matters, and complex commercial disputes.