
The High Stakes Ruling on the Massachusetts ACV Total Loss Valuation Method
In a significant win for the Massachusetts auto insurance industry, Justice Kenneth W. Salinger of the Superior Court has issued a decisive ruling in Parsons v. The Commerce Insurance Company. The decision, handed down on March 13, 2026, effectively ends a years-long legal effort to transform a routine total loss dispute into a sweeping class action. For property and casualty professionals, this case affirmed the standard “Actual Cash Value” (ACV) calculation methods subject to an appeal filed by the losing Plaintiff.
A “Gifted” Total Loss Leads to Litigation
The dispute began following a June 2018 collision involving Harold Parsons and his 2014 Ford Focus SE. Commerce deemed the vehicle a total loss and offered an ACV of $10,258 plus sales tax. This figure was reached by weighting a CCC Market Valuation Report at 75% and a NADA retail value at 25%.
Parsons—represented in negotiations by his father—rejected the offer, demanding as much as $15,141.88. The elder Parsons, known for a long-standing crusade against CCC valuations, argued that the insurer’s methodology was fundamentally flawed.
The Failed Class Action Bid
Before reaching this final judgment, Parsons attempted to certify a class of all similarly situated plaintiffs. The Court denied that motion nine months ago, ruling that determining whether Commerce paid less than ACV requires an “individualized inquiry” for every single vehicle based on its specific age, mileage, and condition. This established early on that ACV claims are rarely suitable for class-wide adjudication.
Defending the CCC Report
A central pillar of the Plaintiff’s strategy was a motion to strike the CCC Market Valuation Report as “inadmissible hearsay”. CCC reports are ubiquitous in total loss auto claims, using local market data to set vehicle values. Critics like the Plaintiff claim the reports undervalue vehicle losses.
In this case, the Court summarily rejected the hearsay objection, noting:
Regulatory Compliance: Massachusetts adjusters are legally required to consider “retail book value” and the “cost of purchase of an available motor vehicle” under 211 C.M.R. § 133.05(1).
Hearsay Exception: The report was not offered to prove the “truth” of the vehicle’s value, but rather to show the information the insurer relied upon during the adjustment process.
The “Price Paid” Irony: Under Factor (b) of the state regulations, an insurer must consider the price paid for the vehicle. Because the car was a gift to Parsons, a strict application of this factor would have likely reduced his payout.
Summary Judgment: The Plaintiff’s Missing Evidence
The Court’s decision to grant summary judgment for Commerce boiled down to a simple evidentiary failure: Parsons offered no expert testimony or competent evidence that his car was actually worth more than Commerce paid.
The Sport Package “Error”: Parsons tried to inflate the NADA value by $850 by claiming his car had a “Sport Package” and aluminum wheels.
This gambit failed as Commerce’s evidence showed that all 2014 Focus SE models had those wheels by default, and his specific vehicle lacked the Sport Package entirely.
Legal Fees as a Chapter 93A “Injury”
In a final attempt to salvage the case, Parsons argued he could prevail under G.L. c. 93A, even without proving he was underpaid, claiming his legal fees themselves constituted “damages”. The Court called this argument “meritless,” reaffirming that a plaintiff must prove an actual “adverse consequence or loss” caused by the insurer before they can collect a dime in attorney’s fees.
The Statutory Remedy: M.G.L. c. 175, § 191A
Perhaps the most notable procedural takeaway involves the “customary and usual” way these disputes are supposed to be handled. By statute and policy, disputes over auto losses should be resolved through the formal appraisal process outlined in M.G.L. c. 175, § 191A. In this instance, Parsons bypassed this mandatory procedure in favor of the courthouse, and Commerce, perhaps seeking a broader legal precedent, did not move to enforce the stay for appraisal.
Appeal Filed
True to the “crusade” nature of this litigation, the battle has not ended with Justice Salinger’s March 13 order. On March 26, 2026, Plaintiff Harold Parsons filed a Notice of Appeal, seeking to have the Massachusetts Appeals Court overturn the grant of summary judgment. This move signals that the Plaintiff’s side is prepared to test the Superior Court’s reasoning on the CCC reports and the Chapter 93A injury requirement at the appellate level. For the insurance industry, this means that while the specific threat of a class action in this case has been neutralized for now, the final word on these common total loss valuation practices may yet be written by a higher court.
Final Takeaway: A Strategic Win For Auto Insurers
While this case may seem like a dispute over a few thousand dollars, for Commerce, it was a battle over the integrity of its valuation system. Given the long litigation history of the Plaintiff’s father and his company, Source One—a sub-prime auto finance company—Commerce had every reason to seek a definitive judicial ruling.
Absent an adverse decision by the Appeals Court, the Superior Court decision for Commerce has affirmed that as long as an insurer follows the four-factor test in 211 C.M.R. § 133.05 – (a) the retail book value; (b) the price paid plus prior improvements, less depreciation; (c) the decrease in value from prior unrelated damage; and (d) the actual cost of purchase of an available vehicle of like kind and quality – and provides a reasonable total loss valuation, they are on solid ground.

Owen Gallagher
Insurance Coverage Legal Expert/Co-Founder & Publisher of Agency Checklists
Interested in contacting me? Call me directly at 617-598-3801.