You are an entrepreneur, fresh from an IPO placing your net worth somewhere in the top one-one-hundredth of one percent. (You’re now an evil top one-one-hundredth of one percenter!) You’ve always had a dream of flying, and so, between efforts at your newest start-up, you take lessons at your local airport to learn how to fly helicopters. Upon receiving your license (and after the appropriate festivities), you stop by the helicopter dealer next door, and purchase a sparkly, brand-new, 5-bladed, hot-rod Hughes MD500 helicopter (with the special two-tone paint job, of course).After signing the papers and being given the keys, you hop in the helicopter, lift off, and begin to climb away—whereupon the tail rotor, which had been installed without safety fasteners, twists off. The helicopter, minus its tail rotor, spins out of control.Your surviving relatives can sue the dealer because:
a. This is an implied warranty from a usage of trade.
b. This is an implied warranty of merchantability.
c. This is an implied warranty of fitness for a specific purpose.
d. This is an express warranty.
e. Your surviving relatives cannot sue the dealer.