MEMORANDUM
This action arises out of the sale, resale, and eventual crash of an Agusta A109 helicopter. Defendant Costruzioni Aeronautiche Giovanni Agusta S.p.A. (“CAGA”) is the Italian manufacturer of the helicopter, and defendant Agusta Aviation Corporation (“AAC”) 1 is its subsidiary responsible for marketing, distribution and support of CAGA products in North America. AAC sold the helicopter to co-defendant Hydroplanes, Inc., 2 who in turn sold it to the plaintiff, Boston Helicopter Charter, Inc. (“Boston Helicopter”). Boston Helicopter *367 and the individuals injured in the accident 3 filed this action against all three defendants. Hydroplanes then filed a cross-claim against CAGA and AAC for indemnity. CAGA and AAC responded with a cross-claim against Hydroplanes for indemnity and contribution, alleging negligence against Hydroplanes in its maintenance and operation of the helicopter. The case is currently before this Court on AAC’s and CAGA’s motion for partial summary judgment on Boston Helicopter’s warranty claims, and on Hydroplanes’ motion for summary judgment on its claim seeking indemnity from AAC and CAGA.
I.
The following facts are undisputed, except where otherwise indicated. Defendant AAC sold the 109A helicopter to Hydroplanes on May 4, 1984 for $1,000,000.00. Hydroplanes did not take delivery of the helicopter until July 26, 1984. The purchase agreement between AAC and Hydroplanes contained the following warranty:
6. Warranty
a. New Equipment. The Equipment is purchased subject to Seller’s standard warranty which is as follows:
Seller hereby warrants to the original purchaser only each new helicopter and part thereof sold by Seller to be free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service, Seller’s obligation under this warranty being limited to replacing or repairing such part at its designated place of business, with the charges payable by Purchaser for such repair or replacement to be prorated for hours of use against the established life of the part or 2,000 hours, whichever is the lesser (with no charges being payable to Purchaser in the event of repair or replacement within the first 500 hours of use), provided that such part shall have been returned to Seller’s designated place of business, with transportation charges prepaid, within 1,000 hours of operation or one year, whichever shall first occur, after delivery of such part to the original purchaser, and provided further that Seller’s examination shall disclose, to Seller’s satisfaction, such part to have been defective. THIS WARRANTY IS GIVEN EXPRESSLY AND IN PLACE OF ALL OTHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND THIS WARRANTY IS THE ONLY WARRANTY MADE BY SELLER OR THE AGUSTA GROUP. The obligations of Seller under this warranty are limited to the repair of helicopter parts as provided herein and liability is excluded for incidental or consequential damages, including without limitation, damage to the helicopter or other property, and costs of expenses for commercial losses or lost profits due to loss of use of grounding of the helicopter or otherwise.
The 500 hour period for free replacement was substituted by the parties in lieu of a standard 200 hour provision. Moreover, the agreement between AAC and Hydroplanes provided that the warranty was transferrable. 4
More than one year later, on October 31, 1985, Hydroplanes entered into a purchase and sale agreement through which it agreed to sell the helicopter to the plaintiff, Boston Helicopter, for approximately $875,-000.00. 5 Paragraph 141 of the purchase and sale agreement between Hydroplanes and plaintiff provided for the transfer of the warranty to plaintiff. This provision read as follows:
Seller agrees that it shall be a condition of closing that Seller shall deliver to Buyer at closing all documentation necessary to transfer to Buyer the extended facto *368 ry warranty, on which there are approximately 200 hours of Aircraft operation time remaining, which extended factory warranty is equivalent to the factory warranty offered with a new aircraft of this type and model. Seller agrees, at the time of closing, to deliver to Buyer such evidence as is reasonably required by Buyer to satisfy Buyer that the transfer of warranty will be recognized by the Agusta Aviation Corporation. 6
In accordance with its obligation under this paragraph of the purchase and sale agreement, Hydroplanes executed a document by which it authorized AAC to transfer the balance of the warranty to plaintiff. This document, dated November 19, 1985, stated that the balance of the warranty as of that date was “approximately 200 hours.” At the bottom of the same document, however, the following was written: “Balance of Warranty at November 19, 1985 is 185.1 hours.” A representative of AAC initialed the document, indicating that the “Assignment of Warranty” had been “Confirmed & Accepted.” The plaintiff took delivery of the helicopter on that same day. Plaintiff contends that it never received a copy of the warranty; for purposes of this motion, this Court assumes that such is the case.
The plaintiff did, however, make use of this warranty. By a letter dated January 10, 1986, plaintiff notified AAC of its appointment of North Atlantic Air, Inc. as its warranty claims agent. ■ According to the affidavit of James Minogue, the customer service manager and warranty administrator, plaintiff made 33 claims from January 10, 1986 until December 30, 1986. The claim forms have a place to note the number of hours the helicopter had been in flight. It appears that AAC honored one claim when the helicopter had a total aircraft operation time of 504 hours. In addition, on several of these claims forms, although CAGA had made a notation that “the warranty has expired due to calendar limits,” AAC honored the claim under what it referred to on the forms as the “AAC Agreement,” or “AAC Special Warranty.” (See Defendants’ Exhibit 7).
The accident took place on January 13, 1987, when the helicopter had a total operation time of 566.8 hours. According to the factual report of the National Transportation Safety Board, the helicopter experienced a tail rotor blade failure shortly after liftoff from the helipad while hovering at twenty-five feet. The rotor blade that failed had a certified expected life of 1,400 hours. A certified expected life refers to the period of time that the certifying authorities permit the part to remain in use. (See Plaintiff’s Exhibit L, Deposition of Paolo Ferreri at 115). The pilot attempted to set the helicopter down on the helipad, but made a hard landing. According to an estimate prepared by the defendants, it would cost $1,015,447.90 to repair the helicopter.
II.
The first motion to be addressed is that by AAC and CAGA for partial summary judgment on Counts VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII, LXXVIII and LXXVIX of the plaintiff’s amended complaint, which allege the following claims: breach of express warranty by AAC and CAGA; breach of implied warranty by AAC and CAGA; breach of warranty of fitness for a particular purpose by AAC and CAGA; failure of the warranty to achieve its essential purpose against AAC only; and violation of Mass. Gen.L. ch. 93A against AAC and CAGA. Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
A. Express Warranty
Article two of the Uniform Commercial Code states that express warranties may be created by any affirmation of fact or promise, any description of the goods, or any sample or model. Mass.Gen.L.Ann. ch. 106, § 2-313 (West 1990). In this case, the plaintiff bases its claim for breach of express warranty on the warranty that Hydroplanes transferred to it. (Plaintiff’s Answer to Defendants’ Interrogatory No. 4). In addressing defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the first task is to determine if the express warranty was still in force, or if it had expired by its terms before the crash.
It therefore becomes necessary to interpret the following language contained in paragraph 6 of the warranty:
... Seller’s obligation under this warranty being limited to replacing or repairing such part at its designated place of business, with the charges payable by Purchaser for such repair or replacement to be prorated for hours of use against the established life of the part or 2,000 hours, whichever is the lesser (with no charges being payable to Purchaser in the event of repair or replacement within the first 500 hours of use), provided that such part shall have been returned to Seller’s designated place of business, with transportation charges prepaid, within 1,000 hours of operation or one year, whichever shall first occur, after delivery of such part ...
Without a doubt, this single-sentence paragraph is unartfully drafted. Defendants argue that the extended component time warranty of 500 hours ran concurrently with a standard warranty providing for proration of replacement costs. Thus, according to defendants, the plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of the proration formula for 1,000 hours or one year, whichever occurred first, but would receive free repair or replacement for 500 hours regardless of the one year limitation. Put another way, defendants contend that the clause in paragraph 6 beginning with the word “provided,” does not apply to the 500 hour free repair-and-replace clause which is set forth parenthetically. Thus, the defendants argue, because the helicopter crashed at 566.8 hours, neither the standard nor the extended warranty was in effect.
Not surprisingly, plaintiff puts forth a different interpretation of the warranty. In fact, plaintiff has proposed two different interpretations. In its first interpretation, plaintiff takes what would appear to be a pro-defendant position. Plaintiff maintains that the 1,000 hours/one year limitation applies to both the applicability of the pro-ration formula and the 500 hour free repair-or-replacement clause. Having argued that the warranty had expired by its terms due to the expiration of one year, plaintiff contends that by allowing for the assignment of the expired warranty from Hydroplanes to plaintiff on November 19, 1985 (more than one year after delivery), and by honoring warranty claims after one year had expired, defendants waived the one year restriction set out in its warranty. Plaintiff’s second reading of the' warranty is that each part was under warranty for the certified life of the part, which is 1,400 hours for the tail rotor blade.
To resolve this dispute concerning the meaning of the warranty, this Court must examine fundamental principles of contract interpretation. It is well-settled under Massachusetts law that the construe
*370
tion of an unambiguous contract is a question of law reserved for the court.
Boston Edison v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
In some instances, however, where a contract is ambiguous and extrinsic evidence is used, a factual question may create a proper case for a jury regarding the meaning of a contract.
Atwood v. Boston,
Under the framework described above, the first step in construing the contract is to determine, as a matter of law, if the warranty is ambiguous.
Boston Edison,
In construing the paragraph at issue, general rules of grammatical construction apply.
Deerskin Trading Post, Inc. v. Syencer Press, Inc.,
As part of that clause, the parenthetical is modified by the “provided” clause, and is therefore subject to the one year limitation. This reading of the warranty is consistent with the well-established rule of grammatical construction that “a modifying clause is confined to the last antecedent unless there is something in the subject matter or dominant purpose which requires a different interpretation.”
Id.
at 123,
Having determined that the warranty had already expired at the time of the crash, it is clear that plaintiff’s claims based on express warranty are barred absent evidence that the one year durational limitation was inapplicable. The plaintiff has characterized its argument as one of waiver. To support its waiver argument, plaintiff points first to the fact that the defendants acknowledged the assignment of the warranty even though the one year period had already expired. Additionally, the plaintiff argues that the defendants waived the one-year limitation by honoring more than thirty of plaintiff’s warranty claims submitted outside the one year warranty period.
Section 2-209 of the Uniform Commercial Code governs questions of modification, rescission and waiver. Mass.Gen.L. Ann. ch. 106, § 2-209 (West 1990). That section reads as follows:
(1) An agreement modifying a contract within this Article needs no consideration to be binding.
(2) A signed agreement which excludes modification or rescission except by a signed writing cannot be otherwise modified or rescinded, but except as between merchants such a requirement on a form supplied by the merchant must be separately signed by the other party.
(3) The requirements of the Statute of Frauds section of this Article (section 2-201) must be satisfied if the contract as modified is within its provisions.
(4) Although an attempt at modification or rescission does not satisfy the requirements of subsection (2) or (3) it can operate as a waiver.
(5) A party who has made a waiver affecting an executory portion of the *372 contract may retract the waiver by reasonable notification received by the other party that strict performance will be required of any term waived, unless the retraction would be unjust in view of a material change of position in reliance on the waiver.
Id. The Code then looks to state law for the definitions of waiver and modification.
According to Massachusetts law, “waiver” is the voluntary relinquishment of a known right.
St. John Bros. Co. v. Falkson,
It is possible to locate precedent that supports applying the concept of waiver to warranty durational limitations.
See Clark v. International Harvester Co.,
To view the warranty, or even the delimited term which is part and parcel thereof, as a privilege or benefit enjoyed by the defendant is to turn the actual relationship of rights and obligations established by the purchase agreement on its head. Thus, it would seem that the defendant’s conduct ... could not have amounted to a waiver.
Id.
Plaintiff’s argument, therefore, must not be that the one year limitation was waived, but rather, that the one year warranty was extended or modified.
See National Util. Serv., Inc. v. Whirlpool Corp.,
Nonetheless, it is clear as a matter of law that, to the extent the letter extended the warranty beyond one year, it did so for the limited period of either 185.1 or 200 hours. Given that the helicopter had logged approximately 315 aircraft hours at the time it was sold to plaintiff, the modification or extension would mean that the warranty was in force until the helicopter reached 500.1 or 515 hours, depending on which of the two figures in the November 19 letter was used. This duration would appear to be in accordance with plaintiffs expectations, given the fact that plaintiffs own purchase and sale agreement with Hydroplanes stated that there were approximately 200 hours remaining on the warranty. (Aircraft Purchase and Sale Agreement, ¶ 14.L).
Plaintiff makes much of the fact that AAC honored a warranty claim on October 2, 1986, when the helicopter had a total of 504 aircraft hours.
10
Looking to the higher figure of 200 hours, this claim at 504 hours fell within the warranty period as modified. Even assuming that the warranty expired at 500 hours, there is no issue of material fact for a jury to decide. As a matter of law, no reasonable jury could find that the defendants extended or modified the warranty by honoring one claim approximately four hours after the warranty had expired. In fact, refusing to honor such a claim would clearly be an unsound business practice in terms of cultivating goodwill.
See
Annotation,
Seller’s Waiver of Sales Contract Provision Limiting Time Within Which Buyer May Object to or Return Goods or Article for Defects or Failure to Comply with Warranty or Representations,
B. Failure of Essential Purpose
Count X of the amended complaint, asserted only against AAC, alleges that the warranty’s remedy failed of its essential purpose. Article two specifically permits parties to modify the contractual remedies provided in the Code. See Mass.Gen.L. Ann. ch. 106, § 2-719(l)(a) (West 1990). In fact, section 2-719(l)(a) specifically permits limitations such as the repair-or-replace limitation found in the warranty at issue here. Nonetheless, section 2-719(2) cautions that “[wjhere circumstances cause an exclusive or limited remedy to fail of its essential purpose, remedy may be had as provided in this subchapter.” Mass.Gen.L. Ann. ch. 106, § 2-719(2) (West 1990). Whether a remedy has failed of its essential purpose is a question of fact.
Courts have held that a repair-or-replace remedy fails of its essential purpose where the “seller is either unwilling or unable to conform the goods to the contract.”
Chatlos Sys., Inc. v. National Cash Register Corp.,
Section 2-719 must be examined, however, in light of this Court’s determination that the warranty was limited in duration and had expired by its terms at the time of the crash. There is some authority for the proposition that a warranty fails of its essential purpose according to section 2-719(2) where the defects were latent, and therefore could not have been discovered during the limited period of the warranty.
See, e.g., Ritchie Enter. v. Honeywell Bull, Inc.,
This is certainly not a case in which an exclusive or limited remedy failed of its essential purpose. To the contrary, the warranty provisions here operated just as intended, allocating the risk of loss between the parties both before and after the warranty expired. The transformer operated satisfactorily long after the warranty period had run. A purchaser cannot claim that a warranty provision has failed of its essential purpose merely because a potential claim does not arise until after the warranty period has expired.
Arkwright-Boston Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co.,
The issue therefore is whether the durational limitation is unconscionable under Mass.Gen.L.Ann. ch. 106, § 2-302.
Hart Eng’g Co.,
Against this background, it cannot be said that the durational limitation of the repair-or-replace warranty was unconscionable. First, the commercial, as opposed to consumer, setting is significant, as is the fact that Boston Helicopter, a business entity, was represented by counsel when it purchased the Agusta helicopter. (See Affidavit of Gary P. Lilienthal, Esq.). Likewise, plaintiff specifically negotiated the transfer of the warranty to it, suggesting that plaintiff was not the uninformed buyer that section 2-302 seeks to protect against unfair surprise. Second, plaintiff has not even argued that the limitation was unreasonable, or that the helicopter when originally sold had a latent defect; plaintiff has merely suggested that the fracture in the tail rotor blade began to develop within the warranty period. Certainly, one could find that most product failures secretly began within the warranty period. Third, it is significant that paragraph 6a, in disclaiming consequential and incidental damages, specifically mentioned “damage to helicopter” as not being recoverable. This explicit statement concerning the possibility that a defective part could damage the helicopter cuts against any argument that there has been any “unfair surprise.” Similarly, defendants’ warranty guide, in demonstrating how the proration formula would work, gives the following example: “Suppose that a tail rotor blade, whose cost is approximately $1,200.00 and retirement life is 1200 hours has failed after 400 hours of operation, the recognized credit would be____” (Plaintiff’s Exhibit Q, Guide to Agusta Commercial Warranty U 9). The possibility of a failure of the tail rotor blade was, therefore, not an “unfair surprise.” Plaintiff would have this Court find such terms inapplicable and unconscionable due to plaintiff’s failure to obtain a copy of the warranty. As will be discussed in more depth below, the fact that plaintiff did not obtain a copy of the warranty has no bearing on the applicability of its terms to plaintiff nor on the reasonableness of the limitation period.
There are other factors weighing against a finding of unconseionability. The period of 1,000 flight hours or one year, is ample, and typical of time limits upheld in other cases involving aircrafts.
See, e.g., Damin Aviation Corp. v. Sikorsky Aircraft, Div. of United Technologies Corp.,
C. Implied Warranties
Defendants have also moved for summary judgment on plaintiff’s claims for breach of implied warranties. 12 The relevant part of paragraph 6a, typed in capital letters, reads as follows: “THIS WARRANTY IS GIVEN EXPRESSLY AND IN *376 PLACE OF ALL OTHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES INCLUDING MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND THIS WARRANTY IS THE ONLY WARRANTY MADE BY SELLER OR THE AGUSTA GROUP.” The question is whether this explicit disclaimer acts to bar all of plaintiffs claims based on an implied warranty theory.
The exclusion of implied warranties is governed by Mass.Gen.L. ch. 106, § 2-316. Section 2-316(2) provides in relevant part that “[sjubject to subsection (3), to exclude or modify the implied warranty of merchantability or any part of it the language must mention merchantability and in case of a writing must be conspicuous, and to exclude or modify any implied warranty of fitness the exclusion must be by a writing and conspicuous.” Section 1-201(10) defines conspicuous, stating that “[a] term or clause is conspicuous when it is so written that a reasonable person against whom it is to operate ought to have noticed it.” Mass.Gen.L.Ann. ch. 106, § 1-201(10) (West 1990). Factors to be considered in evaluating the conspicuousness of a disclaimer are the size of the type, the location of the disclaimer clause, capitalization of the relevant language and the sophistication of the contracting parties.
Logan Equip. Corp. v. Simon Aerials, Inc.,
This Court rejects plaintiffs argument that the language was not conspicuous because plaintiff failed to obtain a-copy of the warranty when the warranty was assigned to it by Hydroplanes. Section 2-210 of the UCC recognizes that assignability is normal and permissible in the context of contracts for the sale of goods. Mass.Gen.L.Ann. ch. 106, § 2-210 uniform commercial code comment 1 (West 1990). Warranties are no exception to this policy in favor of assignability.
Gold’n Plump Poultry, Inc. v. Simmons Eng’g Co.,
Having concluded that there was indeed a valid assignment of the warranty, it is clear that the plaintiff is bound by the warranty’s limitations and disclaimers. The weight of the available case law and commentary indicates that a subpurchaser, such as the plaintiff, is subject to any limitations or exclusions contained in the express warranty even though he did not receive a copy of it.
Lecates v. Hertrich Pontiac Buick Co.,
D. Mass.Gen.L. ch. 93A
Defendants also request that judgment be entered in their favor on Counts LXXVIII and LXXVIX, in which plaintiff asserts claims against AAC and CAGA, respectively, for “violations on [sic] G.L. c. 93A and consequential damages predicated on breach of contract, negligence and breach of warranty.”
14
Section 2-719(3) permits parties to limit or exclude consequential damages unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable. Mass.Gen.L. Ann. ch. 106, § 2-719(3) (West 1990).
15
The Supreme Judicial Court has held that in some circumstances a 93A claim may be duplicative of a warranty claim, and therefore, a clause excluding consequential damages can also bar a 93A claim.
Canal Elec. Co.,
406 Mass, at 378-79,
III.
The final issue to be disposed of is defendant/cross-plaintiff Hydroplanes’ motion for summary judgment for indemnity against AAC and CAGA. Relying primarily on two Massachusetts cases, Hydroplanes asserts that it has a tort-based right to indemnity stemming from the disparity in the fault of the parties.
See Stewart v. Roy Bros., Inc.,
For all of the reasons stated above, the motion of defendants AAC and CAGA for partial summary judgment should be allowed on Counts VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII, LXXVIII and LXXVIX. Hydroplanes' motion for summary judgment on its claim for indemnity is premature, and should be denied.
Order accordingly.
Notes
. Agusta Aviation Corporation is currently known as Agusta Aerospace Corporation.
. Hydroplanes was formerly known as B.L. Jet Sales, Inc.
. The individuals’ claims are not involved in the current motion.
. There is nothing in the material submitted by the parties that indicates what, if anything, Hydroplanes paid for this extension from 200 to 500 hours.
. The Aircraft Purchase and Sale Agreement was actually between B.L. Jet Sales (now Hydroplanes) and Claremont Financial Services, Inc. "or its nominee.” Boston Helicopter is listed as the purchaser in the Aircraft Bill of Sale.
. The next paragraph of the purchase and sale agreement provided that “Seller agrees at closing to deliver to Buyer all Aircraft records and logs including ... warranties ... all of which shall be complete, up to date and in compliance with all FAR’s and other applicable regulations.”
. This Court rejects outright plaintiffs unfounded argument that paragraph 6 can be read to extend a warranty for the certified life of the part, which in this case would be 1,400 hours. (See Plaintiffs Memorandum in Opposition at 9). Presumably, plaintiff relies on the following language in the warranty: “charges ... to be prorated for hours of use against the established life of the part or 2,000 hours, whichever is the lesser.” As poorly drafted as paragraph 6 is; it is clear that the language concerning "the established life of the part or 2,000 hours" concerns only the method or formula by which repair and replacement charges would be prorated. It is disingenuous at best for plaintiff to suggest that each part is warranted for its certified life, as argued in its memorandum, or for 2,000 hours, as proposed in plaintiff's statement of material facts.
. Even if this Court were to conclude that the warranty was ambiguous, the extrinsic evidence does not point unequivocally to defendants’ interpretation. First, looking at CAGA’s notation on many of the claim forms that "the warranty [had] expired due to calendar limits,” it would appear that CAGA itself understood the repair- or-replace remedy to be limited to one year. Second, the Minogue affidavit relied on by defendants is itself ambiguous. Defendants rely on this affidavit for the proposition that the 500 hour free repair-or-replace remedy was available outside of one year. Nonetheless, in contradiction of this argument, in paragraph 5, Minogue states that ”[f]or the first 200 hours of operation, repair or replacement was performed free of charge, provided it was within one year" and in paragraph 6, Minogue explains that although the parties changed the 200 hours to 500 hours, all other terms remained the same. (Defendants' Exhibit B, Minogue Affidavit). Presumably, therefore, one of the terms that remained the same was that repairs were free provided they were within one year. In any case, this Court’s decision that the warranty was expired would not be changed, as will be discussed below.
. Plaintiff does not contest that a valid assignment took place by virtue of the November 19, 1985 letter, and the provision in its purchase and sale agreement with B.L. Jet Sales (now Hydroplanes) providing for the transfer of the warranty.
. Plaintiff's argument concerning the claim at 504 hours was made to counter defendants’ argument, discussed above, that the free repair or replace provision ran for 500 hours.
. Plaintiff has not argued a latent defect theory. Plaintiff did, however, argue that the defect in the tail rotor blade began to occur within the warranty period. (Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Opposition at 10). Even viewing this as a latent defect argument, it must be rejected.
. The plaintiffs claims for breach of implied warranties are as follows: Count VIII "Breach of Implied Warranty” by AAC; Count IX "Breach of Warranty of Fitness for a Particular Purpose” by AAC; Count XII "Breach of Implied Warranty” by CAGA; Count XIII "Breach of Warranty of Fitness for a Particular Purpose" by CAGA.
. Likewise, the purchase and sale agreement stated that "[Hydroplanes] agrees at closing to deliver to [plaintiff] all Aircraft records and logs including ... warranties____" (Plaintiffs Exhibit C, Aircraft Purchase and Sale Agreement ¶ 14J).
. Defendants correctly point out that plaintiff, Boston Helicopter, has not asserted any claims against defendants based upon breach of contract or negligence. Thus, breach of warranty would be the only basis for the 93A claim with respect to Boston Helicopter. The individual plaintiffs injured in the crash have asserted negligence claims against AAC and CAGA and in Counts LXXXI and LXXXII assert 93A claims against AAC and CAGA that are predicated, in part, on such negligence claims.
. Section 2-719(3) states that “[consequential damages may be limited or excluded unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable. Limitation of consequential damages for injury to the person in the case of consumer goods is prima facie unconscionable but limitation of damages where the loss is commercial is not.” Mass.Gen.L.Ann. ch. 106, § 2-719(3) (West 1990).
. Hydroplanes filed a motion to strike AAC and CAGA’s opposition to its motion for summary judgment for indemnity, arguing that AAC and CAGA failed to set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. It is Hydroplanes, however, that bears the initial burden of demonstrating the lack of any genuine issue for trial.
Celotex Corp.,
