You should not include SQL Server in your installation. There are a couple of reasons:
0) You can only distribute SQL Server Express for copyright reasons - not SQL Server full version.
1) They may already have SQL Server installed on the network. If so, then they will presumably want to use that version.
2) If they do have SQL server installed and you start proliferating SQL server Express instances, you are going to annoy the heck out of the database administrator...
3) A single site installation of SQl Server is a lot more likely to be backed up than a number of scattered version under user control.
4) Sql server is quite complex for a "normal" user to install and administer - it is not a good idea!
5) It will destroy the primary advantage of using Sql Server over SqlCE or SQLite - multiuser access. If everyone installs their own copy of SQL server, then you will have multiple copies of your database, each used by a single person. This will cause some confusion, and (depending on how you wrote the original database) may take some considerable effort to combine into a single instance when the problem is realized.
If you must use a multiuser system, then the client should install SQL Server themselves (or you take over DB admin for them and do the installation yourself) - remember that SQL Server is not a cheap product:
SQL Server—Pricing an Licensing | Microsoft[
^] unless of course you want to pay for ityourself?
If you don't need multiple users accessing your database, then switch your code to one of the single user DB engines like SQLite - or even Access - which require no special installation above that required by your application.