Opinion
Introduction
Plаintiff Kathleen Sanchez sued defendant Bally’s Total Fitness Corporation in negligence for injuries sustained during a slide aerobics class. The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment on two separate and independent grounds: (1) plaintiff’s claim was barred by the doctrine of primary assumption of the risk; (2) plaintiff’s claim was barred by a release she executed when she joined the health club five years earlier. We conclude the court properly granted summary judgment pursuant to the terms of the release of liability. We thereforе affirm the judgment.
Factual Background
Plaintiff, a senior real estate officer for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, first joined the health club in June 1990. Her application for membership contained the following clause: “Accidents/Injury: The member *65 agrees that all exercises and use of the fitness centers are undertaken by the member at the sole risk of the member, and that the fitness center shall not be liable for any claims for injuries or damages whatsoever to person or property of the member or of a guest of a member arising out of оr connected with the use of the fitness center. Member agrees to indemnify and to hold the center and its employees harmless from all claims by or liability to member or member’s guest, except for those claims arising out of the center[’]s knowingly failing to correct a dangerous situation brought to its attention.” Plaintiff and a representative of defendant Bally’s Total Fitness Corporation signed the application on June 12, 1990.
On November 2, 1995, plaintiff slipped and fell, while participating in a slide aerobics class offered by defendant. Slide aerobics involves the use of an extremely slippery six-foot mat with rubber bumpers at each end of the mat. 1 The purpose of the slide portion of the mat is to allow a participant, with knees slightly bent and back straight, to slide from side to side, creating an aerobic exercise. A participant wears special socks to facilitate sliding back and forth on the mat.
The accident occurred between exercises, approximately 20 minutes after plaintiff had arrived and joined in the class. Plaintiff, on the left side of the mаt, decided to cross to the right. She took small steps across the slide part of the mat. She walked very slowly and cautiously, as if walking on ice, to avoid slipping. Nonetheless, she slipped, injuring her left wrist. Plaintiff now claims that had she received proper instruction(s) on how to properly cross the slide, the accident would not have happened.
Contentions
Plaintiff contends that the release clause is ineffective to relieve the health club of liability for her injuries because the exculpatory provision is not set out in large or italiсized letters emphasizing to the reader that she is foregoing her right to assert a claim for injuries and damages and that she will hold Bally’s harmless from all claims or liability to plaintiff. She further contends that the provision is inadequate because the word “negligence” is nowhere tо be found among its terms.
Discussion
Plaintiff’s argument that the release clause is ineffective because it is not highlighted or italicized or differentiated by the size of the printed words is irrelevant because she fails to show that she was unaware of the exculpatory *66 language or was otherwise misled. She admitted in her deposition that she signed it and read it and was aware that she was entering into a contract at the time. Moreover, when she signed it she was aware that she had three days within which she could rescind the contract. Given that plaintiff is a senior rеal estate officer engaged in leasing and managing Metropolitan Transportation Authority properties, she can hardly claim that the importance of reading and understanding the contract was lost on her.
Plaintiff’s separate statement of facts includes the following admission: “Plaintiff was aware she was entering a contract when she signed the agreement. Her work as senior real estate officer entails dealing with contracts.” It is self-evident that plaintiff was not led astray by the size or style of the type or the general form of the agreement.
In support of her argument that the release provision is ineffective due to the absence of the term “negligence,” plaintiff provides a survey of cases involving exculpatory clauses which were found to be ineffective and which did nоt include the term “negligence.” Plaintiff argues that
Celli
v.
Sports Car Club of America
(1972)
The rule governing the validity and interpretation of exculpatory clauses is summarized in
Hohe
v.
San Diego Unified Sch. Dist., supra,
Here plaintiff applied for membership in a health club; a facility in which she could exercise and would have access to exercise equipment. It is not remarkable that a health club would recognize that providing a facility in which members would engage in physical exercise and use exercise equipment involves a risk of injuries to its members. Therefore, Bally’s rationally required a release and assumption of risk as a condition of membership. Plaintiff hardly argues that the language оf the release and assumption of the risk clause is concealed by the formatting of the document or that it is unclear and ambiguous or that her injuries are the result of unforeseen risks not reasonably associated with membership in a health club. Her fundamental contention is that, because the release and assumption of the risk clause does not specifically state that she is releasing Bally’s from its “negligent’ conduct, the provision is invalid as a matter of law. This is not so. The inclusion of the term “negligence” is simply not required to validate an exculpatory clause.
In
Leon
v.
Family Fitness Center (#107), Inc.
(1998)
It is obvious that patrons of health clubs sign release and assumption of risk provisions in contemplation of injuries that occur in the course of using the facilities for the primary purpose of exercising and using exercise equipment. Therefore, the injury suffered by plaintiff in the present matter is one reasonably within the contemplation of the parties. In fact, plaintiff offered no evidence to the contrary and admits that she read and signed the contract and knew that she was signing a contract. Her work experience clearly indicates that she had the capacity to understand the significance of the exculpatory provisions of thе contract. In plaintiff’s separate statement of facts she concedes as undisputed “[pjlaintiff was aware she was entering a contract when she signed the agreement. Her work as senior real estate officer entails dealing with contracts. [*0 As part of the agreement between plaintiff and defendant, plaintiff agreed that ‘Accidents/Injury: The member agrees that all exercises and use of the fitness centers are undertaken by the member at the sole risk of the member, and that the fitness center shall not be liable for any claims for injuries and damages whatsoever to person or property of the member or of a guest of a member arising out of or connected with the use of the fitness center. [Mjember agrees to indemnify and to hold the center and its employees harmless from all claims by or liability to member or member’s guest, except for the claims arising out of the center’s knowingly failing to correct a dangerous situation brought to its attention.’ ”
We cannot fathom how plaintiff can argue that she has not released Bally’s and assumed the risk for hеr injury. Her contention that the absence of “[s]ome sort of verbiage, specifically describing in some adequate fashion the negligence of the defendant” renders the release invalid is nothing more than her insistence that the term “negligence” or the specific incident of active or passive negligence must appear in the provision. That, however, is not the law. “While it is true that the express terms of any release
*69
agreement must be applicable to the particular misconduct of the defendant (Prosser & Keeton on Torts (5th ed. 1984) § 68, pp. 483-484), that does not mean that every possible specific act of negligence of the defendant must be spelled out in the agreement or even discussed by the parties.”
(Madison
v.
Superior Court
(1988)
Whether a contract provision is clear and unambiguous is a question of law, not fact. “ ‘Where, as here, no cоnflicting parol evidence is introduced concerning the interpretation of the document, “construction of the instrument is a question of law, and the appellate court will independently construe the writing.” ’ ”
(Allabach
v.
Santa Clara County Fair Assn.
(1996)
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Epstein, J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Notes
Plaintiff also unsuccessfully sued Reebok Corporation, the manufаcturer of the mat.
The release provision at issue in
Leon
v.
Family Fitness Center (#107), Inc.,, supra,
