Appeal from orders of the Supreme Court at Special Term, entered October 5, 1960, in Bronx County which (1) denied a motion by defendants for summary judgment and (2) granted a motion by plaintiffs for an order to reply to defendants’ affirmative defense.
Memorandum bt the Court. The plaintiffs seek to avoid the effect of the general release given by them to the defendants by a claim that they were fraudulently induced to execute that instrument. The affidavit submitted by the injured plaintiff in opposition to the defendants’ summary judgment application avers that prior to the time of execution she had been told by defendants’ representative that the signing of the release was “nothing more than a formality * * * and whatever pain [she] might have in her back was something that would be considered later on if the condition became worse.” Taking the averments of the plaintiffs at their best they assert a representation by defendants that the execution of the release would not bar the plaintiffs from seeking further damages if the injury became worse. While it could well be argued that the language of the release is such as to constitute a specific disclaimer as to the representation alleged and thus bar the plaintiffs from a recovery under the doctrine enunciated in Cohen v. Cohen (1 A D 2d 586, affd. 3 N Y 2d 813) and Danann Realty Corp. v. Harris (5 N Y 2d 317) we need not now decide that question. This matter is before us by way of a motion for summary judgment rather than a motion addressed to the sufficiency of a pleading. Looking to the papers submitted we conclude that the plaintiffs have failed to sustain the burden imposed upon them by rule 113, to wit, demonstrating the existence of a triable issue with respect to the alleged invalidity of the release. It is averred by the defendants, without contradiction, that the plaintiffs had been given physical possession of the release sometime prior to its execution and that it had been in their sole possession until mailed to the defendants’ representatives sometime thereafter. There is no claim by the plaintiffs that they were unable to, or, in fact, did not read the instrument before they signed it. It should be noted that at the time of the execution — some five months after the accident — there was no representative of the defendants present. The release contains a statement on the face thereof — in bold print — to the effect that it contemplated releasing the claim of plaintiffs for all “known and unknown injuries and the consequences thereof which may hereafter develop as well as those which had already developed or are now apparent.” In the light of these established facts the affidavits of the plaintiffs are inadequate to raise a triable issue on the question of whether the plaintiffs, in executing the release, did so in reliance upon the representations allegedly made (see Cohen v. Cohen, supra). It is also