—Order of the Supreme Court, Bronx County (Alan Saks, J.), entered March 2, 1995, which denied plaintiff’s application to increase child support, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs, and the matter remanded to Supreme Court for a determination of defendant’s fair share of university expenses.
The parties have one child, Anthony, born June 12, 1974. Pursuant to judgment of divorce entered August 25, 1990, the parties were awarded joint custody of Anthony, with visitation and child care expenses equally divided. The judgment requires each party to pay one half of the tuition at "the private school that * * * Anthony Otero attends.” By stipulation so ordered by the court on April 12, 1991, the parties modified the judgment of divorce to provide that Anthony live full-time with plaintiff father and that defendant mother pay $630 a month
In October 1994, plaintiff moved to modify the judgment and stipulation to increase his child support payments to reflect the increase in expenses incurred by Anthony’s enrollment at Syracuse University. Supreme Court denied the motion, holding that plaintiff failed to demonstrate an unanticipated or unreasonable change of circumstances warranting ah upward modification in child support (citing Matter of Boden v Boden,
This matter is indistinguishable from Matter of Cohen v Rosen (
It is far from clear that, at the time judgment of divorce was entered in August 1990, when Anthony was just 16, or at the time judgment was modified by the April 1991 stipulation, when he was not yet 17, that plans for his post-secondary education had been formulated. The burden of Anthony’s college education has fallen disproportionately upon plaintiff, and a hearing is appropriate to award educational expenses "having regard for the circumstances of the case and of the respective parties and in the best interests of the child, and as justice
