Pamela T. v. Marc B.

33 Misc. 3d 1001
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 2011
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Misc. 3d 1001 (Pamela T. v. Marc B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamela T. v. Marc B., 33 Misc. 3d 1001 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Matthew F. Cooper, J.

The college application process can be an extremely stressful experience in a young person’s life. Not only is there the prospect of living away from home, often for the very first time, and concerns about making new friends and adjusting to a new environment, but there are difficult decisions to be made as to where to apply and then, if accepted, the crucial choice as to which college or university to actually attend. Unfortunately, for the child of a high-conflict divorce, the anxiety surrounding the process is made that much more intense by the child’s awareness that his or her choice of a college will provide yet another opportunity for parental strife. In many cases the strife will center on how much the parent who is obligated to pay child support will have to contribute towards the cost of the child’s college education. And in New York, the battle is often over what is known as the “SUNY cap.”

[1003]*1003This divorce is by every definition high-conflict, and it is one where money has always been a major issue. The parties, both of whom are attorneys, have regularly returned to court since the entry of the judgment of divorce in 2008 to litigate an endless succession of postjudgment motions. This motion, their sixteenth, results from what one would normally assume to be a cause for celebration: the acceptance of their elder child, who has struggled with a learning disability, to Syracuse University and his decision to attend that institution of higher learning. Instead, the parties are before the court because the defendant father insists that he should be able to invoke the SUNY cap and not be made to pay any more than he would have had to pay if the child had opted to attend a state-funded public school in the State University of New York (SUNY) system, like the State University of New York at Binghamton (SUNY Binghamton), as opposed to a non-state-funded private school, like Syracuse.

This motion calls for the court to examine the SUNY cap and determine whether it is indeed an actual established tenet of matrimonial law, and if so, when and how it should be applied. Although the SUNY cap is often referred to directly in agreements that set forth the parties’ responsibilities when it comes to college and is regularly raised during litigation over the payment of college tuition and expenses, there are surprisingly few reported decisions dealing with it. Almost all of the decisions in which the SUNY cap is mentioned come from the Appellate Division, Second Department. The Appellate Division, First Department, has not addressed the issue at all and, in fact, there appears to be no First Department case, either at the appellate or trial level, where the term “SUNY cap” is used even in passing. As will become clear, the thrust of this decision is that the SUNY cap — to the extent that it stands for the proposition that before a parent can be compelled to contribute towards the cost of a private college there must be a showing that a child cannot receive an adequate education at a state college — is a doctrine that in many cases is harmful to the children of divorced parents, acts to discriminate against them, and is largely unworkable.

Background

The parties were divorced on December 23, 2008. They have two sons, one who is 18 and one who is 16. The judgment of divorce incorporated a custody agreement and a stipulation of [1004]*1004settlement by which the parties had resolved all issues of the divorce except for those concerning child support. The judgment, which was amended on February 26, 2009, also incorporated a decision rendered on August 27, 2007 by another justice of this court ordering defendant father to pay plaintiff mother, who is the custodial parent, the sum of $686 a month as basic child support for the two children as well as 22% of the children’s camp, unreimbursed medical, dental and therapy expenses.1 No mention was made in either the decision, the custody agreement or the stipulation of settlement as to the payment of the children’s college tuition and expenses. As a result, both the judgment and the amended judgment of divorce are silent on the matter.

At the end of 2009, when the older child was still in high school and had not yet applied or been accepted to college, plaintiff made a motion seeking the same relief she seeks here with regard to the payment of college expenses. This court, in a decision and order dated August 30, 2010, denied that application, without prejudice, as having been made prematurely.

In 2007, the elder child was diagnosed with “moderate emotional difficulty” and learning/anxiety disorders, which necessitated certain educational accommodations (e.g., extra time for exams). Despite this diagnosis, he graduated in 2011 from Beacon High School, a selective public high school in Manhattan. He was accepted at Syracuse University, SUNY Binghamton and SUNY Buffalo, along with a number of other schools.2 Syracuse, which awarded him $3,000 in financial aid, costs approximately $53,000 a year to attend as an undergraduate, while SUNY Binghamton and SUNY Buffalo cost only about $18,000 a year. Although the child visited Binghamton and gave serious consideration to going there, he ultimately decided to attend Syracuse. He is now a freshman there studying computer engineering and computer graphics.

The younger child is currently a junior at Stuyvesant High School. Stuyvesant is one of the most selective public high [1005]*1005schools in New York City. At this point in the younger child’s junior year, he has yet to begin applying to colleges. Inasmuch as most Stuyvesant graduates attend college, it can be reasonably assumed that this child will be college bound at some point.

The parties are both practicing attorneys in New York City. Plaintiff works for the Metropolitan Transit Authority Inspector General’s Office and defendant is self-employed as a solo practitioner. Plaintiffs 2010 federal income tax return reports an adjusted gross income of $109,896. Defendant’s 2010 federal income tax return reports an adjusted gross income of $105,135. Both parties have savings and retirement accounts, largely as a result of inheritances. Plaintiff’s net worth statement shows she has assets of approximately $1,230,000. Defendant’s net worth statement shows he has approximately $580,000. Both plaintiff and defendant went to private undergraduate colleges and law schools, with plaintiff graduating from Northwestern University and New York University School of Law, and defendant graduating from Columbia University and Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

The Parties’ Contentions

Plaintiff asserts that defendant should be ordered to contribute equally to the cost of sending the older child to Syracuse and the cost of sending the younger child to college when the time comes for him to apply. Specifically, plaintiff requests that defendant be directed to pay one half of the following expenses for both children: all college related tuition, fees, housing, and meal costs, and all college preparation costs including tutors, entrance exam study courses, and application fees.

In opposing plaintiffs motion, defendant does not oppose an order directing him to contribute to his older child’s college education, but he asks the court to apply the SUNY cap and limit his responsibility to a percentage of the costs of a state university education rather than to a percentage of a private college education.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 3d 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pamela-t-v-marc-b-nysupct-2011.