THOMAS, Judge.
The opinion of February 3, 2012, is withdrawn, and the following is substituted therefor.
Daniel Warren ("the father") and Carol Warren ("the mother") were divorced in August 2000. The parties' separation agreement was incorporated into the divorce judgment. According to the divorce judgment, the father "agree[d] to pay all reasonable college costs for the parties' minor child."
In February 2008, before the parties' child graduated from high school, the mother filed a petition seeking to hold the father in contempt for failing to pay expenses associated with the child's acceptance to Troy University, including the fee incurred for her college-admission testing, registration expenses, and "other expenses associated with college costs." The mother further sought to have the father "pay in advance of each semester a sum of money equal to the average cost of attendance for an in state student at Troy University."
The father answered the mother's petition and filed a counterclaim, requesting that the trial court modify the postminority-educational-support provision in the divorce judgment because the father had lost the job he had held at the time of the divorce and his income had been drastically reduced as a result. The father also requested that both parents be required to pay a portion of the child's college expenses, that the mother and the child be required to seek financial aid, that the award of postminority educational support be limited to the attainment of a bachelor's degree within five years, that the child be required to be a full-time student and to earn at least a "C" average, and that the amount of support be limited to the cost of tuition, room and board, and activity fees at a state-supported college.
The case was first set for a hearing in August 2009. On that date, however, the case was not called for trial, so the trial court entered an order on October 26, 2009, requiring the father to pay $650 per month toward the child's college expenses pending the trial on the matter. The case was apparently set for trial on October 4,
The father filed a motion, purportedly pursuant to Rule 59, Ala. R. Civ. P., seeking to have the February 2011 order set aside; in that motion he denied having consented to the entry of an order against him.
In his motion, the father also complained that the amount of postminority educational support he was ordered to pay was not supported by any evidence because the only "evidence" presented to support the amount was a list of expenses submitted by the mother as an exhibit to her proposed order.
The trial court denied the father the relief he requested in his motion. The trial court did, however, remove the sentence in the February 2011 order that indicated that the father had consented to the order. The father appeals.
As noted above, in response to the mother's contempt petition, the father filed a counterclaim seeking a modification of the postminority-educational-expense provision of the parties' divorce judgment. The trial court ordered the father to pay $74,821.74 in postminority educational support based on the allegations contained in the mother's contempt petition. However, the trial court failed to address the father's request for a modification of his postminority-educational-support obligation in the February 2011 order.
Although a trial court may certify an order deciding fewer than all the pending claims or resolving the issues involving fewer than all the parties as a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., we do not believe that a Rule 54(b) certification would be appropriate in the present case. Because the trial court is permitted to make any modification of the father's postminority-educational-support obligation retroactive to the date he filed his counterclaim seeking a modification, see King v. Barnes, 54 So.3d 900, 905 (Ala.Civ.App.2010), and Fielding v. Fielding, 843 So.2d 766, 769 (Ala.Civ.App.2002),
The mother's request for an attorney fee on appeal is denied.
APPLICATION OVERRULED; OPINION OF FEBRUARY 3, 2012, WITHDRAWN; OPINION SUBSTITUTED; APPEAL DISMISSED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
THOMPSON, P.J., and PITTMAN, BRYAN, and MOORE, JJ., concur.
A trial court is permitted to enter an order resolving less than all the claims before it; an order resolving fewer than all the claims before the court is not a final judgment unless certified as such by the trial court. See Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P. An interlocutory order may be reconsidered by a trial court on its own motion or on the motion of any party at any time before entry of a final judgment. Lanier v. Surrett, 772 So.2d 1187, 1188 (Ala. Civ.App.2000) ("An interlocutory order is subject to revision at any time before the court enters a final judgment that disposes of all the issues."). The mother contends that the fact that the trial court denied the father's motion seeking reconsideration of the February 2011 order renders that interlocutory order final because the trial court again failed to address the father's claim for modification. The trial court clearly left the father's modification claim pending by failing to address it in the February 2011 order; its continued failure to address that same claim by not mentioning it when denying the motion to reconsider the February 2011 order does not have the effect of denying the father's modification request. If it did, every interlocutory order that a trial court revisits at the behest of a party would become final if the trial court denied the request for reconsideration. The fact that the father included a "prayer for general relief" in his motion seeking reconsideration of the February 2011 order has no effect on our reasoning.