The Orphans’ Court for Calvert County, through administrative probate, appointed appellee, Willie Clagett Coates, personal representative of the Estate of Ernest Wesley Coates. The basis of the appointment was appellee’s assertion that he was the only surviving son of the decedent. Appellants, Verla Cannon Hall and others, petitioned for judicial probate, alleging that Ernest Coates had died testate and that appellee was not Ernest’s son. In addition to judicial probate, they sought removal of appellee as personal representative and appointment of Verla Hall in that capacity. Appellee answered the petition. He denied that Ernest had left a will. He rejected the allegation that he was not Ernest’s son. He joined appellants in their prayer for judicial probate, asking that the court find him to be Ernest’s legitimated son and name him as personal representative of Ernest’s estate.
A hearing was had in the Orphans’ Court for Calvert County. There appellants argued that appellee was not the son of Ernest Wesley Coates. More specifically, they contended that appellee was, at best, an illegitimate son of the decedent, who had never been legitimated by virtue of the decedent’s open and notorious recognition of him as his child. Estates and Trusts Article § l-208(b)(3). The orphans’ court saw the matter otherwise. By order dated June 26, 1984, it found that “Ernest Wesley Coates ... on many occasions ... openly acknowledged Willie Coates as his son____” It “determined” appellee “Willie Coates ... to be the son of Ernest Wesley Coates, deceased.”
Appellants now attack this determination as being erroneous both in law and in fact. But before we reach those questions, we must address a threshold issue: that of the jurisdiction of this court to hear the appeal.
Jurisdiction
Section 12-501 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article permits “[a] party [to] appeal to the Court of Special
*255
Appeals from a final judgment of an orphans’ court.” That language is the product of code revision and was adopted by Ch. 2, Acts of 1973 (1st special session). Chapter 2 also repealed various provisions of former Article 5 of the Code, including those that dealt with appeals from orphans’ court.
Wall v. Heller,
In
Langhirt v. Hicks,
Section 5-404(a) of the Estates and Trusts Article provides that:
A hearing for judicial probate is a plenary proceeding____ [The court] shall adjudicate the issues raised in *256 the hearing and shall determine the testamentary capacity of the decedent if he died testate. After the hearing the court shall appoint one or more personal representatives and shall, if appropriate, revoke, modify, or confirm action taken at the administrative ... probate.
In the order here appealed, the Orphans’ Court for Calvert County did not make any determination of testamentary capacity. It did not appoint a personal representative. It did not “revoke, modify, or confirm action taken at the administrative ... probate.” It did not grant or dismiss the petition for judicial probate. It merely made a finding of fact: that appellee was the son of Ernest Coates. This finding of fact was a critical one, but the “order” announcing it was no more than an opinion of the orphans’ court; it was not an appealable order.
Langhirt
and
Collins, supra. See also Schlossberg,
That being the case, we have no jurisdiction over the appeal and must dismiss it. Nevertheless, as the Court of Appeals did in
Schlossberg
and
Langhirt,
we shall “set forth ‘what our decision would be if the case were properly before us’ since inevitably,” upon passage of an appropriate order by the orphans’ court, the issues presented by appellants would return to haunt us by way of a second appeal.
Schlossberg,
Legitimation — Open and Notorious Recognition
Section l-208(b) of the Estates and Trusts Article provides:
A child born to parents who have not participated in a marriage ceremony with each other shall be considered to be the child of the father only if the father
*257 (1) Has been judicially determined to be the father in an action brought under the statutes relating to paternity proceedings; or
(2) Has acknowledged himself, in writing, to be the father; or
(3) Has openly and notoriously recognized the child to be his child; or
(4) Has subsequently married the mother and has acknowledged himself, orally or in writing, to be the father.
There is no contention in this case that appellee’s mother was ever married to Ernest Coates. Nor is there any attempt to invoke paragraph (1) or (2). The only claim for legitimation is asserted under § 1 — 208(b)(3).
As we have seen, the orphans’ court decided that the evidence produced before it demonstrated that the requirements of § l-208(b)(3) had been met. Before turning to the facts presented below, we shall consider the legal issue: What showing does § l-208(b)(3) require to meet its open and notorious recognition standard?
Section l-208(b)(3)’s open and notorious recognition requirement, as a prerequisite to legitimation by a father, must be viewed in the context of the problem the statute and its predecessors attempted to address. That problem was the status of a bastard at common law.
At common law an illegitimate child was regarded as
films nullius
or
filius populi
and was deemed to be without parents or kindred. 1 P. Sykes,
supra,
§ 162. As a consequence, the illegitimate could not inherit from its father. Note,
Inheritance By And From Illegitimates Under Maryland Intestacy Law,
20 Md.L.Rev. 276 (1960).
1
This harsh policy was supported by arguments that it discouraged fraudulent claims and that it punished wrongdoing.
Id.
at 279. As to the latter reason, at least, it came
*258
to be recognized that the punishment was inflicted on the innocent child, not on the erring parents.
Id.
As a consequence, legislatures acted “to remove the taint and disabilities of bastardy from the unoffending children” on “the principle that it is unjust to punish the offspring for the crime of the parents.”
Dilworth v. Dilworth,
An early Maryland step in this direction was the adoption of Ch. 45, § 7, Acts of 1786, re-enacted as Ch. 191, Laws of 1820, § 7. As later codified in Art. 46, § 6, this provided:
If any man shall have a child by any woman whom he shall afterwards marry, such child ..., if acknowledged by the man, shall, in virtue of such marriage and acknowledgment, be hereby legitimated and capable in law to inherit and transmit in inheritance as if born in wedlock.
A much more extensive step was taken in 1969. By Chapter 3 of the Acts of that year, the General Assembly adopted “a comprehensive restatement of the testamentary laws of Maryland____” Second Report of the Governor’s Commission to Review and Revise The Testamentary Law of Maryland, i (1968). A part of that revision was enacted as Art. 93, § 1-208 — the provision that now appears, without substantive change, as § 1-208 of the Estates and Trusts Article. Former Art. 46, § 6, is included as § 1-208(b)(4). But § 1-208, as is apparent, went well beyond Art. 46, § 6. As the Commission observed:
This Section also spells out more fully the procedure for legitimation by acknowledgment without a subsequent marriage as is now required by Maryland law. It reflects the modern policy in the direction of mitigating the impact Of illegitimacy.
Second Report
at 9.
See also Dawson v. Eversberg,
The legislative history we have traced clearly manifests substantial abandonment of the notion that an illegitimate child should be punished because it occupies that status. On the other hand, the other basis for the harsh common-law policy — protection against fraudulent claims — has not been rejected totally. Each of the four legitimation conditions of § l-208(b) is a safeguard against false claims of parenthood because each requires some formal or informal action to establish paternity — in each case an action in which the purported father must be involved. With the exception of paragraph (1) of subsection (b) (judicial determination), the statute requires some form of acknowledgment by the father; an acknowledgment that can be proven, it would seem, from some source or sources other than the putative child. Paragraph (3), upon which we focus, makes that apparent because it demands an open and notorious recognition of parenthood by the father. The question is just how open and notorious that recognition must be. As we address this question, we keep in mind that § l-208(b), as a legitimation statute, is to be liberally interpreted.
Thomas v. Solis, supra,
The few reported Maryland decisions are of little help in determining the full extent of the requirement.
Dilworth v. Dilworth, supra,
for example, involved former Art. 46, § 6 and thus a requirement of acknowledgment of parenthood by the father. It appears that after the father and mother were married, the father acknowledged the child
*260
was his and the child was “raised and treated in the family as their legitimate offspring.”
In
Skeens v. Paterno,
What, less than raising as a family member or acknowledgment of paternity in pleadings, will suffice as recognition? We dealt with that question in
Harris v. Brinkley,
Do these cases instruct that “withholding [the] fact [paternity] from no one” (Harris) or telling “everybody”
(Davis
) is a
sine qua non
of open and notorious recognition? We think not. In
Montgomery v. Schweiker,
Cases from other jurisdictions, with generally similar fact patterns, have reached the same result.
See, e.g., In Re Wulfs Estate,
The holdings of these cases may be applied to § l-208(b)(3). Although Iowa and New Mexico law speaks in terms of “general and notorious recognition,” while Maryland requires that the father “[h]as openly and notoriously recognized” the child as his, we discern no material difference. “Open” is defined as “visible; apparent; notorious; not clandestine.” Black’s Law Dictionary (Rev. 4th ed. 1968). “Notorious” while it may mean “universally recognized” also denotes “... [o]pen; generally or commonly known and spoken of.” Id, 5 When we consider these words in the context of the fraud-preventing purpose of the statute, we think they should be read as the equivalent of the “general and notorious” language used in other states. The underlying purpose is essentially the same. That purpose is to guard against false paternity claims, such as those made after the putative father is dead, and thus no longer able to give his own version of matters. That purpose is accomplished when there is evidence sufficient to support a finding that the father admitted his paternity, not necessarily to all the world, but to appropriate people under appropriate circumstances. The testimony of the recipients of this information, if the testimony is believed, provides a *263 sufficient safeguard against fraud. It was in this fashion that the orphans’ court in effect construed the Maryland law. We hold its construction was correct.
The Facts of This Case
We now consider the application of § l-208(b)(3) to the facts of this case. In doing so we keep in mind that this is an appeal directly from the orphans’ court to this court. Courts and Judicial Proceedings Art. § 12-501. In such an appeal, “the findings of the Orphans’ Court are entitled to a presumption of correctness.”
New York State Library School Association, Inc. v. Atwater,
The record contains evidence from which a fact-finder could determine that appellee, William Clagett Coates, was the illegitimate son of Ernest Coates and a woman named Mabel Jones or Mabel Clagett. Appellee was born in 1926. Ernest Coates, a long-time resident of Calvert County, died in 1983. During many of the intervening years, appellee was absent from Calvert County. There was evidence that appellee visited Ernest from time to time and cared for him in his last illness. There was no evidence that appellee ever lived with Ernest Coates as part of the latter's family, nor was there evidence that Ernest had acknowledged in writing that appellee was his son. There was no evidence of any judicial determination of paternity. But there was testimony, from Walter Johnson, a stepson of Ernest’s, that Ernest, as early as 1966, had introduced appellee as Ernest’s son. Stepdaughters Carrie Taylor and Elizabeth Hawkins testified that Ernest had acknowledged appellee to be his son on more than one occasion. These were individuals to whom it was natural that such statements would be made; the statements were made under circumstances suggesting no motive for falsification; they were made to *264 people who had had a lengthy and close association with Ernest.
To be sure, those introductions and acknowledgments were made in Ernest’s home, to relatives, and in comparative privacy. But they were not made in secrecy or under any claim of confidentiality. They were made under circumstances suggesting no intent to conceal paternity, but rather to reveal it in an appropriate manner. Ernest’s recognition of appellee as his son was not limited to family members, 6 for he acknowledged paternity to Gladys Kent, a neighbor, and to Rowland Morsell, a iife-long friend. The statement made to Morsell, moreover, was made outside Ernest’s home.
There was, in addition, evidence that after the death of Ernest’s daughter, Lillian Coates Myers, appellee was listed as Ernest’s son in a church funeral bulletin — one that had been prepared with Ernest’s participation and in part under his direction.
See Sanchez, supra,
There was, of course, contradictory testimony. Some of appellant’s witnesses testified that Ernest denied having had a son. Others said they had never heard Ernest admit to having a son. Conflicts of this sort are not unusual in “open and notorious” recognition cases.
See Shelley v. Smith,
In the record before us there was evidence to support a finding that Ernest Coates had “openly and notoriously recognized” appellee to be his son. We cannot say that the Orphans’ Court for Calvert County was clearly erroneous in deciding that he had, and in concluding that “Willie Coates is ... the [legitimated] son of Ernest Wesley Coates, deceased.”
APPEAL DISMISSED. APPELLANTS TO PAY THE COSTS.
Notes
. The author of this note was Daniel W. Moylan, now a judge of the Circuit Court for Washington County.
. In the context of this case it is worth noting that § 1-208 does more than establish the right of an illegitimate child to inherit where one or more of the statutory conditions are met. As a legitimation statute,
Thomas v. Solis,
. It is equally clear that a father who co-habitates with the mother and helps her rear the children has also openly and notoriously recognized the children.
Thomas,
. Many of the cases are collected at
Annot.
. We cite the 1968 edition of Black because its publication was roughly contemporaneous with the Second Report of the Governor’s Commission to Review and Revise the Testamentary Law of Maryland, supra. As we have seen, it was via the legislative adoption of the recommendations of this Report that the "openly and notoriously” language first entered the legitimacy law of Maryland.
. There was also evidence in the record from which it could be inferred that Ernest Coates introduced Willie as his son at a family reunion.
