M. MICHAEL KINARD, Judge.
Appellant, James Manken, appeals from the final order entered by the Benton County Circuit Court in a juvenile case involving four-year-old J.M. A year after J.M. was removed from the physical custody of his grandmother and his subsequent adjudication as dependent-neglected, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of the child's mother. The petition also alleged that appellant was a putative father but that he had not established paternity, had not had significant contacts with the child or provided material support for him, and had not otherwise taken any action to cause any parental rights to attach.
Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings underlying either of the trial court's conclusions. Rather, he argues only that the court erred in treating him as though he had two "opposing legal statuses," i.e., that he was both a nonparent to whom no parental rights had ever attached and a parent whose rights should be terminated. He seeks reversal of the order and remand of the case for the trial court to "definitively decide [appellant's] legal status and to proceed from there accordingly."
Our view of the case makes remand unnecessary. Although the trial court's order is certainly not a model of clarity, reading it in its entirety and in context with the pleadings, we conclude that the trial court determined first and foremost that appellant was not a person to whom any parental rights had ever attached and that he should be dismissed from the case. We think, as both parties before this court apparently also do, that the decision regarding "termination" of appellant's "parental rights" was an alternative disposition that would be effective only if the trial court's first stated basis for disposition of the case against appellant were to be reversed on appeal.
In any event, the law is clear that in a traditional equitable action an appellate court may always enter such order as the trial court should have entered. Ferguson v. Green, 266 Ark. 556, 587 S.W.2d 18 (1979); White v. White, 50 Ark.App. 240, 905 S.W.2d 485 (1995). Where the record is fully developed and we can plainly see where the equities lie, this court should decide the case without remanding it to the trial court. Ferguson, supra. Here, there is no need for additional evidence to be presented or for the trial court to make any additional findings and thus no need for a remand.
We hold that the trial court's order here effectively provides that appellant is not a person to whom any parental rights ever attached and that he was therefore dismissed from the action. That decision is unchallenged on appeal and is affirmed. The remaining findings and conclusions regarding appellant were intended to be alternative and applicable only in the event of a condition (reversal of the determination that appellant had no parental rights) that did not materialize. To the extent that the order might be read in the future as an involuntary termination of appellant's parental rights to this child, we hereby modify the order to make it clear that it shall not be read in that manner. Because no parental rights existed to be terminated under the circumstances of this case, we hold that no such termination occurred. This modification suffices to remove the only prejudice about which appellant complains.
Affirmed as modified.
Virden and Glover, JJ., agree.