PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.
This case arose after Robert Lankford, the putative biological father of K.B., filed a petition for legitimation against Kristen Baker, the child's mother. Kristen Baker's husband, Mark Baker, moved to intervene in and to dismiss the proceeding. The trial court granted Lankford's legitimation petition, then denied Mark Baker's motion to intervene and ruled that the motion to dismiss was moot. Mark Baker filed this interlocutory appeal. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment denying the motion to intervene, vacate the judgments on the motion to dismiss and petition for legitimation, and remand the case for further proceedings.
In December 2006, while married to Mark Baker, Kristen Baker gave birth to K.B. Mark Baker believed K.B. was his biological child, and he was listed as her father on the birth certificate. The Bakers lived together as a family, and Mark Baker provided financial support for and developed a relationship with K.B. In June 2008, when K.B. was about 18 months old, Kristen Baker told Mark Baker that the child was Lankford's biological child. In February 2009, Kristen Baker moved out of the home. Mark Baker paid support for the child, and eventually filed for divorce.
On November 4, 2009, while the divorce was pending, Lankford filed a petition for legitimation, custody and visitation, submitting with the petition the results of a DNA test showing a 99.997 percent likelihood that he was K.B.'s biological father. Kristen Baker consented to the legitimation.
On November 13, 2009, Mark Baker moved to intervene in and to dismiss the legitimation proceeding, arguing that Lankford had abandoned his opportunity interest to develop a relationship with K.B. and that, even if he had not, the court was required to determine whether legitimation would be appropriate considering Lankford's fitness as a parent or the best interest of the child.
On November 16, 2009, while Mark Baker's motion to intervene was pending, the court granted the legitimation petition. On December 1, 2009, the court denied Mark Baker's motion to intervene and ruled that his motion to dismiss was moot.
1. Mark Baker contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to intervene. We agree.
OCGA § 9-11-24(a)(2) provides, in relevant part, that upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action:
Mark Baker met the first requirement, as he clearly had an interest in the legitimation proceeding. OCGA § 19-7-20 provides, in pertinent part:
A child's legal father is defined as the man who was married to the child's biological mother at the time the child was conceived or born, unless such paternity was disproved by a final order.
Lankford argues, however, that Mark Baker had no interest in the action because (a) the presumption of legitimacy was rebutted by evidence that Mark Baker is not the child's biological father, and (b) a nonbiological father has no recognizable legal rights to the child. However, as discussed above, a legal father, even one who is not the biological father, has parental and custodial rights to the child.
Mark Baker also met the second and third criteria for intervening as of right. If the trial court were to declare K.B. to be the legitimate child of someone other than Mark Baker in an unappealed order, that man would become the child's legal father—in place of Mark Baker.
When Mark Baker moved to intervene, he was K.B.'s legal father. The court, however, granted the legitimation petition while his timely, meritorious motion to intervene of right was pending. Where intervention appears before final judgment, where the rights of the intervening party have not been protected, and where the denial of intervention would dispose of the intervening party's cause of action, intervention should be allowed and the failure to do so amounts to an abuse of discretion.
2. We also vacate the trial court's judgments on the legitimation petition and the motion to dismiss, and remand the case for the court to consider the motion to dismiss and the legitimation petition.
Judgment reversed in part and vacated in part, and case remanded.
MILLER, C.J., and JOHNSON, J., concur.