This case requires us to address whether section 452.375.5(5)1 permits a person asserting third-party custody rights to intervene as a matter of right in an adoption proceeding. K.L. appeals from the trial court’s order and judgment which, based on standing, (i) dismissed K.L.’s petition seeking a determination of third-party child custody rights, and (ii) denied KL.’s motion to intervene as a matter of right in a separate adoption proceeding.
The trial court’s order and judgment is not final for purposes of appeal insofar as it dismissed KL.’s petition seeking a determination of third-party child custody rights because that petition was consolidated with the adoption proceeding, and the order and judgment did not resolve all claims as to all parties in the consolidated action.
The trial court’s order and judgment is final for purposes of appeal insofar as it denied KL.’s motion to intervene as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding. Because a child custody determination is not in issue in an adoption proceeding, K.L. has not established an interest in the subject matter of the adoption proceeding that permits her to intervene as a matter of right.
KL.’s appeal of the order and judgment dismissing her third-party child custody petition is dismissed for want of a final judgment. The trial court’s denial of the motion to intervene as a matter of right is affirmed. This matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
Factual and Procedural History2
A.M. and K.L. began a committed relationship in 2002. In 2007, A.M. underwent artificial insemination using an anonymous donor’s sperm. A female child (“Child”) was born in February 2008. The Child suffers from severe medical problems as a result of complications during her birth and requires specialized care. K.L. contends that she quit her job to stay home with the Child and that she served as the Child’s primary caregiver for four years. According to K.L., the couple separated in *708the spring of 2011, around the time a medical malpractice lawsuit involving the Child was settled and a multi-million dollar trust was established for the benefit of the Child. K.L. contends that A.M. began refusing to allow K.L. to have contact with the Child in the fall of 2011 and that A.M. cut off all contact between K.L. and the Child in July 2012.
A.M. married R.M. in August 2012.3 On September 21, 2012, A.M. and R.M. filed a petition seeking stepparent adoption and to change the surname of the Child (“Adoption Petition”). The Adoption Petition alleged that A.M. is the biological mother of the Child and that the identity of the Child’s biological father is unknown. The Adoption Petition further alleged that the Child had resided with and has been'in the care, custody, and control of A.M. and R.M. since December 2011. The Adoption Petition acknowledged that K.L. believes she has some type of claim to custody of the Child, parenting time with the Child, or both, though A.M. and R.M. dispute the claim. A.M. and R.M. forwarded a stamp-filed copy of the Adoption Petition to KL.’s attorney.
K.L. took two actions in response to the Adoption Petition. First, K.L. filed an original proceeding seeking an award of joint legal and physical custody over the Child to K.L. and A.M. (“Child Custody Petition”). The Child Custody Petition acknowledged that A.M. is the biological mother of the Child and that K.L. has no biological relationship to the Child. The Child Custody Petition alleged, however, that K.L. “has acknowledged by her actions and statements to third-parties that she is [the] adoptive mother of the [Child],” and that “[b]oth [K.L. and A.M.] have acknowledged by their actions and statements to third-parties that they intend to raise the minor child as co-equal parents.” The Child Custody Petition alleged that K.L. is entitled to third-party custody of the Child pursuant to section 452.375.5(5).4 The Child Custody Petition *709does not allege that A.M. is unfit or an inappropriate parent, but appears instead to rely on a generalized assertion regarding the welfare and best interests of the Child given K.L.’s historical relationship with the Child.5
Second, K.L. filed a motion to intervene as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding pursuant to section 452.375.5(5) (“Motion to Intervene”). The Motion to Intervene alleged that K.L. and A.M. had jointly agreed to conceive a child via artificial insemination and had agreed that K.L. would adopt the child born as a result of the process. The Motion to Intervene alleged that an adoption was put on hold solely because of the medical emergencies surrounding the Child’s birth, and K.L. alleged that she quit her job to attend to the Child’s specialized care requirements. The Motion to Intervene further alleged that K.L. and A.M. raised the Child as co-parents until their relationship ended. K.L. alleged that her interest in securing third-party custody rights with the Child supported intervention as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding. K.L. alleged that if R.M. is permitted to adopt the Child, she will be “legally barred from petitioning for custody in the future.” As required by Rule 52.12(a), K.L. alleged that she had filed the Child Custody Petition seeking joint custody of the Child, suggesting that pleading would be her “claim” if intervention was granted. Neither the Motion to Intervene nor the Child Custody Petition allege that K.L. has a superior right to adopt the Child.
A.M. filed a motion to dismiss the Child Custody Petition (“Motion to Dismiss”) for lack of standing. The Motion to Dismiss argued that 452.375.5(5) applies only to permit the determination of third-party custody issues when custody of a minor child born of a marriage is properly before the court for determination in connection with a dissolution proceeding. The Motion to Dismiss thus contended that the trial court had no statutory authority to determine third-party custody of the Child pursuant to section 452.375.5(5) because A.M. and K.L. were never married and the Child was not born of a marriage. Thus, the Motion to Dismiss asserted that K.L. had no standing to bring an original proceeding to determine third-party custody of the Child under section 452.375 and that the Child Custody Petition failed to state a claim.6
A.M. and R.M. also opposed KL.’s Motion to Intervene in the adoption proceeding, making similar allegations to those raised in the Motion to Dismiss. A.M. and R.M. also noted that despite K.L.’s references to herself as the “adoptive” mother of the Child, K.L. has never been declared legally to be the adoptive mother of the Child. They also argued that an interest *710in determining custody rights will not support intervention as a matter of right in an adoption proceeding because it is not a legal interest that will be directly impaired by an adoption.
K.L. filed a motion to consolidate the adoption proceeding and the child custody proceeding pursuant to Rule 66.01 “into a single proceeding on the merits of the legal and equitable rights of the three putative parents of the [Child].” The motion was unopposed by A.M. and R.M. and by the Guardian Ad Litem who had been appointed for the Child. The trial court entered an order consolidating the actions and set deadlines to complete briefing on the pending Motion to Dismiss and Motion to Intervene.
On February 13, 2014, the trial court issued its order and judgment (“Judgment”). The Judgment both granted the Motion to Dismiss KL.’s Child Custody Petition and denied KL.’s Motion to Intervene in the adoption proceeding for lack of standing.
K.L. appeals.
Finality of the Judgment for Purposes of Appeal
Before we examine the merits of KL.’s points on appeal, we “must determine whether jurisdiction is proper, regardless of whether any of the parties raised the issue.”7 Crest Constr. II, Inc. v. Hart, 439 S.W.3d 246, 249 (Mo.App. W.D.2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Generally an appellate court only has jurisdiction over final judgments disposing of all issues and parties, which leave nothing for future determination.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). An exception to the final judgment rule is found in Rule 74.01(b), which provides that “[w]hen more than one claim for relief is presented in an action ... or when multiple parties are involved, the court may enter a judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties only upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay.” If the judgment does not either resolve all issues as to all parties or expressly designate that “there is no just reason for delay,” the judgment is not final for purposes of appeal and must be dismissed. Crest Constr. II, 439 S.W.3d at 249. Application of these settled principles to this case is influenced by the trial court’s order of consolidation.
K.L. filed an unopposed motion to consolidate the Adoption Petition and the Child Custody Petition “into a single proceeding on the merits of the legal and equitable rights of the three putative parents of the [Child].” The motion to consolidate asserted that consolidation was proper pursuant to Rule 66.01 because “[t]here are common parties in both cases,8 the questions of law and fact deal with rights to custody and/or visitation with the same minor child,9 and the matters are both before the Family Court Division.”10 The *711trial court ordered consolidation without further elaboration.
“[W]hen a trial court employs the term ‘consolidation,’ its effect on the separate identity of the actions is not immediately clear.” Woods v. Cory, 149 S.W.3d 912, 914 (Mo.App.S.D.2004).
The phrase “consolidation of actions” has been used by courts in three different senses. One application of the term means the staying of proceedings in one or more actions pending the outcome of proceedings in another action. Used in another sense, the phrase refers to the trial of several actions together. Actions which are consolidated in this sense remain separate actions with respect to docket entries, verdicts, judgments, and all aspects except trial. Finally, the term “consolidation” may mean the uniting of two or more previously distinct actions into one. Actions which have been consolidated in this sense lose their independent and separate existence, and only one judgment is rendered in the single action into which they have been combined.
Moss v. Home Depot USA, Inc., 988 S.W.2d 627, 630 (Mo.App.E.D.1999) (internal quotation marks omitted). Determining the type of consolidation ordered by a trial court requires an examination of the record to determine whether the actions remained separate in all aspects except trial or whether the two actions were merged into a single action. See Woods, 149 S.W.3d at 914.
The motion to consolidate sought to consolidate the Adoption Petition and the Child Custody Petition into “a single proceeding.” The trial court granted the motion based on the parties’ consent. Thereafter, docket entries under the case number originally assigned to the Child Custody Petition ceased, and all further proceedings with respect to the Child Custody Petition were docketed under the case number assigned to the Adoption Petition. The captions and case numbers for the two cases were consolidated on all subsequent pleadings, including the Judgment and in this appeal. Plainly, the trial court’s order of consolidation united the Child Custody Petition and the Adoption Petition into one action. As a result, the actions lost “their independent and separate existence, and only one judgment is [to be] rendered in the single action into which they have been combined.” Moss, 988 S.W.2d at 630.
In City of Kansas City v. Woodson, we considered the finality''of a judgment disposing of one of two consolidated actions. 130 S.W.3d 7, 11 (Mo.App.W.D.2004). There, the trial court consolidated an action filed by the City of Kansas City against a landowner with an action filed by the Director of Collections of Jackson County against the same landowner. Id. at 9. The trial court thereafter entered summary judgment in favor of the City, and the landowner appealed the entry of summary judgment. Id. We dismissed the appeal because the judgment was not final as it did not dispose'of the County’s claims against the landowner. Id. at 11. We explained: “[B]ecause the judgment from which the [landowner] appeals does not dispose of all the claims against all the parties in the underlying consolidated civil action and fails to make ‘an express determination that there is no just reason for delay,’ the judgment is not final and ap-pealable, and must be dismissed for a lack of jurisdiction.” Id. (quoting Rule 74.01(b)).
Here, the Judgment dismissed K.L.’s Child Custody Petition and denied KL.’s Motion to Intervene in the adoption pro*712ceeding.11 The Judgment did not resolve the claims asserted by A.M. and R.M. in the Adoption Petition.12 The Judgment thus did not resolve all issues as to all parties in the consolidated action. Nor did the Judgment include a Rule 74.01(b) certification,13 the essential precursor to our authority to entertain an interlocutory appeal. Barring the applicability of another exception to the final judgment rule, this appeal must be dismissed.
There are limited circumstances where an appellate court is authorized to entertain an appeal from an order that does not resolve all issues as to all parties, even in the absence of Rule 74.01(b) certification. One such circumstance is implicated by the Judgment. “ ‘[T]he denial of a motion to intervene as a matter of right under .Rule 52.12(a) is a final and appeal-able judgment.’ ” State ex rel. Ideker, Inc. v. Grate, 437 S.W.3d 279, 283 (Mo.App. W.D.2014) (quoting Eckhoff v. Eckhoff 242 S.W.3d 466, 469 (Mo.App.W.D.2008)). That is because, a “ ‘movant cannot appeal from the judgment’ ” in a case where “ ‘the movant asserts that she may be legally bound or prejudiced by ” the judgment “ ‘unless she is allowed to intervene.’ ” Id. (quoting Eckhoff, 242 S.W.3d at 469). Thus, “ ‘the order denying intervention has the degree of definiteness which supports an appeal therefrom.’ ” Id. (quoting State ex rel. Reser v. Martin, 576 S.W.2d 289, 290-91 (Mo. banc 1978)).
K.L.’s Motion to Intervene sought to intervene in the adoption proceeding as a matter of right pursuant to Rule 52.12(a).14 The trial court’s denial of the Motion to Intervene is a final appealable judgment.
We are thus left in ah unusual procedural position. The trial court’s grant of the Motion to Dismiss K.L.’s Child Custody Petition is not a final appealable judgment. The trial court’s denial of K.L.’s Motion to Intervene in the adoption proceeding is a *713final appealable judgment. K.L.’s appeal of the grant of the Motion to Dismiss is dismissed for want of a final judgment. We will entertain, however, KL.’s appeal of the denial of her Motion to Intervene.
Standard of Review
We recently described our standard of review of the denial of a motion to intervene in In re D.S.K., 428 S.W.3d 655, 657 (Mo.App.W.D.2013):
We will affirm the denial of a motion to intervene unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it erroneously declares or applies the law. Motions to intervene as a matter of right, like the one before us, are typically decided based upon the motion, pleadings, counsel’s arguments, and suggestions in support or opposition to the motion. The circuit court usually does not hear any evidence or make any declarations of law. Instead, the decision to grant or deny the motion is one involving the application of law.
(Internal citations and quotations omitted.)
Though the denial of a motion to intervene does not usually involve a declaration of law, here the trial court expressly denied the Motion to Intervene because it concluded that K.L. did not have standing to assert a claim for third-party custodial rights. The issue of standing is a threshold question in that “[a] party cannot obtain relief from a court if that party lacks standing.” Exec. Bd. of Mo. Baptist Convention v. Carnahan, 170 S.W.3d 437, 445 (Mo.App.W.D.2005). We review a trial court’s determination that a party lacks standing de novo. Mo. Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. Oneok, Inc., 318 S.W.3d 134, 137 (Mo.App.W.D.2009). We determine whether a person has standing from a review of the allegations in the pleadings along with any other undisputed facts revealed by the record. White v. White, 293 S.W.3d 1, 8 (Mo.App.W.D.2009) (noting that standing is determined from the allegations in a petition and from other undisputed facts revealed in the record).
Analysis
K.L. asserts four points on appeal.15 In her first three points, K.L. argues, respectively, that she had standing to intervene as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding on the theories of equitable estop-pel, third-party custody pursuant to section 452.375.5(5), and equitable or de facto parentage. In her fourth point, K.L. asserts that the denial of her Motion to Intervene based on a lack of standing violates her constitutional rights to due process and equal protection.
KL.’s Motion to Intervene did not seek to intervene in the adoption proceeding based on either the theory of equitable estoppel or equitable parentage, the subjects of points one and three on appeal. Nor did the Motion to Intervene assert that intervention was required in order to protect K.L.’s constitutional rights to due process and equal protection, the subject of point four on appeal. K.L.’s first, third, and fourth points on appeal thus preserve nothing for our review, as they claim error in denying the Motion to Intervene on the basis of theories not presented to the trial court. White, 293 S.W.3d at 8 (noting that standing is determined from the pleading asserting the claim and from other undisputed facts established on the record). Points one, three, and four are denied.
*714The Motion to Intervene did argue that K.L. had standing to intervene as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding pursuant to section 452.375.5(5), the subject of K.L.’s second point on appeal. Accordingly, KL.’s second point on appeal is preserved for our review.16
Point Two
KL.’s second point on appeal alleges that the trial court erred in denying the Motion to Intervene because she is entitled to intervene as a matter of right pursuant to Rule 52.12(a) since she has a legal interest in determining third-party custody of the Child pursuant to section 452.375.5(5). We must first determine whether K.L. has satisfied the essential requirements of Rule 52.12(a) before we need address whether section 452.375.5(5) creates a legal interest K.L. is entitled to assert.
A. Intervention as a Matter of Right Pursuant to Rule 52.12(a)
Rule 52.12 provides for intervention as a matter of right as follows:
Upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action: (1) when a statute of this state confers an unconditional right to intervene or (2) (i) when the applicant claims an interest relating to the property or transaction that is the subject of the action and (ii) the applicant is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede the applicant’s ability to protect that interest, (Hi) unless the applicant’s interest is adequately represented by existing parties.
(emphasized text added and highlighted for clarification). K.L. does not claim that a statute of this state confers an unconditional right to intervene as permitted by Rule 52.12(a)(1),17 but instead relies on Rule 52.12(a)(2). K.L. “ ‘carries the burden of establishing the presence of all three elements required for intervention as a matter of right.’ ” Prentzler v. Carnahan, 366 S.W.3d 557, 561 (Mo.App.W.D.2012) (quoting Kinney v. Schneider Nat’l Carriers, Inc., 200 S.W.3d 607, 611 (Mo.App.W.D.2006)). “‘[A] motion to intervene as of right under Rule 52.12(a)(2) may properly be denied if even one of these three elements is not established.’ ” Id. (quoting Kinney, 200 S.W.3d at 611).
“An interest, for purposes of intervention as of right, ‘means a concern, more than mere curiosity, or academic or sentimental desire.’ ” Allred v. Carnahan, 372 S.W.3d 477, 484 (Mo.App.W.D.2012) (quoting In re Liquidation of Prof'l Med. Ins. Co., 92 S.W.3d 775, 778 (Mo. banc 2003)). “ ‘An interest necessary for inter*715vention as a matter of right does not include a mere, consequential, remote or conjectural possibility of being affected as a result of the action, but must be a direct claim upon the subject matter such that the intervenor will either gain or lose by direct operation of judgment.’ ” Id. (quoting State ex rel. Nixon v. Am. Tobacco Co., 34 S.W.3d 122, 128 (Mo. banc 2000)). “ ‘To intervene in an action as a matter of right, the intervenor’s interest in the action must be a direct and immediate claim to, and have its origin in, the demand made ... by one of the parties to the original action.’ ” Id. (quoting In re Clarkson Kehrs Mill Transp. Dev. Dist., 308 S.W.3d 748, 753 (Mo.App.E.D.2010)).
The Motion to Intervene alleges that K.L. has an interest in the adoption proceeding because she desires third-party custodial rights over the Child. A.M. and R.M. concede in the Adoption Petition that K.L. “believes she has some type of claim to custody and/or parenting time with the [Cjhild.”18 To intervene as a matter of right, however, it is not enough that K.L. claims an interest in determining custody and visitation rights with the Child. Instead, K.L. must establish that her interest in determining custody and visitation is a direct claim upon the subject matter of the adoption proceeding that will be lost by direct operation of a judgment permitting R.M. to adopt the Child. K.L. has not met this burden.
B. The Determination of Custody Rights Is Not In Issue in an Adoption Proceeding
“The meaning of the term ‘adopted’ is well settled.” In re Estate of R.M., 356 S.W.3d 250, 252 (Mo.App.E.D.2012).
When a child is adopted ... all legal relationships and all rights and duties between such child and his natural parents (other than a natural parent who joins in the petition for adoption as provided in section 453.010) shall cease and determine. Such child shall thereafter be deemed and held to be for every purpose the child of his parent or parents by adoption....
Section 453.090.1. Adoption is thus “a judicial act which creates a complex set of legal relationships similar to those existing between a natural parent and child. One of those legal relationships is that of ‘custody.’ ” In re Estate of R.M., 356 S.W.3d at 252 (citations omitted).19
Because an adoption establishes a parent-child relationship for all purposes, the statutory procedures for adoptions set forth in Chapter 453 require .service of an adoption petition upon persons whose existing parental or custodial rights will be severed by adoption. Specifically, section 453.060.1 requires service of a summons and a copy of the adoption petition20 on:
*716(1) Any person, agency, organization or institution whose consent to the adoption is required by law unless such consent is filed in court;
(2) Any person whose consent to the adoption, according to the allegation of the petition for adoption, is not required for the reasons set forth in subdivision (6) or (7) of section 453.04021;
(3) Any person, agency, organization or institution, within or without the state, having custody of the child sought to be adopted under a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction even though its consent to the adoption is not required by law;
(4) The legally appointed guardian of the child;
(5) Any person adjudicated ... to be the father of the child;
(6) Any person who has timely filed a notice of intent to claim paternity of the child pursuant to section 192.016 or an acknowledgment of paternity pursuant to section 193.087.
Though each of the aforesaid persons or entities must be served,22 a court in an adoption proceeding is empowered to “act upon the petition without the consent of any party, except that of a parent whose consent is required by sections 453.030 to 453.050,23 and the judgment is binding on all parties so served. Any such party has the right to appeal from the judg-ment_” Section 453.060.4. A judgment of adoption requires a court to determine that “[i]t is fit and proper that such adoption should be made.” Section 453.080.1(8).
Chapter 453 does not authorize a trial court to determine custody disputes, and makes no provision for the entry of child custody or visitation orders other than the transfer of custody of a child to proposed adoptive parents to facilitate adoption as permitted by section 453.110. This is consistent with the fact that an adoption, by its nature, permanently severs “all legal relationships and all rights and duties between such child and his natural parents,” including custodial rights. Section 453.090.1. Stated differently, an adoption proceeding is not a child custody determination wherein competing custodial rights to a child are weighed and determined by the court. Instead, an adoption proceeding requires a court to determine whether the creation of a parent-child relationship is in the best interests of a child. See In re Adoption of R.S., 231 S.W.3d 826, 830-31 (Mo.App.S.D.2007) (holding that “[wjhile an adoption certainly entails the adoptive parents receiving both legal and physical custody of the child, it is different [from] granting custody to a parent or a third party”).
Consistent with this observation, sections 452.700 to 452.930, the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (“UCCJEA”), defines a “child custody determination” in pertinent part as:
[A] judgment, decree, or other order of a court providing for the legal custody, *717physical custody, or visitation with respect to a child. The term includes a permanent, temporary, initial, or modification order.
Section 452.705(3). The UCCJEA defines a “child custody proceeding” wherein “child custody determinations” may be made in pertinent part as:
[A] proceeding in which legal custody, physical custody, or visitation with respect to a child is an issue. The term includes a proceeding for divorce, separation, neglect, abuse, dependency, guardianship, paternity, termination of parental rights, and protection from domestic violence in which the issue may appear.
Section 452.705(4) (emphasis added). Notably absent from this definition are adoption proceedings controlled by sections 453.005 to 453.170, wherein no authority is vested in a court to enter custodial or visitation orders of the nature described in section 452.705(3). In fact, section 452.710(1) of the UCCJEA expressly provides that “Sections 452.700 to 452.930 shall not govern ... [a]n adoption proceeding.”
It follows that as child custody determinations are not in issue in an adoption proceeding, K.L.’s. interest in determining her custodial and visitation rights with the Child is not the type of interest that will support intervention as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding. KL.’s claim that section 452.375.5(5) entitles her to custody and visitation rights with the Child, whatever its legal merit, will not be lost by direct operation of a judgment permitting R.M. to adopt the Child. That is because parental custodial rights are not absolute. “The general rule [is] that natural parents have a primary right to the custody of their children.... ” In Interest of C.L.M., 625 S.W.2d 613, 617 (Mo. banc 1981). “When in conflict, however, the rule favoring parental custody is superseded by the concerns of the state for the child’s welfare.” Id. Thus, should R.M. adopt the Child, any future court will remain free to make third-party child custody and visitation determinations involving the Child in a proceeding where such determinations are authorized by law.
The result we reach today is not novel. We have previously affirmed the denial of a motion to intervene as a matter of right in an adoption proceeding where the inter-venor expressed an interest in determining custody and visitation rights. In In re Adoption of H.M.C., 11 S.W.3d 81, 85-86 (Mo.App.W.D.2000), an adoption petition and associated termination of parental rights action was filed by persons not biologically related’ to a child but whom had been appointed guardians of the child. The paternal grandparents’ motion to intervene in the action as a matter of right was denied.24 Id. at 86. Following the entry of judgment terminating the natural parents’ parental rights and entering a decree of adoption in favor of the guardians, grandparents appealed the denial of their motion to intervene. Id. at 86. We held that the “Paternal Grandparents [sic] biological relationship to the child, by itself, does not constitute the necessary ‘interest’ under Rule 52.12(a)(2), to require intervention.” Id. at 90. And we held that the “Paternal Grandparents have no legal right, under current Missouri case-law, which will be directly enlarged or diminished by the adoption of their biological grandchild.” Id. In that case, we cited *718Missouri Supreme Court precedent recognizing that:
One “interested” in an action is one who is concerned in the outcome or result thereof because he has a legal right which will be directly affected thereby or a legal liability which will be directly enlarged or diminished by the judgment or decree....
Id. (emphasis added) (quoting In the Matter of Trapp, 593 S.W.2d 193, 204 (Mo. banc 1980)).
In re Adoption of R.S. is also consistent with our holding. There, the Southern District reversed an award of visitation rights to paternal grandparents in an adoption proceeding that named maternal grandparents as the adoptive parents.25 231 S.W.3d at 827. The court explained that Chapter 453 does not itself authorize an award of custody or visitation rights and that no other statute authorized such an award in an adoption proceeding. Id. at 830-31. Relevant to this case, the court held that “[s]ection 452.375.5 does not give a grandparent a right to [seek] visitation in an adoption proceeding commenced under Chapter 453.”26 Id. at 831.
It is thus apparent that a claimed interest in determining custody or visitation will not support intervention as a matter of right in an adoption proceeding because custody and visitation are not “in issue” in an adoption proceeding.27 Rather, to support intervention as a matter of right in an adoption proceeding, a proposed interve-nor must claim a superior legal right to adopt. In re C.G.L., 28 S.W.3d 502 (Mo.App.S.D.2000), confirms this conclusion. In that case, members of an Indian tribe established a legal right pursuant to the federal Indian Child Welfare Act to preference in the adoptive placement of an Indian child — rights that directly involved the demand at issue in the adoption proceeding. Id. at 505. The Indian tribe’s legal right to preference in the adoptive placement of the child would have been directly impaired by a decree naming someone else as the child’s adoptive parents. Id. As a result, the Southern District reversed the trial court’s denial of the Indian tribe’s motion to intervene as a matter of right. Id.
The conclusion that an interest in determining custodial or visitation rights will not support intervention as a matter of right in a proceeding where custody is not “in issue” was also the basis for our decision in In re D.S.K., 428 S.W.3d 655 (Mo.App.W.D.2013). There, wife filed a petition for declaration of paternity pursuant *719to the Uniform Parentage Act28 naming husband and the man that the wife believed to be the biological father of several children born during her marriage to husband. Id. at 656. Paternity tests confirmed that husband was not the biological father of the children.29 Id. Husband moved to dismiss himself from the paternity action,30 and then simultaneously filed a motion to intervene in the paternity action as a matter of right. Id. at 657. We affirmed the trial court’s denial of the motion to intervene as a matter of right because although section 210.841.8 provides that a paternity judgment “may contain” provisions concerning child custody and visitation, it is not required to do so. Id. at 658. We held that Section 210.841.3 allows child custody determinations to be made if such determinations are requested in the paternity petition. Id. at 658-59. Because wife’s paternity petition sought only a declaration regarding the biological relationship of a putative father to her children and did not seek a child custody determination, child custody was not “in issue,” and husband had no interest permitting intervention as a matter of right. Id. at 659.
In re D.S.K is instructive by analogy. In an adoption proceeding, as in a paternity proceeding limited to determining a putative father’s biological relationship to a child, nothing more is at issue than the creation or verification of a parent-child relationship. More to the point, although section 210.841.3 provides that a paternity judgment “may contain” provisions concerning child custody and visitation if that subject is made an issue by the paternity petition, there is no comparable expression of authority in Chapter 453. See In re Adoption of R.S., 231 S.W.3d at 829-31 (holding that there is no statutory authority to award visitation in an adoption proceeding pursuant to Chapter 453, Chapter 211, or section 452.375.5(5)).
In re C.M.D., 18 S.W.3d 556 (Mo.App. W.D.2000), is also analogous. In that case, a grandparent who claimed an interest in custody was not entitled to intervene as a matter of right in a section 211.447 termination of parental rights proceeding. Id. at 565. The grandparent claimed an unconditional statutory right to intervene under section 211.177.1 which permits a grandparent to intervene in a proceeding initiated pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 211 “in which the custody of a grandchild is in issue.” Id. at 564. We held that the “focus of the court [in a section 211.447 proceeding] is on the parent-child relationship and whether severing that relationship is in the best interest of the child. Custody of the child is not ‘in issue.’ ”31 Id. at 565 (emphasis added). If *720custody is not “in issue” in a statutory proceeding to determine whether it is in the best interests of a child to sever a parent-child relationship, it follows that custody is not “in issue” in a statutory proceeding to determine whether it is in the best interests of a child to create a parent-child relationship.
Here, the trial court concluded that K.L. lacked standing to intervene. In effect, the trial court concluded that K.L. did not have a right or interest that would be directly impacted by a judgment entered in the adoption proceeding. In light of our discussion, this was not error.
C. K.L.’s Claimed Rights Under Section 452.375.5(5)
K.L. nonetheless argues that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in In re T.Q.L., 386 S.W.3d 135 (Mo. banc 2012), requires a different outcome. K.L. argues that T.Q.L. elevated section 452.375.5(5) beyond merely authorizing a trial court to award third-party custody in dissolution cases to authorizing an independent cause of action that can be asserted by any third-party in an original proceeding to determine child custody .and visitation. According to K.L., T.Q.L. required her Motion to Intervene in the adoption proceeding to be granted.32
We have some reservation about KL.’s interpretation of T.Q.L.33 Regardless, even *721if T.Q.L. intended to announce a construction of section 452.375.5(5) that authorizes third parties to initiate original proceedings to determine child custody and visitation rights, we have already explained that an interest in child custody or visitation is not sufficient to support intervention as a matter of right in an adoption proceeding where child custody determinations are not “in issue.”
K.L.’s second point on appeal is denied.
Conclusion
K.L.’s appeal from the trial court’s grant of the Motion to Dismiss her Child Custody Petition is dismissed for want of a final judgment, requiring remand of this matter for further proceedings.34 The trial court’s denial of KL.’s Motion to Intervene as a matter of right in the adoption proceeding is affirmed. A.M. and R.M.’s motion seeking an award of attorney’s fees is denied.35
All concur