A court-not-of-record's mere notes do not constitute a court order adjudicating paternity that would preclude a supposed father from later proving by DNA testing that he was not the father of a child for whom he had agreed to pay child support, the Court of Appeals holds in Alexander v. Morgan, 452 S.E. 2d 370, 9 VLW 795 (12/20/94). The judge made a ruling and some notes, but no endorsed order was ever entered as planned after the JDR Court hearing in which the supposed father had in effect acknowledged paternity and agreed to a support amount. Instead, a written agreement was entered into within three months of the ruling. The juvenile court's mere notes did not make the appellant irrevocably the legal father of this child. After all, the court's notes expressly showed that they were not intended to constitute a final order.