On оr about April 30, 1997, the Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles (Department) notified Robert E. Kroll that his Georgia operator’s license wаs under suspension or revocation and that failure to obtain a clearance letter from that state would result in summary revocation оf his Nebraska operator’s license which had been issued on March 28. Upon receipt of this notification, Kroll filed a “Petition for Review оf an Administrative Decision” in the district court for Nemaha County. On February 23, 1998, the district court entered an order reciting that trial was held on January 26 and determining that “the decision of Alvin Abramson, Director of the Department of Motor Vehicles which in substance provides for the administrative revocation of the Plaintiff Robert E. Kroll’s drivers [sic] license under and pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-487 [(Reissue 1998)] is hereby reversed and vacated.” The order further directed the Department to reinstate Kroll’s driving privileges and enjoined the Department “from removing those privileges in the future as a result of the suspеnsion of his driving privileges in the State of Georgia.” No appeal was taken from this order.
Subsequently, on April 10,1998, the district court entered an order rеciting that trial was held on January 26, but finding in favor of the Department. This order included a specific finding “[t]hat the revocation of [Kroll’s] operatоr’s license by the Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-487 [(Reissue 1998)] is affirmed.” However, it made no reference to the order of February 23 in which it had reached the opposite result.
*550 Upon entry of the April 10, 1998, order, Kroll filed a motion for new trial, which was deniеd. He then appealed to the Nebraska Court of Appeals, which on September 9,1998, summarily dismissed the appeal pursuant to Neb. Ct. R. of Prac. 7A(2) (rev. 1996), stating: “Order filed April 10, 1998, is declared void for lack of jurisdiction in view of trial court’s order of February 23, 1998, from which no appeal was taken.” Wе granted the Department’s petition for further review.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The Department asserts the Court of Appeals erred in dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiсtion and in reinstating the district court’s order of February 23, 1998.
SCOPE OF REVIEW
The determination of a jurisdictional issue which does not involve a factual dispute is a mattеr of law which requires an appellate court to reach its conclusions independent from those of the trial court.
State
v.
Jacob, ante
p. 492,
ANALYSIS
Before reaching the legal issues presented for review, it is the duty of an appellate court to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the matter befоre it.
State
v.
Jacob,
supra;
State
v.
Silvers,
The letter Kroll received from the Department in April 1997 advised him to contact officials in Georgia for information regarding the requirements for clearing the status of his operator’s license in that state and instructed him to mail or fax the necessary information to the Department by June 16. The letter specifically informed Kroll that “[failure to receive [siс] a clearance letter to this Department by the above date will result in the summary revocation of [Kroll’s license] pursuant to Nebraskа Revised Statute 60-487.” On the same day that Kroll filed his “Petition for Review of an Administrative Decision,” the Department received from him a money order in the amount of $205 to cover “the bond and the cost of the transcript required under Section 60-4,105 Nebraska Revised Statute.”
Section 60-4,105 provides for appeals from certain orders of the Department. The statutory language makes it clear that appeals must be from final orders оf the Department, providing in part, “The ruling, order, or decision of the director in refusing to issue or reinstate such license or in suspending, canceling, or revoking the same shall be as final and binding as the final order or judgment of a court of general jurisdiction.” § 60-4,105. The threshold issue, therefore, is whether the letter Kroll received from the Department was a final, appealable order.
Orders which specify that a trial court will exercisе its jurisdiction based upon future action or inaction by a party are conditional and therefore not appealable.
Deuth
v.
Ratigan, ante
p. 419,
We conclude that in the present case, the April 30, 1997, letter was conditional because it contemplatеd further action by the parties. The letter specifically provided that summary revocation of Kxoll’s license would occur only if no clearance letter from the State of Georgia was received by June 16. This cannot be considered a formal, final action by the Department because it “does not perform in praesenti, and thus leaves to speculation and conjecture what its final effect may be ....”
Id.
at 524,
Thus, although not for the reason it articulated, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the district court’s order of April 10, 1998, was void and that the aрpeal from that order should be dismissed. We also determine that the district court’s order of February 23, 1998, was void and remand the cause to the Court of Appeals to vacate the judgment of the district court because of that court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Affirmed and remanded with directions.
