
    Daniel D. Johnson et al. v. Charles A. Bouton.
    Filed November 17, 1898.
    No. 8418.
    
    1. Injunction: Power oe Judge at Chambers. A district judge at chambers has no power to determine finally an action for injunction, or to enter an order out of term time dismissing a cause.
    2. Jurisdiction: Consent. Consent of parties cannot confer jurisdiction of the subject-matter.
    3. Injunction: Action on Rond. An action on a temporary injunction bond will not lie until there has been a final adjudication of the injunction cause on its merits.
    Error from the district court of Seott’is Bluff county. Tried below before Neville, J.
    
      Reversed.
    
    
      F. A. Wright and G. G. Wright, for plaintiffs in error.
    
      George W. Heist and M. J. Huffman, contra.
    
   Norval, J.

In July, 1891, Daniel D. Johnson commenced an action in the district court of Scott’s Bluff county to enjoin Charles A. Bouton from diverting or interfering with the waters of Winter creek. A temporary injunction was allowed by the judge of the district court of said county, and Johnson, with William H. Wright and Thomas Roberts, as his sureties, entered into a bond or undertaking to the defendant to pay him all damages which he might sustain by reason of the suing out of said injunction, if it should be finally.determined that the same ought not to have been granted. This undertaking was filed with, and approved by, the clerk of said court. Subsequently, in vacation, the judge of said court entered an order dismissing the cause. Thereupon this suit was instituted by Bouton against the principal and sureties upon the injunction bond.. Plaintiff obtained judgment in the sium of $300, and the defendants have brought the record here for review.

A number of errors are assigned, based upon the admission of testimony, the giving of instructions, and the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment, which present for consideration substantially the same question, namely, was the order entered during vacation dismissing the injunction suit without jurisdiction and void? - A judge of the district court possesses only such authority or jurisdiction at chambers as is conferred by statute. (Ellis v. East, 7 Neb. 381.) Authority is given a district judge in vacation to grant, dissolve, or modify a temporary injunction, but he is given no jurisdiction out of term time to make an order dismissing an injunction suit or to make any other final disposition of such cause. This was expressly ruled in Browne v. Edwards & McCullough Lumber Co., 14 Neb. 361. The fact that the parties to the injunction suit stipulated that the •decision on the merits should be entered by the judge in vacation is unimportant. That jurisdiction of the subject-matter cannot be conferred by agreement of parties iis elementary. The record before us fails to show that any order was ever entered vacating or dissolving the temporary order of injunction, either in term time or in vacation. The order of dismissal entered by the judge at chambers is void, and there has never been a final disposition of the case in which the injunctional order was granted; hence a right of action on the bond has not yet accrued, and this suit was prematurely brought. (Browne v. Edwards & McCullough Lumber Co., 44 Neb. 361.) The judgment, for the reasons stated, is

Reversed.  