There is in the city of Omaha a tract of land, occupying one city block, and known as “Jefferson Square.” This has for many years been used as a public park, and a considerable sum of money has been expended in improving it and adapting it to such use. In 1893, by ordinance, the mayor and council submitted to the electors of the city a proposition for the issuing of bonds “to pay the cost of securing a site for a market place and erecting a market house thereon.” The proposition was carried, and thereafter, by another ordinance,. Jefferson Square was designated as the site for the erection of a market house; and a resolution was passed directing the board of public mirks, under the direction of the city engineer, to cl ear and grade the square, preparatory to the erection of tbe market house. These officers were proceeding to comply with the resolution when the plaintiff, showing no interest other than as a taxpayer of the city and a citizen thereof, brought this action to restrain the city and the officers named in the resolution from entering upon the square for the purpose indicated. On final hearing the injunction granted at the commencement *374of the suit urns made perpetual, and the defendants appealed.
An important question involved in the record, and one-which has received a masterly discussion in the briefs, relates to the cliaiacter of the city’s title to the land, and whether it has been charged with a perpetual use as a park so that it is not within the authority of the city to divert it, under any circumstances, to a different use. While the district court seems to have passed on that question, it seems to us that it cannot be logically reached until certain other questions are disposed of; and the conclusion we have reached on these disposes of the ease without a decision of the underlying question. No opinion is therefore expressed on the broad question referred to.
A.s the city charter stood at the time of the proceeding's complained of the mayor and council had power “to erect and establish market houses, and market places, * * and * * * locate such market houses hnd market places * * * on any streets, alleys, or public grounds, or on any land purchased for such purpose.” ' (Compiled Statutes 1893, eh. 12a, sec. 62.) it was evidently under this grant that the city undertook to act. The title of the ordinance submitting the proposition was as follows: “An ordinance providing for submitting to the legal electors of the city of Omaha at a general election to he held in said city on the 7th of November, 1803, the question of issuing bonds of the city of Omaha to the amount of two hundred thousand dollars to pay the cost of securing a site for- a market place and erecting a market house thereon.” The proposition voted on, as embodied in the ordinance, was as follows: “Shall bonds of the city of Omaha in the sum of two hundred thousand dollars he issued for the purpose of paying the cost of securing a site for a market place, not less than a block in size, and erecting a market house then-on, such market place to be on such block in said city north of Leavenworth street; south of Cuming street, *375and east of Twentieth street, as may be designated by the mayor and council by ordinance after advertisement for bids of not less than four weeks, the said market house to be erected thereon to be in size at least two hundred and sixty-four feet by sixty feet, two stories in height, the lower story to be devoted to market house purposes, and the second story to contain a public assembly hall, the said bonds to run not more than twenty years and to bear interest, payable semi-annually, at a rate not to- exceed five per cent per annum, with coupons attached, the said bonds to be called ‘Market House Bonds,’ and not to bé sold for less than par, the proceeds of said bonds to be used for no other purpose than paying the cost of securing such site and erecting such market house, the said bonds to be issued from time to time as may be required during the years 1894 and 1895.” The authority of the city government in the use and expenditure of the fund so provided a vas limited and strictly defined by the terms of the proposition so ratified by Arote of the people. Beyond any doubt this proposition contemplated, not. the issuing of bonds to the amount of $200,000 for the erecting of a market house on land already OAvned by the city and devoted to another purpose, but the purchasing of land for a market place, and the erection of a market house on the land so purchased. Contending against this construction counsel for the appellants call attention to the use, both in the title of. the ordinance and in the proposition itself, of the word “securing” instead of “purchasing,” and to the failure to designate any particular amount to be appropriated to the purchase of land. It is thence asserted that the Aroters could not hnve been influenced by the fact that any particular sum Avas to be so used, that a site might have been purchased for a nominal sum, and that the use of the word “secure” indicated an intention to permit the use of the fund to pay abutting damages and other expenses incident to the process of appropriating to this use and adapting thereto land already belonging to the city but theretofore de*376voted to other purposes. We canuot believe that the electors so understood it. The statute contemplates two things — market places and market houses, the distinction between the two being carefully preserved throughout the section. By “market place” was evidently meant something more than land occupied by a market house. This distinction is preserved in. the title and in the body of the ordinance, the only connection therein being the requirement that the market house shall be erected on the market place. The proposition delimits an area within the city within which the market place, is to be located, and we think we may perhaps take notice of the fact'that the area designated is in the most thickly populated portion of the city. The -proposition requires that the designation of a site shall be made after advertisment for- bids — clearly bids for the sale of land to the city. This last feature unmistakably indicates the intention to purchase land for the purpose. Every part of the ordinance reinforces that inference. When we recur to the alternative power in the charter to locate market places on streets, alleys, or public grounds, or else on land purchased for the purpose, the intent of the proposition adopted becomes a demonstrated fact. That when the governing body of a municipality is authorized by a vote of the people, and only thereby, to incur a debt for a particular purpose, such purpose must be strictly complied with, and the terms of the authority granted be strictly and fully pursued, is so well settled that it would be idle to cite authorities on the proposition. That the mayor and council, in attempting to erect a market house on land already belonging to the city and used for another purpose, were departing from the terms of the vote in a material respect, and so diverting the funds at their disposal to an unauthorized purpose, is evident on a moment’s reflection. We may take notice of the fact that American cities have largely grown up without adequate provision for parks and public pleasure grounds, and that many cities, including Omaha, after reaching an *377advanced period of development, have found it necessary, at enormous expense, to purchase and improve land for parks. A large proportion of a city’s inhabitants is therefore always jealous of any attempt to vacate parks already existing or to divert them in whole or in part to other purposes. That feeling may have been so strong that it would have led to the rejection of the market house proposition had it not by. its language excluded the possibility of its bringing about, the destruction of one of the parks. Again, $200,000 is a large sum to devote wholly to the construction of a market house. If land was to be purchased within the designated area it was certain to require a large portion of the sum voted wherewith to make the purchase. Men might be willing, from the necessity of the case, to vote bonds to .the amount of $200,000 where a purchase of land was to be made, but not to incur so large a debt for the construction of a building on land already owned.
It is argued that the plaintiff, merely as a taxpayer, showing no special interest, cannot be heard to complain. Some early cases lend color to this argument, but they are all readily distinguishable. In Normand v. Otoe County, 8 Neb. 18, it was said that taxpayers might maintain an action to restrain county commissioners from án illegal exercise of their power, but that it must appear that they would be greatly or irreparably injured by the acts sought to be prevented. That was a proceeding to restrain the commissioners from carrying out á contract made with a lawyer to bring a suit for the county against the plaintiffs, it being alleged that the sum to be paid the laAvyer was exorbitant. Clearly those particular taxpayers were properly denied relief. In Parody v. School District, 15 Neb. 514, it was said that the plaintiff must show some special damage not common to the public. The opinion shows that there was no assignment of error and no brief, and that the court was “left Avholly in the dark” as to the questions presented. The purpose of the action was to restrain the removal of a schoolhouse. It *378does not appear from the report that the plaintiff had children of school age, that he was a taxpayer, or that the proposed removal would entail any expense. He therefore showed no interest whatever. In McLaughlin v. Sandusky, 17 Neb. 110, it was said that it must appear that the plaintiff would suffer an injury. The plaintiff sued, not as a taxpayer, but as a land-owner, to prevent a road supervisor from opening a ditch from a' highway upon his land. Relief was refused because there was no proof that his land would be injured. On the other hand, the right of a taxpayer to maintain a suit to restrain officers from wasting or unlawfully expen ding-public funds, has been several times affirmed. (Follmer v. Nuckolls County, 6 Neb. 204; Solomon v. Fleming, 34 Neb. 40; Ackerman v. Thummel, 40 Neb. 95; Morris v. Merrell, 44 Neb. 423.) In a lucid discussion of the question in his work on Municipal Corporations, Judge Dillon says (sec. 914 et seq.) that the right of a taxpayer in such a case has been affirmed in many states and that it is now almost the universal doctrine. Of course he must bring himself within some equitable principle. In the case before us he has done this by seeking to prevent the violation of a trust, and the squandering of a trust fund for a purpose contrary to the trust. The right of a stockholder of a private corporation to' so intervene is firmly established in cases where the governing body refuses to protect the rights of the stockholders or is itself the wrong-doer. As Judge Dillon suggests, there are still stronger reasons for permitting a taxpayer to assert the same right where the officers of a municipal corporation, charged with the protection of the property, are themselves violating the trust and diverting it from its proper use. Judge Dillon’s views on the subject have been cited and adopted by the supreme court of the United States in Crampton v. Zabriskie, 101 U. S. 601, where Mr. Justice Field says: “Of the right of resident taxpayers to invoke the interposition of a court of equity to prevent an illegal disposition of the moneys of the county or the illegal creation of *379a debt which they in common with other property-holders of the county may otherwise be compelled to pay, there is at this day no serious question.”
Affirmed.