The statutes passed prior to 1887 with reference to guideposts, provided in substance that the selectmen or road commissioners of each town should submit to the inhabitants at the annual town meeting a report of all the places in which guideposts had been erected, and of all places at which in their opinion they ought to be erected ; that upon that report the town was to determine the several places at which such *541posts should be erected, “ which shall be recorded in the town records ”; and that at each of the places so determined a substantial post should be erected, with suitable boards with inscriptions thereon showing the distance to the next town and sometimes álso the distance to some other prominent town to which the road led, with the familiar figure of the hand; but the inhabitants could “at their annual meeting agree upon some suitable substitute for such guide posts.” St. 1794, c. 63. Rev. Sts. c. 25, §§ 28-33. Gen. Sts. c. 45, §§ 1-5. Pub. Sts. c. 53, §§ 1-5. In all these statutes the inhabitants of the town acted upon the report of the selectmen, and determined from it the places where guideposts should be erected. . There can be no doubt that quite frequently a tree, and sometimes an artificial structure, like a house, was used as a suitable substitute for the particular kind of post described in the statute. St. 1887, c. 162, amends Pub. Sts. c. 53, § 1, by requiring that the town “shall erect and maintain such guide-posts at such forks or intersections of such highways and other ways as lead to adjoining towns or cities.”
One of the questions is whether the evidence justified the finding made by the judge before whom the case was tried, that the location of the guideboards upon the trees had been approved and ratified by the town. Upon this point it appeared, that the trees in question were large and ancient elm trees, and that the guideboards had been affixed to them for many years; that the proper officers had submitted oral reports, and in at least two years, namely, in 1898 and 1899, written reports, which were printed in the annual report of the town officers for these years, to the inhabitants at their annual meeting, of all places in which guideboards were erected and maintained in the town, including the guideboards in question ; but there was no record evidence showing that the town by any express vote ever designated those trees as a substitute for posts upon which to place guideboards, nor was there any other evidence on the subject.
Upon this evidence we think that the finding was warranted. The long continuance of the use of the trees as guideposts, the reports oral and written of the selectmen in their official capacity announcing such use, the entire absence of any evidence of any objection by any person to it, and the improbability that this *542public duty of affixing guideboards would be performed by any private person, all concur in leading to the conclusion that this use was in conformity with the wishes of the inhabitants and had been in effect approved and ratified by their action in town meeting.
The next question is whether the defendant as tree warden had the power to remove the guideboards which had been thus lawfully placed there. The defendant’s authority comes from St. 1899, c. 330.
Within the last fifty years, various statutes have been passed for the culture and protection of shade and ornamental trees in the public streets. The history of this legislation up to and including St. .1885, c. 123, is set out in Chase v. Lowell, 149 Mass. 85, and it is unnecessary to repeat it in detail.
The general result of the statutes up to that time was that such a tree planted under a license should be taken to be the private property of the person planting it or upon whose premises it was. planted, and should not be regarded as a public nuisance, nor should it be removed except upon complaint to the mayor and aldermen, selectmen or road commissioners, and an adjudication that public necessity seemed to them to require it. Penalties were provided for injury wilful or otherwise to such a tree. Several statutes have since been passed, all tending to give greater care to the trees. Sts. 1890, c. 196 ; 1891, c. 49; 1892, c. 147; 1893, c. 403; 1896, c. 190; 1897, cc. 254, 428; 1899, c. 330.
This last statute requires that every town shall at its annual town meeting elect a tree warden, who, with some exceptions not here material, shall have the care and control of all public shade trees, and shall decide about the cutting or removal of them. A penalty is imposed against any person who affixes to any tree in a public place “ a playbill, picture, announcement, notice, advertisement or other thing, whether in writing or otherwise, . . . except for the purpose of protecting it.” § 5. In view of the prior legislation on this matter, which it is unnecessary further to rehearse, we think that the care and control given to the tree warden is in substance the same as that which had been theretofore exercised by various town officers, and that the ruling that the prohibition in the statute refers to an interfer*543ence not authorized by law with shade trees and that the statute is not to be so construed as to give to the tree warden supreme power over a tree as against the power of the town to locate guideboards, is correct.
Injunction to issue. ■