Plaintiffs herein, as heirs at law and beneficiaries under the will of Marshall B. Lloyd, deceased, brought this action to determine whether a charitable trust for which provision was made in Mr. Lloyd’s will has lapsed or has been rendered impossible of performance by events subsequent to testator’s death.* Plaintiffs also assert that this *61testamentary trust lapsed by reason of nonperformance within the time specified in the will, and they challenge the legality of the appointment of Albert G. Cherney and Cecil J. Scanlan as two of the trustees, as well as the fitness of these two men to execute the trust; and finally plaintiffs attack a proposed plan of executing the trust on the ground that it is not in accord with the provisions of Mr. Lloyd’s will. In effect, the decree entered by the circuit judge dismissed plaintiffs’ bill of complaint, and they have appealed.
Marshall B. Lloyd died August 10, 1927, leaving a large estate of which he made disposition by a will and codicil which were duly admitted to probate. We are in no way concerned in this suit with many provisions in the will; nor can decision herein be influenced by certain things done incident to probating the estate. Among such was the order of the probate judge made over eight years ago by which an agreement entered into between the executors and certain beneficiaries under the will was approved, and thereby a number of alleged spendthrift trusts established by the will were wholly nullified and in *62lieu thereof the beneficiaries given outright a certain portion of the property belonging to the estate. A number of the plaintiffs in the instant case were parties to the above mentioned agreement and for that reason ought to be estopped from challenging its validity. But entirely aside from this circumstance, the transaction approved by the probate court was consummated more than eight years ago and it is now beyond the power of the court to correct it and establish a status quo ante. Suffice it to say that the act of the probate court in approving the agreement did not nullify the charitable trust for which provision was made by Marshall B. Lloyd in his will.
At the time this bill of complaint was filed the residue of the Lloyd estate had been transferred to the three trustee defendants. This residue which constituted the corpus of the charitable trust is shown by the record to be of a present value somewhat in excess of $210,000. The manner in which the testator disposed of his estate (aside from certain bequests with which we are not at all concerned) and the purposes in which he was interested and for which he provided a charitable trust are indicated by the portion of his will quoted in the margin hereof. In effect, by the trust provisions of his will Mr. Lloyd divided his estate into aliquot portions or shares, and provided that 10 of these shares should be set aside and held in a trust fund known as the Marshall B. Lloyd Fund, which, with subsequent additions thereto, should be devoted to charitable uses such as “furthering of the medical arts, the practice of medicine, the care of the sick, medical education, the spreading of knowledge of hygiene and care of the sick, child welfare, the establishment and operation of hospitals, laboratories, dispensaries and medical diagnostic institutions, or any or *63either» of said purposes which may properly come within charitable uses.” The testator further recommended in his will the establishment of “an institution in Menominee, Michigan, for medical diagnosis and temporary care of the sick.” As to the balance of the estate covered by the testamentary trust, certain specified beneficiaries were given the income during their respective lives, and upon the death of each of such beneficiaries these respective portions became a part of the corpus of the charitable trust. However, as above indicated, by reason of the probate court having approved a settlement entered into between the executors of the estate and these individual beneficiaries, all such trust provisions are now eliminated from the. factual situation of the case and the trustee defendants are possessed of property of the value above stated to be devoted to the charitable trust.
Both the executors and the trustees were vested by the terms of the will with rather plenary powers in the management of the estate. But the will does contain the following provision:
“My trustees shall be required to devote to such uses from time to time, the initial fund of 10 shares, wdthin 10 years from the date of my demise, and all further shares or proceeds thereof, within 10 years from the termination of the life estate subject to which they are held, and other funds, if any, within 10 years after my death. ’ ’
The bill of complaint was filed more than 10 years after Mr. Lloyd’s death and the trustees had not yet devoted any of the trust funds to any of the purposes specified in the will. In fact the trustees named in the will and codicil declined to serve and in their stead the probate court named as trustees the First National Bank of Menominee, Cecil J. *64Scanlan and Albert Gr. Cherney. Two of the* questions propounded by appellants are:
“Was this (charitable) bequest accepted by any competent authority within the time limited by the terms thereof?”
“Did the charitable legacy in the will of Marshall B. Lloyd lapse upon the named trustees declining to act?”
It is true, as asserted by appellants, that the testator’s gift in trust for charitable purposes to the named trustees indicated he had confidence in them, and further these trustees were vested with a rather large measure of authority. . Like circumstances usually attend the creation of a trust. But it does not follow in event of the death of a trustee named in a will or his refusal to serve that the trust must fail. By the provisions of this will it is contemplated that it may become necessary to appoint a successor to the corporate trustee; and plaintiffs have alleged in their bill and defendants have admitted in their answer that the First National Bank of Menominee “was duly and legally appointed corporate trustee * * * and now has in its possession” the corpus of the trust estate. Under such circumstances it is of little or no consequence for decision herein as to whether either of the two individual trustees was or was not legally appointed. An appointment, if necessary, may yet be made to fill a vacancy, if one exists in such trusteeships. It is sufficient to note that a trust will not fail for want of a trustee or because of the trustee’s inaction. The provision in the instant case as to applying the available trust funds to the charitable purposes within the fixed period of 10 years was merely a direction to the trustees. Failure to do so, whether *65excusable or not, does not defeat the trust. Especially is this true since there is no reverter clause in the will.
“Had no trustee been named, the rule is familiar that a perfectly defined trust will not fail for lack of a trustee, but that a court of equity, by its general inherent jurisdiction over trusts, can supply one.” Penny v. Croul, 76 Mich. 471, 476 (5 L. R. A. 858).
See, also, In re More’s Estate, 179 Mich. 237; King v. Merritt, 67 Mich. 194; Kelsey v. Detroit Trust Co., 265 Mich. 358; and 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13512 (Stat. Ann. § 26.1191).
“Charitable trusts are favored in the law. In absence of a reverter clause, the trust cannot be defeated by failure of executors or trustees to carry it out. Courts will compel performance. Courts will not permit trusts to fail for want of trustees, but will appoint successor trustees to carry out the trust when deceased trustees have failed or omitted to do so. These are truisms. 2 Restatement of the Law of Trusts, p. 1222, comment (a).” In re Mead’s Estate, 227 Wis. 311 (277 N. W. 694, 279 N. W. 18).
“It is also considered as a settled rule, that such a gift to a charitable use is to receive a most liberal construction; and if the trustees pervert the fund to other uses, or even if they refuse to accept or execute the trusts, the charity itself shall not fail, nor will the property revert to the donor. But it will be competent for a court of chancery to direct, in the former case, that the trusts shall be executed, and in the latter, that new trustees shall be appointed, in whom the legal estate shall vest, to be holden in trust for the purposes of the charity.” Inhabitants of Hadley v. Trustees of Hopkins Academy, 14 Pick. (31 Mass.) 240.
“Heirs and personal representatives of a donor have no beneficial interest reverting or accruing to *66themselves from the breach or non-execution of a trust for a charitable use.” 2 Perry on Trusts and Trustees (7th Ed.), p. 1273.
In the light of the above authorities and many others which might be cited, it must be held that this charitable trust has not failed by reason of nonacceptance by competent trustees within the time limited by the terms of the will nor by reason of the trustees named in the will having declined to act.
Appellants also present the following question:
“Was this legacy rendered void as impractical and impossible of performance through the conditions leading up to and by the compromise agreement approved by the probate court May 29,1930 Í ’ ’
Appellants assert that Mr. Lloyd’s bequest to charity was thus defeated. In this we cannot agree. While it is obvious that the compromise agreement referred to in the above question materially minimized the corpus of the charitable trust, this is no reason for holding that the trust is thereby defeated in toto. Especially since, as hereinbefore indicated, there still remains a very substantial trust fund to be administered. It seems unnecessary to cite authority in support of this conclusion, but the following is to the point:
“If a fund decreases in value, so that the original purposes of the charity cannot be accomplished, the scheme of the charity may be changed cy pres.” 2 Perry on Trusts and Trustees (7th Ed.), p. 1239.
Our opinion in the instant case might well be concluded at this point because we have disposed of every question bearing upon the validity of the trust; and having held, as we do, that the trust is valid, none of these plaintiffs have any interest whatever in the subject-matter of this suit. By statutory pro*67vision the responsibility for the proper administration of a trust of this character is placed in the “prosecuting attorney of the county in which the court of chancery shall have jurisdiction.” 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13513 (Stat. Ann. § 26.1192). Plaintiffs recognize the official interest of the prosecuting attorney in this trust by making him a party defendant.
Notwithstanding this lack of interest, we note two other questions presented by appellants. The first of these questions challenges the appointment by the probate court of Albert G. Cherney and Cecil J. Scanlan as trustees. It is appellants’ contention that the charitable trust in the instant case is one of the class included in 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13512 (Stat. Ann. §26.1191), since there is some “indefiniteness or uncertainty of the object of such trust or of the persons designated as the beneficiaries thereunder in the instrument creating the same;” and that, therefore, as provided in the same section, in case a vacancy occurs in the trusteeship “then the trust shall vest in a court of chancery for the proper county, and shall be executed by some trustee appointed for that purpose by or under the direction of the court.” See, also, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13513. Appellants conclude that since the chancery court und,er the statute had jurisdiction of this trust, the appointment of the two trustees named by the probate court was void. For the purposes of this case it may be so conceded, but the record discloses that this case, including the trustees named, has already been before the circuit court of Menominee county in chancery and after full hearing a finding was made and a decree entered by the circuit judge which in effect ratifies the appointment of these trustees, including an approval of their qualifications to act, and directs them to proceed with the execution of *68the trust. We deem this tantamount to appointment by the circuit court in chancery. If a further and more specific order is deemed necessary, or the giving of bonds is requisite, et cetera, orders can be made accordingly.
The remaining question presented by appellants is as follows:
“Is the plan of said trustees as approved by the chancellor a proper execution of the trust?”
The record fairly indicates that the proposed plan is somewhat of a deviation from that contemplated by the testator; but notwithstanding this the proposed plan devotes the trust fund to the same general field of charitable activity contemplated by the donor. Circumstances disclosed by the evidence which justify and indeed necessitate somewhat of a deviation from the original plan of executing this trust are disclosed by the following quoted from the opinion of the trial judge:
“At the time of his death Marshall B. Lloyd was estimated to be worth between two millions and two and one-half millions dollars. He had an estimated annual income of 300,000 to 150,000 dollars. The principal asset of Ms estate was corporate stock of Heywood-Wakefield Company. * * * But the Heywood-Wakefield Company, like many another, soon fell upon evil days. The general depression came along. The value of its stock shrunk' to a fraction of its former selling price in the market, and there were no earnings for distribution. For nine years prior to December, 1936, the Heywood-Wakefield Company paid no dividends. * * * If because of the shrinkage in value of the fund the purpose of the testator cannot be carried out exactly as planned then the rule of cy pres authorizes the court to see that it is carried out as nearly as possible according to his plan. ’ ’
*69Even appellants in their brief state: “It is undisputed that execution of Mr. Lloyd’s intentions on the basis he planned has become impossible and impracticable by reason of shrinkage of the fund. ’ ’
It would serve no purpose to recite in detail the proposed plan of the trustees which has already been approved by the 'circuit judge before whom testimony was taken at length. In attacking the proposed plan, the point most urgently stressed by appellants is that it will involve pledging substantially half of the corpus of the trust estate for the purpose of raising funds with which to erect a building to carry on the activities of this trust. This appellants assert is in direct violation of the provision in Mr. Lloyd’s will that not to exceed one-fourth part of the corpus of the trust shall be used for building purposes and the remainder is to be used as a permanent endowment fund. While the plan proposed has the uncertainty of all human affairs, still there is testimony from which it may fairly be concluded that the income of the trust estate will be sufficient to pay the obligation incident to which the pledge is to be made. The record discloses that an extensive effort has been made to ascertain what is the best plan under which this trust can be executed in view of changed conditions. The result of this investigation justifies the plan proposed by the trustees and approved by the circuit judge. While, as before stated, it deviates somewhat from the plan of using the funds contemplated by the donor, still it is within the same field of charitable activity and is permissible under the doctrine of cy pres which is recognized in this State. Appeal of Hannan, 227 Mich. 569.
The decree entered in the circuit court is affirmed, with costs to appellees.
Wiest, C. J., and Butzel, Bushnell, Sharpe, Potter, Chandler, and McAllister, JJ., concurred.