In March, 1925, Mrs. Erisse Corbello was interdicted by the Fourteenth district court for the parish of Calcasieu, and the Calcasieu National Bank of Lake Charles was appointed curator of the interdict. The bank rendered provisional accounts annually until the interdict died in February, 1930, when it rendered its final account. The heirs of the deceased opposed the accounts filed by the bank, and, on the trial of the opposition, the district court rendered a judgment approving the accounts, directing that the funds in the possession of the curator be distributed, and ordering the curator discharged. On appeal to this court, the judgment was affirmed. See Corbello v. Corbello,
Neither of the grounds relied on by the appellees warrants this court in dismissing the bank's appeal. The right of a litigant to appeal from an adverse judgment is wholly different from his right to invoke the supervisory process of the court to review an adverse ruling of an inferior court. The remedies are not interchangeable. Under the constitutional provisions the court's appellate jurisdiction is as distinct in its nature as it is in its name from the court's supervisory jurisdiction. The court's supervisory powers are exercised only in those cases where there is no remedy by appeal or where such a remedy is likely to prove inadequate. All that was decided on the bank's application for the remedial writs was that the court below had properly denied the bank's motion for an appeal from its judgment, affirmed by this court, dismissing the opposition of the interdict's heirs to the several accounts filed by the bank as the interdict's curator. This ruling does not affect the merits of the present appeal the purpose of which is to bring up for review the judgment of the court below dismissing on the appellees' peremptory exceptions the bank's supplemental account.
For the reasons assigned, the motion to dismiss the appeal is denied. *Page 430
