delivered the opinion of the Court,
In this cause we reexamine when the statute of limitations in a legal-malpractice case should be tolled. Petitioners sued respondent attorneys for mishandling the defense of a maritime personal-injury lawsuit. The trial court granted the attorneys’ motions for summary judgment based on limitations. The court of appeals affirmed.
Petitioners Apex Towing Company, Apex Barge Company, and Apex Oil Company (collectively “Apex”) hired respondents William M. Tolin, III, of the Texas law firm of Benckenstein & Oxford (collectively “Oxford”), and later the Louisiana law firm of Hebert, Mouledoux & Bland (Bland), to defend them against a maritime personal-injury suit in a Texas court. The plaintiff seaman in that suit was injured while boarding a vessel when the wash of a tugboat owned by Apex caused him to fall from the gangplank. In its legal-malpractice case, Apex alleges among other things that Oxford and Bland failed to file a timely maritime limitation-of-liability pleading, leaving Apex exposed to a judgment in excess of the value of the vessel and its freight. On August 31, 1994, the trial court in the underlying personal-injury suit rendered judgment on a jury verdict for an amount in excess of any limit that could have been imposed had Apex’s attorneys filed a timely maritime-limitation pleading. Apex hired additional counsel to file post-judgment motions and an appeal. The ease was ultimately settled, and the court of appeals dismissed the appeal on May 19,1995.
On August 31, 1995, Apex filed a legal-malpractice suit against Oxford and Bland in Louisiana. That case was later dismissed without prejudice. On February 19, 1997, Apex filed this lawsuit against both law firms, alleging among other things that the attorneys breached the standard of care by failing to file a timely maritime-limitation pleading, failing to investigate and pursue appropriate discovery, failing to file special exceptions, and failing to submit an appropriate jury charge and instructions. Oxford and Bland moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the two-year statute of limitations on Apex’s malpractice claim began to run no later than January 27, 1995, when the parties purportedly agreed to settle the underlying personal-injury case. The trial court granted summary judgment for the attorneys.
The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
The court of appeals in this case is not alone in its view that our decision in
Murphy
narrowed or limited application of the
*120
Hughes
rule to situations in which a party is forced to obtain new counsel.
See Eiland v. Turpin, Smith, Dyer, Saxe & McDonald,
Apex argues that the bright-line rule we established in
Hughes
was not modified or limited by
Murphy.
It emphasizes that in
Murphy
the Court held only that the tolling rule does not apply to accounting-malpractice cases; thus in legal-malpractice cases, limitations remains tolled until the terminal point in the underlying litigation, regardless of when the malpractice defendant ceased to have an attorney-client relationship with the malpractice plaintiff. In
Murphy,
in a section responding to one of the dissenting opinions in that case, the Court stated that
Hughes
“is expressly limited to claims against a lawyer arising out of litigation where the party must not only assert inconsistent positions but must also obtain new counsel.”
Oxford and Bland respond that in Murphy the Court modified the Hughes rule so that the statute of limitations begins to run not later than when a party hires new counsel to handle the underlying litigation. Once new counsel is hired, they argue, the policy reasons behind the Hughes rule no longer apply. They also argue that the policy reasons behind Hughes no longer apply once parties agree to settle the underlying case because a settlement obviates the risk that the client will be forced to take inconsistent positions, and fixes the amount of damages caused by the malpractice. Thus the attorneys argue that the Hughes tolling rule should apply on a case-by-case basis, only when the policy reasons behind the rule also apply directly to the facts of the specific case under review.
The legal-malpractice claims presented in this case are governed by the two-year statute of limitations.
See
Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 16.003(a);
Willis v. Maverick,
In
Hughes,
we articulated two policy considerations as the bases for tolling the statute of limitations when an attorney commits malpractice in the prosecution or defense of a claim that results in litigation until all appeals on the underlying claim are exhausted.
Hughes,
In this case, the court of appeals added a continued-representation requirement based on statements about
Hughes
drawn from
Murphy.
Moreover, a close reading of
Murphy
does not support the conclusion that we modified the
Hughes
rule in that case. First, the specific relevant holding of
Murphy
is that
Hughes
does not apply to malpractice actions against accountants.
As we noted in
Hughes,
the tolling rule we adopted is not universally followed.
Moreover, although tolling limitations is conceptually distinct from applying the discovery rule to delay commencement of limitations, we note that clear and strict application of the
Hughes
tolling rule comports with our efforts to maintain a categorical approach when determining whether the discovery rule applies to certain types of claims.
See HECI Exploration Co. v. Neel,
Similarly, without re-examining whether the policy reasons behind the tolling rule apply in each legal-malpractice case matching the
Hughes
paradigm, courts should simply apply the
Hughes
tolling rule to the category of legal-malpractice cases encompassed within its definition.
See Farah v. Mafrige & Kormanik, P.C.,
In this ease, Apex alleges that Oxford and Bland committed malpractice while defending Apex in the underlying personal-injury litigation. The Hughes rule thus applies to this case. As the underlying case was not finally concluded until May 19, 1995, when the court of appeals issued its order dismissing Apex’s appeal, Apex’s malpractice suit was timely when filed on February 19, 1997. The court of appeals therefore erred in affirming the trial court’s summary judgment on limitations. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand this cause to the trial court for further proceedings.
