*767 OPINION
Thе Estate of Carol A. Whitsett appeals a summary judgment entered in favor of William E. Junell and Andrews Kurth L.L.P. (“A & K”). In one issue, Whitsett contends the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Junell and A & K because the
Hughes
rule tolled the statute of limitations on her legal malpractice claims against Junell and A & K until the Fifth Circuit dismissed her appeal in the underlying litigation made the subject of this suit.
Hughes v. Mahaney & Higgins,
Background
In 1980, Whitsett’s husband was killed in an airplane crash. After her husband’s death, Whitsett engaged Thomas Dardas, an attorney, to pursue a wrongful death claim and handle the estate of her late husband. During the representation, Dar-das convinced Whitsett to makе him two loans, together totaling $95,000. Dardas defaulted on the loans.
In December 1981, Whitsett hired Junell to represent her in a lawsuit against Dar-das to obtain repayment of the loans (the “Dardas litigation”). Junell filed suit against Dardas in December 1982. The lawsuit alleged breach of fiduciary duty, legal malpractice, breach of contract, fraud, violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”), and sought recovery of punitive damages. Whitsett alleges that she asked Junell to assert additional tort claims against Dardas in the lawsuit, and that Junell advised against filing these claims because pursuit of them would be futile. Dardas filed for bankruptcy shortly thereaftеr and Junell asserted Whitsett’s claims in the bankruptcy proceeding.
In 1988, Junell left his former law firm and joined A & K. Junell withdrew from his representation of Whitsett in February 1991. Whitsett’s new attorney, Tom Dickens, pursued the Dardas litigation in federal court and lost. Whitsett appealed the trial court’s take-nothing judgment in the Dardas litigation. The Fifth Circuit dismissed the appeal on March 30,1993.
On March 30, 1995, two years after the dismissal of the federal appeal, Whitsett filed this action against Junell and A & K. Whitsett alleges that in the Dardas litigation, Junell (1) negligently failed to pursue the tort claims he asserted against Dardas and (2) failed to include additional unidentified “unasserted” tort claims. Junell and A & K moved for partial summary judgment, asserting the affirmative defense of limitations. The trial court granted the motion.
The trial court’s order granting Junell and A & K’s partial motion for summary judgment states,
On June 20, 2000, the Court heard Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on Limitations (the “Motion”). After reviewing the pleadings and hearing arguments of counsel, the Court grants the motion in part, and denies it in part.
The Motion was directed at the specific claims and causes of action asserted by Carol Whitsett against William E. Junell, Jr. and Andrews & Kurth, L.L.P., which arose out of alleged claims which Carol Whitsett had against Thomas A. Dardas that were not included or asserted in litigation filed by Whitsett against Dardas. It is ORDERED that the Motion is granted as to those specific claims and causes of action against the Defendants that Carol Whitsett had *768 against Thomas A. Dardas that were not included or asserted in litigation filed by Whitsett against Dardas, provided, however, that it is further ORDERED that the Motion is denied as to Whitsett’s cause of action alleging fraud and conspiracy to defraud.
After the partial summary judgment, Whitsett’s remaining claims against Junell and A & K went to trial, including claims for fraud, conspirаcy to commit fraud, violations of the DTPA, and breach of fiduciary duty. The trial court granted Junell and A & K’s motion for directed verdict on all of Whitsett’s claims except the breach of fiduciary duty claim. The jury, however, returned a verdict in favor of Junell and A & K on the breach of fiduciary duty claim, and the trial court rendered a final judgment that Junell did not engage in a clear and serious violation of duty to Whit-sett such that he should be required to forfeit his fee. 1
Whitsett died in February 2002. Her estate pursues this litigation on her behalf, appealing the partial summary judgment that dismissed Whitsett’s legal malpractice claims based on limitations.
See Belt v. Oppenheimer, Blend, Harrison & Tate, Inc.,
Statute of Limitations
Standard of Review
Our review of a summary judgment is de novo.
Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Knott,
“A defendant moving for summary judgment on an affirmative defense must prove each element of its defense as a matter of law, leaving no issues оf material fact.”
Garza v. Exel Logistics, Inc.,
Equitable Tolling
A two-year statute of limitations governs legal malpractice claims. Tex. Civ. PRAC.
&
RemlCode Ann. § 16.003 (Vernon Supp.2006);
Willis v. Maverick,
In
Hughes,
the Texas Supreme Court expressed two policy reasons for tolling the statute of limitations when an attorney commits malpractice in the prosecution or defense of a claim that results in litigation.
The supreme court reinforced these policy considerations in
Sanchez v. Hastings,
stating that “if the client must carefully scrutinize every stage of the case for possible missteps it would erode the trust between client and lawyer necessary for the successful prosecution of litigation.”
In
Apex Towing Co. v. Tolin,
the Texas Supreme Court instructed lower courts to desist from re-examining whether the policy reasons behind
Hughes
apply in each legal malpractice case presented and to “simply apply the
Hughes
tolling rule to the category of legal-malpractice cases encompassed within its definition.”
Application of Equitable Tolling in This Case
Here, Whitsett alleges that Junell committed malpractice in the prosecution of her case against Dardas by failing to pursue her tort claims, and by failing to file related (though unidentified) tort claims in the first instance. Junell and A
&
K respond that the
Hughes
rule does not apply because Whitsett’s legal malpractice claims arise only from Junell’s negligent failure to file tort claims against Dardas, and thus he could not have committed malpractice
*770
“during [his] prosecution or defense of a claim that resulted] in litigation,” because the unidentified additional tort claims that Whitsett contends should have been brought against Dardas were never actually litigated.
Hughes,
In the years since the
Hughes
decision, however, the Texas Supreme Court has held that the phrase, “in the prosecution or defense of a claim,” includes claims that should have been brought, but were not.
See Sanchez,
The supreme court applied the
Hughes
rule phrase “claim that results in litigation” broadly in
Sanchez,
As in
Sanchez,
Whitsett’s malpractice claims against Junell and A
&
K arose from an alleged failure to include or pursue tort claims in the Dardas litigation. Following
Sanchez
and
Hughes,
we hold that Whitsett’s malpractice claims against Junell and A & K arose in the prosecution of the Dardas litigation and therefore the
Hughes
rule applies.
See Sanchez,
Junell and A & K failed to prove as a matter of law that the scope of Junell’s representation of Whitsett was limited to recovery of the two loans Whitsett made to Dardas, or that the additional claims at issue constituted separate, divisible injuries for limitations purposes. Rather, Whitsett offered deposition testimony that the scope of the Dardas litigation was not limited to the issue of the notes, but extended to other tort claims:
*771 I asked him over and over again to please at least list the claims that I wanted. Even though he knew that the two notes would be an easy recovery, he felt — and for which there was оnly 100,-000 — why would we want to sue for anything other than what we can recover. And I objected. I just literally kept, as Ed Cain did, going back to that constantly, for him to at least see the policy.
He advised us, Ed Cain and I, that there was not enough insurance coverage to even bring up and these were easy to collect on. And although he knеw there were many more issues, that Dardas’ insurance malpractice was only for 100,000 and these notes could easily be proved, and he mentioned that the other issues are too complicated, convoluted for even a jury to understand.
In addition, the original petition in the Dardas litigation alleges malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty as it relates to Dardas’s representation of Whitsett generally and is not specifically a suit to collect on the notes. Whitsett has therefore produced some summary judgment evidence that Dardas’s legal representation of her in matters incident to her husband’s estate constitutes а “claim that resulted] in litigation” and an “indivisible injury” for the purposes of the
Hughes
tolling rule.
See Sanchez,
Conclusion
After the trial court ruled on the limitations issue in this case, the Texas Supreme Court clarified the scope of the
Hughes
tolling rule to include the legal malpractice claims Whitsett asserts and disapproved of the authorities relied on in the trial court for summary judgment.
See Apex Towing Co.,
Notes
. Whitsett contends that Junell failed to file "additional tort claims,” and failed to pursue the tort claims that he did file in the original petition in the Dardas litigation. It is unclear from the record whether the trial court’s partial summary judgment includes claims that Junell filed but did not pursue, or just tort claims that were never filed, leaving the former for trial on the merits. We analyze both for limitations purposes and leave the scope of the partial summary judgment for the trial court to address on remand.
. Junell and A & K cite
Sharpe v. Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas
in support of their contention that the
Hughes
rule does not apply to Whitsett’s legal malpractice claims.
