Gail Gillette v. Stephen Graves ( 2020 )


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  •                                   Fourth Court of Appeals
    San Antonio, Texas
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    No. 04-18-00771-CV
    Gail GILLETTE,
    Appellant
    v.
    Stephen GRAVES,
    Appellee
    From the 224th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 2017CI03140
    Honorable Richard Price, Judge Presiding
    OPINION ON REHEARING
    Opinion by:       Irene Rios, Justice
    Sitting:          Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
    Irene Rios, Justice
    Beth Watkins, Justice
    Delivered and Filed: March 4, 2020
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    On November 20, 2019, the court issued an opinion and judgment in this appeal. Although
    a motion for reconsideration en banc is pending, the panel, on its own motion, withdraws its
    November 20, 2019 opinion and judgment, and substitutes this opinion and judgment in their
    place. 1
    1
    This opinion adds citation to two Texas Supreme Court case decided after this court’s November 20, 2019 opinion
    and judgment. Additionally, it corrects a factual assertion in the original opinion that the second and third foreclosure
    lawsuits were filed by the same lawyer when they were actually filed by two different lawyers.
    04-18-00771-CV
    Gail Gillette sued her former lawyer, Stephen Graves, for legal malpractice. Graves moved
    for summary judgment, arguing the suit was barred by the two-year statute of limitations. The trial
    court granted summary judgment and dismissed Gillette’s suit. On appeal, Gillette argues her legal
    malpractice suit was not barred by limitations based on the tolling rule established in Hughes v.
    Mahaney & Higgins, 
    821 S.W.2d 154
    (Tex. 1991). We reverse and remand.
    BACKGROUND
    The Foreclosure Litigation
    Gillette hired Graves to resolve accounting discrepancies in her mortgage payments and
    prevent her mortgage lender from foreclosing on her home. Acting on Gillette’s behalf, Graves
    filed suit against the mortgage lender on July 30, 2010. The suit asked the trial court to enjoin the
    foreclosure sale of Gillette’s home, which was set for August 3, 2010. The trial court temporarily
    enjoined the lender from foreclosing on Gillette’s home. More than two years later, Graves entered
    into an agreement with the lender and signed an agreed judgment disposing of the suit. According
    to Gillette, Graves entered into the agreed judgment without her consent. The agreed judgment
    dismissed “all of [Gillette’s] causes of action against” the lender and stated that the lender was
    “entitled to a declaratory judgment that it may lawfully proceed with the foreclosure sale of the
    property.” The agreed judgment was signed by the trial court on January 8, 2013.
    After the dismissal, the lender resumed foreclosure proceedings on Gillette’s home. The
    lender prepared a new notice of foreclosure. Gillette retained another lawyer to represent her. This
    lawyer filed suit against the lender and obtained a temporary injunction stopping the newly-noticed
    foreclosure sale of Gillette’s home. This suit was eventually dismissed because of the agreed
    judgment in the suit filed by Graves.
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    04-18-00771-CV
    Again, the lender resumed foreclosure proceedings on Gillette’s home. The lender actually
    foreclosed on Gillette’s home on December 3, 2013. The lender began eviction proceedings against
    Gillette. On March 29, 2014, Gillette, who was represented by a third lawyer, filed a wrongful
    foreclosure suit against the lender. In this suit, Gillette alleged the lender had failed to comply with
    the terms of the agreed judgment in the initial suit. Gillette obtained a temporary injunction
    preventing her eviction. Ultimately, Gillette and the lender entered into a settlement agreement
    that ended the foreclosure dispute. Under the settlement agreement, the lender paid Gillette a sum
    of money and Gillette vacated her home. The trial court signed an order dismissing the wrongful
    foreclosure suit on January 29, 2016.
    The Legal Malpractice Suit
    On February 22, 2017, Gillette filed a legal malpractice lawsuit against Graves. Gillette
    alleged Graves had committed legal malpractice by entering into an agreed judgment in the first
    suit without Gillette’s consent. Graves moved for summary judgment, asserting that the two-year
    statute of limitations barred Gillette’s legal malpractice claim. Graves argued that Gillette’s legal
    malpractice claim “necessarily accrued not later than the final conclusion of the litigation in which
    [I] represented [Gillette].” Attached to the summary judgment motion was a certified copy of the
    agreed judgment in the first suit against the lender, which the trial court had signed on January 8,
    2013.
    Gillette filed a response to the summary judgment motion, arguing her suit was not time-
    barred because the statute of limitations for her legal malpractice suit was tolled until the
    foreclosure-related litigation was resolved. Gillette further argued she did not have a viable legal
    malpractice claim until all the foreclosure litigation was finally concluded.
    The trial court granted Graves’s summary judgment motion and dismissed Gillette’s legal
    malpractice suit. Gillette appealed.
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    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a summary judgment de novo. Travelers Ins. Co. v. Joachim, 
    315 S.W.3d 860
    ,
    862 (Tex. 2010). A summary judgment movant bears the burden to show that no genuine issue of
    material fact exists and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Provident Life & Accident
    Ins. Co. v. Knott, 
    128 S.W.3d 211
    , 215–16 (Tex. 2003). A defendant moving for summary
    judgment on the ground that the plaintiff’s claim is barred by limitations must conclusively
    establish the application of the statute of limitations, including the date when limitations began to
    run. 
    Id. at 220.
    LEGAL MALPRACTICE, LIMITATIONS, & THE HUGHES TOLLING
    RULE
    A cause of action for legal malpractice is subject to the two-year statute of limitations. TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 16.003(a). Generally, a cause of action accrues and the statute of
    limitations begins to run when facts come into existence that authorize a party to seek a judicial
    remedy. Archer v. Tregellas, 
    566 S.W.3d 281
    , 288 (Tex. 2018). The determination of the date of
    accrual of a cause of action is a legal question that we review de novo. Ghidoni v. Skeins, 
    510 S.W.3d 707
    , 710 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2016, no pet.).
    Texas recognizes a special tolling rule for certain categories of legal malpractice claims.
    The Texas Supreme Court first articulated this tolling rule in Hughes v. Mahaney & Higgins, 
    821 S.W.2d 154
    , 157 (Tex. 1991), and later reaffirmed it in Apex Towing Co. v. Tolin, 
    41 S.W.3d 118
    ,
    119 (Tex. 2001). The Hughes tolling rule as articulated in Apex states: “When an attorney commits
    malpractice in the prosecution or defense of a claim that results in litigation, the statute of
    limitations on a malpractice claim against that attorney is tolled until all appeals on the underlying
    claim are exhausted or the litigation is otherwise finally concluded.” 
    Apex, 41 S.W.3d at 119
    ; see
    
    Hughes, 821 S.W.2d at 157
    .
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    04-18-00771-CV
    Our analysis is guided by three Texas Supreme Court cases: Hughes, Gulf Coast Investment
    Corp. v. Brown, 2 and Apex. In Hughes, a husband and wife hired a lawyer to help them adopt a
    
    child. 821 S.W.2d at 155
    . The lawyer obtained an affidavit from the child’s biological mother
    voluntarily relinquishing her rights to the child. 
    Id. The affidavit
    named the lawyer, rather than the
    husband and wife, the child’s temporary managing conservator. 
    Id. After obtaining
    the affidavit,
    the lawyer filed suit to terminate the biological parents’ parental rights. 
    Id. However, the
    biological
    mother changed her mind, revoked the affidavit of relinquishment, and moved to dismiss the
    parental termination suit. 
    Id. The biological
    mother argued the husband and wife lacked standing
    to sue. 
    Id. The biological
    mother ultimately prevailed on appeal on her standing argument and the
    husband and wife’s suit was eventually dismissed on this ground. 
    Id. at 156.
    Thereafter, the husband and wife sued their lawyer for malpractice, arguing he was
    negligent in obtaining a relinquishment affidavit that named himself, instead of his clients, the
    child’s temporary managing conservator. 
    Id. In response,
    the lawyer argued the legal malpractice
    suit was barred by the two-year statute of limitations. 
    Id. The Texas
    Supreme Court disagreed with
    the lawyer, holding that the statute of limitations on the legal malpractice suit was tolled until all
    the appeals on the underlying claim were exhausted. 
    Id. at 157.
    In adopting this rule, the supreme
    court recognized that requiring the clients to file their legal malpractice suit earlier would have
    forced them to adopt inherently inconsistent postures in the termination appeal and in the
    malpractice suit and would have compromised their likelihood of success in both cases. 
    Id. Specifically, the
    husband and wife would have been placed in the position of claiming in their
    malpractice case that their lawyer had committed malpractice in handling their termination suit
    and that, but for his negligence, the termination suit and adoption would have succeeded. 
    Id. On 2
        821 S.W.2d159 (Tex. 1991).
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    04-18-00771-CV
    the other hand, in pursuing their termination appeal, they would have had to make the inconsistent
    claim that their lawyer’s actions were correct or, at least, not fatal to their claims. 
    Id. The supreme
    court further explained its reasoning:
    Where “a person is prevented from exercising his legal remedy by the
    pendency of legal proceedings, the time during which he is thus prevented should
    not be counted against him in determining whether limitations have barred his
    right.” Walker v. Hanes, 
    570 S.W.2d 534
    , 540 (Tex. Civ. App.—Corpus Christi
    1978, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (limitations tolled while prior submission of same case was
    being appealed); Cavitt v. Amsler, 
    242 S.W. 246
    , 249 (Tex. Civ. App.—Austin
    1922, writ dism’d) (limitations on suit for dividends tolled while suit to determine
    ownership of stock was being appealed); Pease v. State, 
    228 S.W. 269
    , 270–71
    (Tex. Civ. App.—El Paso 1921, writ ref’d) (plaintiff’s cause of action in suit for
    salary did not accrue until final decision in quo warranto proceeding that defendant
    was not entitled to job); Fields v. Austin, 
    30 S.W. 386
    , 387 (Tex. Civ. App. 1895,
    writ ref’d) (cause of action for rent did not accrue until appeals exhausted on suit
    to determine title to land).
    We conclude that the rationale applied in these cases is also appropriate
    when a client’s cause of action for malpractice arises during the attorney’s
    prosecution or defense of a claim which results in litigation. Limitations are tolled
    for the second cause of action because the viability of the second cause of action
    depends on the outcome of the first.
    Therefore, we hold that when an attorney commits malpractice in the
    prosecution or defense of a claim that results in litigation, the statute of limitations
    on the malpractice claim against the attorney is tolled until all appeals on the
    underlying claim are exhausted. We join other jurisdictions in adopting this well-
    reasoned rule.
    
    Id. In Gulf
    Coast Investment Corp. v. Brown, the Texas Supreme Court extended the Hughes
    rule to toll limitations during the pendency of a third-party suit rather than an appeal. 
    821 S.W.2d 159
    , 160 (Tex. 1991). In Gulf Coast, lawyers had represented an investment company during a
    non-judicial foreclosure sale of real property. 
    Id. After the
    foreclosure sale, the investment
    company was sued by the former property owners for wrongful foreclosure. 
    Id. When the
    wrongful
    foreclosure suit was resolved, the investment company sued its former lawyers for their actions
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    04-18-00771-CV
    related to the foreclosure sale. 
    Id. The Texas
    Supreme Court held that the malpractice suit was not
    barred by limitations because the Hughes tolling rule applied. 
    Id. “[W]hen an
    attorney’s
    malpractice in conducting a non-judicial foreclosure sale of real property results in a wrongful
    foreclosure action against the client, the statute of limitations on the malpractice claim is tolled
    until the wrongful foreclosure action is finally resolved.” 
    Id. “We see
    no reason why the tolling
    rule announced by this court in Hughes [] should not apply when the attorney’s malpractice results,
    not in an appeal on the underlying claim, but in a wrongful foreclosure action by a third-party
    against the client.” 
    Id. In Apex,
    the Texas Supreme Court further held a legal malpractice case was not removed
    from the scope of the Hughes rule, despite the hiring of new lawyers and the settlement of the
    underlying 
    litigation. 41 S.W.3d at 120
    –22. The facts in Apex showed that lawyers were hired to
    defend a client in a personal injury suit. 
    Id. at 119.
    After trial, the client hired additional lawyers
    to file post-judgment motions and an appeal. 
    Id. The case
    settled while on appeal. 
    Id. The client
    did not file its malpractice suit until after the case was settled and the appeal was dismissed. 
    Id. The lawyers
    argued the malpractice suit was barred by limitations because the Hughes tolling rule
    no longer applied once the client hired new counsel. 
    Id. at 120.
    However, the Texas Supreme Court
    rejected the argument that the Hughes tolling rule is limited to situations in which the client
    continues to be represented by the same lawyer. See 
    id. at 121
    (“[W]e reiterate that continued
    representation by the allegedly malpracticing attorney was not a requirement set out in Hughes.”).
    In Apex, the supreme court discussed Hughes’s policy considerations. 
    Id. First, limitations
    should be tolled in the malpractice case because clients should not be forced to adopt inherently
    inconsistent litigation postures in the underlying litigation and the malpractice case. 
    Id. Second, limitations
    should be tolled in the malpractice case because the viability of the malpractice case
    depends on the outcome of the underlying litigation. 
    Id. -7- 04-18-00771-CV
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Gillette argues the Hughes rule applied to toll the time for filing her claim.
    Gillette emphasizes that her second and third foreclosure suits were filed to “undo” the harm
    Graves had done in handling the dispute with her mortgage lender, and therefore, they functioned
    like an appeal. Gillette also argues her legal malpractice action was not viable when the trial court
    signed the agreed judgment in the initial suit on January 8, 2013, and did not become viable until
    the trial court rendered judgment dismissing the last foreclosure-related suit on January 29, 2016.
    We agree with Gillette that her legal malpractice claim against Graves fits within the
    Hughes/Apex rule, which provides: “When an attorney commits malpractice in the prosecution or
    defense of a claim that results in litigation, the statute of limitations on a malpractice claim is tolled
    until all appeals on the underlying claim are exhausted or the litigation is otherwise finally
    concluded.” 
    Apex, 41 S.W.3d at 119
    ; see 
    Hughes, 821 S.W.2d at 157
    . In its recent discussion of
    the Hughes/Apex tolling rule, the Texas Supreme Court explained the rule’s application as follows:
    The rule does not apply every time legal “malpractice . . . results in litigation.” Rather, we
    included a critical limitation: the malpractice must be committed “in the prosecution or
    defense of a claim.”
    Our Hughes tolling cases confirm that these terms carry their ordinary meaning
    within the legal-services context. “Claim” refers to “[t]he assertion of an existing right; any
    right to payment or to an equitable remedy, even if contingent or provisional” and “[a]
    demand for money, property, or a legal remedy to which one asserts a right . . . .”
    “Prosecution” and “Defense” are opposing sides of the same coin. To prosecute something
    means “[t]o commence and carry out (a legal action).” Defense refers to “[a] defendant’s
    stated reason why the plaintiff . . . has no valid case” and to defend a claim means “to do
    something [protective] . . . [t]o deny, contest, or oppose (an allegation or claim) . . . [t]o
    represent (someone) as an attorney; to act as legal counsel for someone who has been sued
    or prosecuted.”
    Erikson v. Renda, 
    590 S.W.3d 557
    , 567 (Tex. 2019) (internal citations omitted). Additionally, the
    term “litigation” has been construed broadly. See Sanchez v. Hastings, 
    898 S.W.2d 287
    , 288 (Tex.
    1995) (holding, in a malpractice case complaining of the lawyers’ failure to sue a tortfeasor
    in a wrongful death case, that limitations was tolled until all litigation concluded against other
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    tortfeasors liable for the same indivisible injury); Gulf 
    Coast, 821 S.W.2d at 160
    (holding
    limitations on a legal malpractice suit implicating a lawyer’s actions in a non-judicial foreclosure
    sale was tolled during a subsequent suit against client for wrongful foreclosure); see also Estate of
    Whitsett v. Junell, 
    218 S.W.3d 765
    , 771 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2007, no pet.) (construing
    the phrase “claim that results in litigation” to include all claims for an indivisible injury that an
    attorney is hired to pursue on behalf of a client, as well as any claim the attorney must assert on
    behalf of his client in the exercise of reasonable care).
    Here, Gillette hired Graves to resolve accounting discrepancies in her mortgage payments
    and to prevent her mortgage lender from foreclosing on her home. The “prosecution or defense”
    of Gillette’s “claim,” that is, Gillette’s assertion of her rights with regard to her home, “result[ed]
    in litigation,” specifically, the filing of three foreclosure-related suits against her mortgage lender.
    The litigation on Gillette’s “claim” did not “finally conclude[]” until the trial court signed the
    judgment dismissing the third suit challenging the foreclosure of Gillette’s home. This judgment
    was not appealed. Therefore, the judgment dismissing the third suit was the terminal point in the
    litigation concerning the foreclosure on Gillette’s home, and Gillette’s legal malpractice claim
    was not viable until this time. If this court were to hold to the contrary and conclude limitations
    was not tolled, Gillette would have been forced into adopting the “inherently inconsistent litigation
    postures” the Hughes court described as “untenabl[e].” 
    See 821 S.W.2d at 156
    . “Specifically, had
    [Gillette] sued [Graves] for malpractice while seeking to” prevent the eviction by claiming
    wrongful foreclosure based on the lender’s failure to comply with the terms of the agreed judgment
    obtained by Graves in the first foreclosure proceeding, Gillette “would have been placed in the
    position of claiming that [Graves] committed malpractice in the handling of [the first foreclosure
    proceeding] and that, but for [Graves’s] negligence,” no agreed judgment would have been
    entered. In pursuing her claim of wrongful foreclosure based on the lender’s breach of the agreed
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    04-18-00771-CV
    judgment, however, Gillette “had to make the inconsistent claim that [Graves’s] actions were
    correct.” See 
    id. at 157.
    As the Hughes court recognized, this type of conflict would compromise
    Gillette’s success in both suits. See 
    id. Graves argues
    the trial court properly granted summary judgment on Gillette’s legal
    malpractice claim because under Hughes, the statute of limitations on legal malpractice claims
    “begins to run on the date of final adjudication of a litigated matter in which the malpractice is
    alleged to have occurred.” Graves further argues: “A fair reading of existing case law is that direct
    attack by appeal of a judgment alleged to have been entered as a result of legal malpractice tolls
    the statute of limitations on assertion of a claim for that malpractice until the appeal is concluded.” 3
    (emphasis in original). We disagree. The fact that Gillette pursued a remedy in the trial court and
    not the appellate court is not determinative. In Gulf Coast, the Texas Supreme Court held that a
    suit filed by a third-party against the client operated to toll 
    limitations. 821 S.W.2d at 160
    .
    Additionally, the language of the Hughes tolling rule as articulated in Apex does not support
    Graves’s argument: “[T]he statute of limitations on a malpractice claim . . . is tolled until all
    appeals on the underlying claim are exhausted or the litigation is otherwise finally concluded.”
    
    Apex, 41 S.W.3d at 119
    (emphasis added). We conclude the Hughes tolling rule is not limited to
    situations in which a judgment is under direct attack by appeal. See Gulf 
    Coast, 821 S.W.2d at 160
    ; Nowak v. Pellis, 
    248 S.W.3d 736
    , 740–41 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2007, no pet.)
    (applying the Hughes rule to toll limitations until all litigation ended on the underlying medical
    malpractice claim, including the dismissal of a separate bill of review suit against one of the
    defendants); see also Skelton v. Gray, No. 18-0386, 
    2020 WL 868122
    , at *4-5 (Tex. February 21,
    3
    The only case Graves cites in his appellate brief is Hughes v. Mahaney & Higgins, 
    821 S.W.2d 154
    (Tex. 1991).
    - 10 -
    04-18-00771-CV
    2020) (holding the limitations period for a legal malpractice claim involving representation in a
    criminal case was tolled during both direct appeal and post-conviction proceedings).
    We hold Gillette’s cause of action for legal malpractice against Graves accrued when the
    foreclosure litigation came to an end. Under the Hughes rule, Gillette’s legal malpractice claim
    did not accrue until the trial court signed the judgment dismissing the last foreclosure-related suit
    on January 29, 2016.
    Gillette filed her legal malpractice suit against Graves on February 22, 2017, which was
    within the two-year statute of limitations. Therefore, Gillette’s legal malpractice suit was not
    barred by the two-year statute of limitations. Because Graves failed to meet his burden to establish
    the affirmative defense of limitations, he was not entitled to summary judgment. We conclude the
    trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Graves.
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Irene Rios, Justice
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