OPINION
HUDSON, Justice.
At issue is whether appellant Joseph Frederick has filed a timely legal-malpractice claim under Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1(5) (2016). Frederick’s attorney, respondent Kay Wallerich, prepared an ante-nuptial agreement for Frederick and his then-fíancée, Cynthia Gatliff, in 2006. The agreement did not include the statutorily required witness signatures, however, thus making it unenforceable. Frederick and Gatliff were married the next day. One year later, Wallerich drafted a will for Frederick, which incorporated the ante-nuptial agreement by reference. According to the will, Frederick did not leave any assets to Gatliff because the antenuptial agreement already specified the portion of his assets that she was to receive upon his death. When Gatliff filed for divorce after 6 years of marriage, she alleged that the antenuptial agreement was invalid because it lacked the requisite witness signatures.
Later that year, Frederick commenced a lawsuit against Wallerich for legal malpractice. Although the invalid execution of the antenuptial agreement fell outside of the 6-year limitations period for malpractice claims, Frederick alleged that subsequent representations by Wallerich that the antenuptial agreement was valid— most significantly when Wallerich drafted his will 1 year later—were separate legal-malpractice claims that each triggered their own statute of limitations periods. Wallerich moved for judgment on the pleadings, which the district court granted, determining that all of Frederick’s claims related to the antenuptial agreement were untimely filed. The court of appeals affirmed. Because we hold that Frederick has sufficiently alleged that Wallerich’s •will drafting formed the basis for a separate malpractice claim within the limitations period, we reverse and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
FACTS
On appeal from the district court’s judgment on the pleadings, we must take all allegations of the complaint as true. Walsh v. U.S. Bank, N.A., 851 N.W.2d 598, 606 (Minn. 2014). We therefore rely principally on the allegations of the complaint for the factual record.
Beginning in 2006, Frederick retained Farrish Johnson Law Office for various family law and estate matters. In September 2006, Frederick consulted with an attorney at. Farrish Johnson Law Office, Wallerich, to draft an antenuptial agreement before his wedding to Gatliff. Frederick’s intent was that Gatliff would not receive his assets, or the appreciation therefrom, if they divorced. Frederick and Gatliff signed the agreement on September 28, 2006, but the witness lines were left blank, making the agreement unenforceable. See Minn. Stat. § 519.11, subd. 2 (2016) (“Antenuptial ... contracts ... shall be in writing, executed in the presence of two witnesses and acknowledged by the parties.... ”). Frederick and Gatliff married the next day, on September 29, 2006.
One year later, on September 12, 2007, Frederick again consulted Wallerich, this time to discuss the planning and drafting of a new will. Wallerich affirmatively assured Frederick at this meeting that the previously executed antenuptial agreement was valid and enforceable. The terms of Frederick’s will show that he intended to incorporate the antenuptial agreement by reference, and implicitly relied on its validity in crafting the provisions of the will: “I have entered into an Antenuptial Agreement prior to executing this Will. I have intentionally omitted my spouse from taking under this Will as we have provided for bequests at our death by separate written instrument dated September 28, 2006.” On September 28, 2007, Frederick’s will was executed.
Frederick continued to retain Wallerich for various estate and family law matters, including in January 2008, when Gatliff signed a consent to Frederick’s will, acknowledging the enforceability of the ante-nuptial agreement incorporated within, saying “I have read and understand the provisions of the Antenuptial Agreement dated September 28, 2006, which make provision for me to consent to th[is] will.” Further, Frederick consulted Wallerich in April 2010 and July 2011, when he executed codicils to his will.
In January 2013, Gatliff filed for divorce. She argued that the antenuptial agreement was unenforceable due to a lack of witness signatures. On September 10, 2013, while the dissolution proceeding was pending, Frederick commenced a legal-malpractice suit against Wallerich. Wallerich filed an answer and moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that Frederick’s claims were untimely filed because more than 6 years had passed since the attempted execution of the antenuptial agreement. See Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1(5) (establishing a 6-year statute of limitations for negligence claims). Before Frederick filed his response, his legal-malpractice action was stayed pending resolution of the dissolution proceedings.
In the dissolution case, the district court ruled that the antenuptial agreement was unenforceable. As a result of this ruling, Frederick and Gatliff stipulated to a division of marital property in which Frederick would give Gatliff a share of his assets, taking into account the appreciation of the assets during their marriage. After resolution of the dissolution proceeding, the court lifted the stay of Frederick’s legal-malpractice action against Wallerich. Responding to Wallerich’s pre-stay motion for judgment on the pleadings, Frederick disagreed that his action was untimely. Rather, he asserted that Wallerich committed several acts of legal malpractice, with independent damages attributable to each. Specifically, Frederick argued that the September 2007 visits with Wallerich to draft a new will gave rise to an entirely new cause of action for legal malpractice apart from the mistakes made during the 2006 drafting of the antenuptial agreement. Thus, Frederick argued, his September 2013 complaint was filed within the 6-year limitations period.
In September 2015, the district court granted Wallerich’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, dismissing all of Frederick’s claims under the statute of limitations. In an unpublished opinion, the court of appeals affirmed. Frederick v. Wallerich, No. A15-2052, 2016 WL 4068931, at *1 (Minn. App. Aug. 1, 2016). Relying on Antone v. Mirviss, 720 N.W.2d 331 (Minn. 2006), the court of appeals reasoned that the statute of limitations begins to run when the cause of action accrues, which is “when the plaintiff can allege sufficient facts to survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Frederick, 2016 WL 4068931, at *2 (quoting Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 335). The court noted that Minnesota follows the “some damage” rule, in which a “cause of action accrues when ‘some’ damage has occurred as a result of the alleged malpractice,” with “some damage” defined as “any compensable damage.” Id. (quoting Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 335-36). Tracking Antone, the court determined that Frederick’s legal-malpractice cause of action accrued on the date of his marriage, because at that moment he became subject to “some damage.” Id. at *3. Because Frederick married on September 29, 2006, his claim filed on September 10, 2013, was therefore untimely. Id. The court similarly affirmed the dismissal of Frederick’s remaining claims—breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, and reckless misrepresentation—because “they are within the penumbra of his legal-malpractice action.” Id. at *4. Frederick appealed to this court, and we granted review to determine whether the multiple acts of alleged negligence in this case can give rise to independent causes of action that trigger separate statute of limitations periods.
ANALYSIS
“The construction and applicability of statutes of limitations are questions of law that [we] review[ ] de novo.” Benigni v. Cty. of St. Louis, 585 N.W.2d 51, 54 (Minn. 1998). On appeal from a dismissal on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, we “review de novo whether ‘the complaint sets forth a legally sufficient claim for relief,”’ which includes the question of whether the complaint itself was timely filed. Zutz v. Nelson, 788 N.W.2d 58, 61 (Minn. 2010) (quoting Bodah v. Lakeville Motor Express, Inc., 663 N.W.2d 550, 553 (Minn. 2003)). We must “accept the facts alleged in the complaint as true and construe all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.” Walsh, 851 N.W.2d at 606. We also consider statements or documents incorporated as exhibits into the pleadings. Minn. R. Civ. P. 10.03 (“A copy of any written instrument which is an exhibit to a pleading is a part of the statement of claim or defense set forth in the pleading.”).
The statute of limitations for a legal-malpractice claim is 6 years. Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1 (5). We have previously determined that the statute of limitations period begins to run when a cause of action accrues for legal malpractice. Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 335. There is no dispute that a claim accrued on the date of the marriage, September 29, 2006, for the errors that Wallerich made when she failed to ensure that the antenuptial agreement was validly executed. See id. The claim based on that negligent act is unquestionably untimely because it was not filed by September 29, 2012. See Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1(5). Because Frederick filed his legal-malpractice claim on September 10, 2013, there must be a separate claim that accrued on or after September 10, 2007, for the filing to be timely.
“Accrual” is the point at which a plaintiff can allege sufficient facts to survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted. Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 335 (citing Dalton v. Dow Chem. Co., 280 Minn. 147, 158 N.W.2d 580, 584 (1968)). If Frederick has accrued multiple causes of action for legal malpractice at different points in time, then some of the claims may be timely when others are not. Cf. Horn v. Natl Comput. Sys. Inc., 311 N.W.2d 1, 2 (Minn. 1981) (holding that a separate limitations period runs from accrual of each separate cause of action in an installment contract). An analysis of when a claim accrues, which turns on whether it can survive a motion to dismiss, necessarily involves consideration of all elements of the claim. Dalton, 158 N.W.2d at 584 (“Thus, the alleged negligence .:. coupled with the alleged resulting damage is the gravamen in deciding the date upon which the cause of action at law herein accrues.” (emphasis added)).
To state a claim for legal malpractice, a plaintiff must allege “(1) the existence of an attorney-client relationship; (2) acts constituting negligence or breach of contract; (3) that such acts were the proximate cause of the plaintiffs damages; [and] (4) that but for the [attomey-]defen-dant’s conduct the plaintiff would have been successful in the prosecution or defense of the action.” Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 334 (first alteration added) (citing Blue Water Corp. v. O’Toole, 336 N.W.2d 279, 281 (Minn. 1983)). When the case involves a transactional matter, as here, the fínál element is necessarily modified; it turns on whether the attorney’s conduct was the but-for cause of the failure to obtain a more favorable result rather than success or failure in litigation. Jerry’s Enters., Inc. v. Larkin, Hoffman, Daly & Lindgren, Ltd., 711 N.W.2d 811, 819 (Minn. 2006). The showing that a plaintiff must make to survive a motion to dismiss on these elements “is minimal,” but failure to satisfy any element defeats the entire claim. Noske v. Friedberg, 670 N.W.2d 740, 742 (Minn. 2003); see Minn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(e).
It is undisputed that the facts alleged in this case satisfy the first element of a legal-malpractice claim, the existence of an attorney-client relationship. At issue are the remaining elements: whether negligent acts exist that were the proximate and but-for cause of Frederick’s damages. To determine the remaining three elements we must consider: (1) whether Wallerich’s failures to alert Frederick of the unenforce-ability of his antenuptial agreement could be independent acts of negligence from the negligent execution of the antenuptial agreement itself; (2) whether Frederick suffered damages caused by these failures; and (3) whether those damages are independent of the damages attributable to the negligent execution of the antenuptial agreement. We address each in turn.
I.
We have not previously addressed whether, and when, multiple acts of legal malpractice can give rise to independent causes of action, each having a separate accrual date under an applicable statute of limitations.
A.
We first address whether multiple acts of legal malpractice can give rise to independent causes of action. The parties frame the issue in very different terms. Wallerich maintains that no cause of action has accrued separate from the 2006 execution of the antenuptial agreement based on a primary-right theory. In Wallerich’s view, Frederick suffered one violation of one primary right—the errors in the drafting of his antenuptial agreement—and therefore all of the acts are part of a single claim that accrued on September 29, 2006, the date of the marriage. Frederick alleges that each time he sought legal advice from Wallerich after signing the antenuptial agreement in 2006, Wallerich committed an independent act of malpractice by failing to inform him of the antenuptial agreement’s invalidity. Frederick argues that the 2007 will drafting, in particular, was an entirely separate negligent act that gave rise to an independent cause of action for legal malpractice that accrued separately on the date of its execution. We agree with Frederick.
Wallerich’s primary-right framework is outdated. It is well established that a cause of action accrues for a legal-malpractice claim when “the cause of action will survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Herrmann v. McMenomy & Severson, 590 N.W.2d 641, 643 (Minn. 1999). Thus, the existence of a timely suit here rises or falls on Frederick’s ability to demonstrate whether the elements of a legal-malpractice claim are satisfied by an act that occurred within the 6-year statute of limitations, not his ability to prove a violation of a separate primary right. Dalton, 158 N.W.2d at 584; see Herrmann, 590 N.W.2d at 643 n.12.
Further, we have previously indicated that separate negligence causes of action may accrue independently within the same set of facts, and therefore can trigger separate accrual dates. See, e.g., Togstad v. Vesely, Otto, Miller & Keefe, 291 N.W.2d 686, 693-95 (Minn. 1980) (noting that the same attorney could have been negligent both for rendering advice without research and for failing to advise the same client on the applicable statute of limitations); cf. Capitol Supply Co. v. City of St. Paul, 316 N.W.2d 554, 555 (Minn. 1982) (determining that a complaint that alleged City negligence during the course of a 1970 road project presented two distinct causes of action: one for “negligent change in the grade of an established road” and another for “negligent design and construction,” and applying two separate limitations periods). Our law therefore permits two separate transactions within the same set of facts to be reasonably characterized as separate acts that give rise to independent negligence claims.
B.
We next address when multiple acts are sufficiently independent to give rise to distinct causes of action for legal malpractice that trigger separate accrual dates.
The court of appeals rejected Frederick’s contention that Wallerich’s statements in 2007 regarding the antenup-tial’s validity were independent acts of negligence giving rise to a separate legal-malpractice claim. The court of appeals discussed its own reasoning in Devereaux v. Stroup, No. A07-0103, 2008 WL 73712 (Minn. App. Jan. 8, 2008). In -Devereaux, the court of appeals correctly noted that we have not previously addressed how multiple acts of negligence may accrue independently, but had instead only addressed the issue of when the damages element of a negligence claim is satisfied to trigger the limitations period. Id. at *2-3 (noting that neither Herrmann nor Antone “involve[d] an attorney accused of two separate acts of negligence”). The Dever-eaux court determined that the two acts at issue did give rise to separate causes of action for negligence: the first act based on negligent tax advice that exposed the clients to “civil and criminal ... [liability for] conversion and theft,” and the second act based on negligent litigation advice that aggravated the negligent tax advice, worsened the couple’s liability, and “increased their principal liability.” Id. at *3.
Here, the court of appeals found two reasons to depart from its reasoning in Devereaux. Although it is undisputed that the 2006 antenuptial drafting was negligent, the court of appeals determined that Wallerich’s subsequent actions involving the will “did not significantly worsen or enhance” Frederick’s losses. Frederick, 2016 WL 4068931, at *2-3. Further, the court determined that Wallerich’s subsequent acts were limited to the same type of misconduct as the first negligent act— “improper advice concerning the validity of the antenuptial agreement”—compared to the “wide-ranging and distinct forms of misconduct” in Devereaux. Id.
Although Devereaux does not control our analysis, its reasoning and the court of appeals’ departure from it in this case are instructive. First, we disagree with the court of appeals that Frederick’s position was not “significantly” worsened by Walle-rich’s failure to inform him of the invalidity of his antenuptial agreement in 2007. Frederick faced an additional 6 years of appreciation of his assets from 2007, when Wallerich incorporated the antenuptial agreement into the new will, to Gatliffs divorce filing in 2013. Contrary to the dissent’s argument that all of Frederick’s damages accrued at the time of marriage, had Frederick known that the antenuptial agreement was invalid in 2007, rather than incorporating it into his will, he could have sought a new agreement or a divorce to avoid the 6 additional years of appreciation. Instead, Wallerich’s failure to inform Frederick of the invalidity of the agree-, ment in 2007 led to appreciation that resulted in $1 million in additional payments to Gatliff—a significant worsening of Frederick’s position.
Second, although it is true that the improper advice in 2007 relates to the same legal issue as the 2006 negligence—that is, the validity of the antenuptial agreement— we disagree with the court of appeals that Wallerich’s negligent conduct in 2007 was the same “type” of negligent conduct as in 2006. Frederick’s will was crafted in reliance on the enforceability of the antenup-tial agreement, as evidenced by the will’s explicit terms, and the antenuptial agreement was incorporated by reference into the will. Wallerich’s negligent conduct in 2007—failing to advise Frederick of the invalidity of the antenuptial agreement— spanned multiple areas of law (estate planning and marital planning), and multiple legal projects (execution of a will and an antenuptial agreement).
Third, the alleged acts of negligence took place at different times and during different transactions, both of which are common-sense factors that the court of appeals has previously used as guidance in determining whether individual acts give rise to separate causes of action with different accrual dates. See Nash v. Gurovusch, No. A10-1489, 2011 WL 1287546, at *2 (Minn. App. Apr. 5, 2011) (despite involving the same underlying legal issue, “the two acts occurred at different times, are not necessarily causally connected, and arose in legal representation concerning different proceedings” and were thus distinct acts with different accrual dates). Here, Frederick approached Wallerieh in 2007 to execute a will, an entirely separate legal transaction from the antenuptial agreement prepared and executed 1 year earlier. Although we recognize that the legal issue underlying both transactions involves the same question—whether Wallerieh acted negligently in failing to inform Frederick that the antenuptial agreement was invalid—nothing in our precedent dictates that an attorney’s negligence in a prior transaction precludes a client from recovering for a subsequent negligent act in a separate transaction.
Fourth, the two acts are not connected by a sufficient causal link that would necessitate a conclusion that the two acts flowed from the same negligence. Id.; see Gearin v. Bailey’s Nurseries, Inc., No. All-0595, 2012 WL 34035, at *2 (Minn. App. Jan. 9, 2012) (analyzing whether two separate acts gave rise to distinct causes of action based on whether the subsequent alleged “acts” were a “progression” that causally flowed from the initial act). Although the incorporation of the invalid antenuptial agreement into the will in 2007 would not have occurred without the 2006 negligent execution of the antenuptial agreement, it does not follow that the 2006 act prevented Wallerieh from meeting the duty of care in the 2007 transaction. In fact, given that statutes and case law are subject to change, depending on the client, the area of law, and the scope of work, the standard of care for an attorney may require verification of the quality of prior work.
Accordingly, because (1) Frederick’s position significantly worsened; (2) Wallerich’s subsequent acts did not involve the same type of conduct as the 2006 acts; (3) the acts occurred at different times and, importantly, during different transactions; (4) the subsequent act was not connected by a sufficient causal link to the first act; and (5) the subsequent act specifically and explicitly incorporated and relied on the continued validity of Wallerich’s prior work, we conclude that Frederick has made a minimal showing that the 2007 will drafting was an independent act of negligence, separate from the 2006 execution of the antenuptial agreement.
Wallerieh cautions that if we determine that Frederick’s claim survives, “a plaintiff could maintain in perpetuity a malpractice action premised on the improper drafting of an executed document by telephoning the attorney every few years and asking the lawyer’s opinion whether the document could cause him harm in the future.” For two reasons, we are not convinced that such a result inevitably flows from our decision. First, this case.involves a completely separate and substantial attorney work product than the initial negligently executed antenuptial agreement. Frederick did not merely ask to be reassured of the validity of the antenuptial agreement; he asked for a separate legal document to be drafted. That document, his will, relied on and incorporated the antenuptial agreement. Wallerich billed Frederick for the time she took to review the antenuptial agreement and to draft the will that incorporated it. It is unlikely that either party believed that Wallerich was being financially compensated simply to provide reassurance to the client. Rather, a reasonable client would expect that he or she was paying Wallerich for her work in drafting a new legal document.
Second, Wallerich’s hypothetical ignores the fact that a separate and independent cause of action exists only if the remaining elements of a legal-malpractice claim—independent damages and causation—are also present. Further, although the burden to allege those elements to survive a motion to dismiss is minimal, the requirement to substantiate those elements is more demanding.
In adopting this fact-specific approach to determine when multiple acts are sufficiently distinct to give rise to separate legal-malpractice claims, we also specifically reject the rule proposed by Frederick. Frederick contends that a lawyer owes a professional and fiduciary duty to a client to consult the law and learn the facts “each time” the lawyer provides legal advice to the client. (Emphasis added.) We disagree.
As the amicus Minnesota State Bar Association points out, lawyers must be afforded adequate discretion to make judgment calls when clients seek to revisit previously completed projects. Lawyers must, based on context, discern whether the client simply wants reassurance that the project was completed, a reminder of the outcome, assurance that the outcome was favorable, or additional legal research on the question. We agree with the Minnesota State Bar Association and note that Frederick’s rule is too broad because it assumes that every client, in revisiting previous work, prefers the last option: to have the attorney conduct new research and analysis every time a client asks a question. We therefore reject Frederick’s proposed bright-line rule.
A more fact-specific approach, as we adopt today, permits us to conclude that this subsequent act—a failure to verify the validity of the antenuptial agreement before incorporating it into additional work— may, if proven, give rise to a separate cause of action for negligence. Our ruling today is better suited to the realities of the practice of law and the dynamics of- the attorney-client relationship, and leaves room for clients and lawyers to revisit completed projects and re-establish confidence in previous work through a variety of approaches without resulting in additional liability for the attorney.
II.
Because we conclude that Frederick has sufficiently alleged that the will drafting in 2007 was an independent act of negligence, we must now consider the remaining elements of Frederick’s legal-malpractice claim: whether the 2007 will drafting was the proximate cause of Frederick’s damages, and whether Wallerich’s negligence was the but-for cause of Frederick’s failure to obtain a more favorable result.
A.
We must first analyze whether Frederick has alleged damages that were proximately caused by Wallerich’s alleged negligence in 2007. Unlike the negligent-act element considered in Part I, we have previously discussed how to determine whether there are separate compensable damages arising out of a subsequent negligent act.
In general, we have held that damages accrue, and thus begin the running of the statute of limitations, once any compensable damages occur. Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 336 (“[T]he statute of limitations begins to run, on the occurrence of any compensable damage, whether specifically identified in the complaint or not.”). This is known as the “some damage” rule. See generally id. at 335-36 (discussing our adoption of the “some damage” rule over the “occurrence” and “discovery” rules). “Some damage” is defined broadly to include any damage, regardless of whether that damage was alleged in the complaint. Id.
We have twice addressed the “some damage” rule in the context of a legal-malpractice claim. We first did so in Herrmann. 590 N.W.2d at 641. Then in Antone, we specifically addressed the “some damage” rule in the context of an antenuptial agreement, similar to the facts presented here. 720 N.W.2d at 335. In Antone, we determined that “some damage” occurred when each member of the couple lost the right to protect his or her premarital assets. Id. at 337-38 (concluding that “exposure” to “a claim upon a portion of any appreciation in [the] premarital property” constituted “an injury that resulted in some damage”). In Antone, that “exposure” occurred at the point of marriage.
Wallerich argues that, as in Antone, we must similarly hold that “some damage” accrued when Frederick and Gatliff were married in 2006. As Frederick accurately points out, however, only one act of negligence was at issue in Antone. Id. at 335 (“[T]he only disputed element here is ... damages.... ”). Here, Frederick adequately alleges two distinct acts of negligence, as we concluded in Part I. Thus Antone may provide guidance, but it does not resolve the question presented in this case. Although Antone established a rule that any damage associated with the drafting or execution of an antenuptial agreement accrues at the time of marriage, it did not, by necessary implication, foreclose the possibility that subsequent independent acts of negligence could cause separate damages.
Our conclusion is supported by Antone itself, which established a rule that “some damage” occurred at the “point of no return,” when Antone was “expos[ed]” to “a claim upon a portion of any appreciation of his premarital property.” Id. at 337-38. Although this “point of no return,” on Antone’s facts, was the date of marriage, Antone does not imbue marriage with any broader significance. The question before us, then, is whether distinct compensable damages—that is, an exposure to a claim of a portion of any appreciation of Frederick’s premarital assets—accrued when Wallerich drafted and executed Frederick’s will in 2007.
The district court reasoned that “to ‘split up’ [Frederick’s] claims to try to establish different time periods in order to extend or toll the statute of limitations is, as a practical and policy matter, contrary to the whole purpose of having a statute of limitations.” The district court went on to hold that Frederick “has not, and cannot, plead damages separate and distinct from the original alleged negligence—the preparation and unwitnessed signing of the defective Agreement.” The court of appeals agreed. Relying on the facts of Antone for the proposition that the cause of action accrued on the date of marriage because “on that day[, Antone] lost his nonmarital-property protections,” the court of appeals similarly determined that Frederick’s claim accrued at marriage. Frederick, 2016 WL 4068931, at *3 (citing Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 337-38). The court of appeals did not squarely address Frederick’s claim that a new cause of action, and thus an independent claim for damages, arose in 2007 when the will was drafted and executed.
Frederick alleges that he incurred additional compensable damages, separate and apart from the failure to adequately execute the antenuptial agreement, because he could not protect the appreciation on his premarital assets that specifically resulted from Wallerich’s failure to inform him that the antenuptial agreement was unenforceable in 2007. This failure to protect his assets, Frederick alleges, cost him an additional $1 million in asset appreciation that otherwise would not have been awarded to Gatliff.- Conversely, Wallerich argues that Antone established a “bright line” rule that all damages arising out of a negligently executed antenuptial agreement accrue at the time of the marriage. We agree with Frederick.
It is undisputed that the damages from the first negligent act—the failed execution of the antenuptial agreement— accrued on the date of the marriage. But Antone neither forecloses nor even addresses the ability of a client to bring a separate claim based on an allegation of damages flowing directly from a separate negligent act—here, the 2007 failure to ensure the antenuptial’s enforceability before its incorporation into Frederick’s will. In the dissent’s view, Frederick lost his ability to shield any appreciation of his premarital assets on the date of marriage. But the dissent correctly recognizes that Frederick’s damages “represent missed opportunities for him to reduce the damages” from Wallerich’s 2006 negligence. Under Antone, compensable damages include a loss of opportunity to mitigate additional damages—a loss that Frederick experienced here as a result of Wallerich’s failure to inform him of the antenuptial agreement’s invalidity in 2007. See Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 338. Although it is true that “some damages” accrued on the date of marriage, it is also true that “some damages” accrued in 2007 when Frederick lost the opportunity to avoid, and was exposed to, an additional $1 million payment due to the appreciation of his premarital assets. Given the “minimal” showing required to meet our standard for claim accrual, Noske, 670 N.W.2d at 742, Frederick has sufficiently alleged that he suffered “some damage” again in 2007.
Frederick has also adequately alleged that the $1 million-in damages due to the asset appreciation from 2007 to 2013 was proximately caused by Wallerich’s negligence in 2007, rather than Wallerich’s negligent antenuptial agreement drafting in 2006. Wallerich argues that Frederick’s alleged damages are all attributable to the failure to draft an enforceable antenuptial agreement in 2006. In Wallerich’s view, no new damages arose out of Wallerich’s subsequent failure to inform Frederick of the unenforceability of the antenuptial agreement when drafting and executing his will in 2007, even if that failure was an independent act of negligence.
Wallerich’s formulation of legal causation, however, is not consistent with our case law. “In the context of general tort liability, such as negligence actions, we long ago defined a proximate cause of a given result as ‘a material element or a substantial factor in the happening of that result.’” Osborne v. Twin Bowl, Inc., 749 N.W.2d 367, 372 (Minn. 2008) (quoting Peterson v. Fulton, 192 Minn. 360, 256 N.W. 901, 903 (1934)). Thus, the question is whether Frederick sufficiently alleged that Wallerich’s failure to accurately advise him in 2007 regarding the validity of the 2006 antenuptial agreement was a “substantial factor” in incurring an additional $1 million in damages.
Accepting, as we must, the allegations in Frederick’s complaint as true, Frederick has sufficiently alleged that Wallerich’s negligence in 2007 was at least a “substantial factor” in the additional $1 million in damages that Frederick suffered. The very fact that Frederick could have taken unilateral steps in 2007 to avoid having to share additional appreciation of his assets with Gatliff shows that Wallerich’s negligence was a “substantial factor.” Accordingly, we are satisfied that Frederick has adequately alleged that Wallerich’s 2007 negligence proximately caused his $1 million in damages.
B.
But alleging proximate cause of damages is not enough. Frederick must also show that Wallerich’s 2007 negligence was the but-for cause of his failure to obtain a more favorable result—that is, avoiding the additional $1 million in damages. In other words, Frederick must sufficiently allege that his damages were solely attributable to the 2007 act of negligence (the will drafting), rather than the 2006 act (the execution of the antenuptial agreement). Jerry’s Enters., Inc., 711 N.W.2d at 819.
Frederick claims that, had he been properly informed of the antenuptial agreement’s deficiencies in 2007 (“but for” Wallerich’s alleged negligent omission), he would have taken steps to protect his assets and prevented an additional 6 years of appreciation that occurred from 2007 to 2013. He identifies multiple steps that were either foreclosed, or that he was prohibited from taking, as a direct result of Wallerich’s negligent failure to inform him of the antenuptial agreement’s unenforce-ability: he could have asked Gatliff to sign a postnuptial agreement; he could have divorced Gatliff if she did not sign the postnuptial agreement; and finally, he would have been able to sue Wallerich earlier for legal malpractice for the 2006 act within the statute of limitations.
Most clearly, Frederick’s claim that he would have divorced Gatliff sufficiently alleges a course of action that he may have unilaterally taken to protect his assets. Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 337 (holding that a claim accrued when Antone lost the right to unilaterally protect the appreciation of his premarital assets). Because initiating a divorce is a concrete action that was directly foreclosed by Wallerich’s failure to review the antenuptial agreement, Frederick has a colorable claim that Wallerich’s 2007 negligence is the but-for cause of his compensable damages. Indeed, but for Wallerich’s 2007 negligence, Frederick would have obtained a more favorable result: keeping the $1 million of asset appreciation.
In sum, we conclude that Frederick has sufficiently alleged a timely legal-malpractice claim sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss based on Wallerich’s 2007 will drafting. Our holding in this case is heavily dependent on its procedural posture. Again, as we must, we accept the allegations in Frederick’s complaint as true and acknowledge that the facts that Frederick must allege to survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim—the standard for claim accrual in legal malpractice—are “minimal.” Noske, 670 N.W.2d at 742. Whether, after additional discovery, the facts support Frederick’s claim is a differ- ent matter that is not before us. And whether the other acts that Frederick alleges give rise to independent causes of action is a matter that we leave for the district court to consider at an appropriate time. Because we conclude that Frederick has a timely claim, the district court’s dismissal of his complaint on the pleadings was erroneous. We therefore reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand this matter to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting, Gildea, C.J., and Anderson, J.
. The dissent argues that we incorrectly label the antenuptial agreement as incorporated by reference” in the will. Incorporation by reference” is a legal term that means a method of making a secondary document part of a primary document by including in the primary document a statement that the secondary document should be treated as if it were contained within the primary one.” Incorporation by reference, Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004). Minnesota allows [a]ny writing in existence when a will is executed [to] be incorporated by reference if the language of the will manifests this intent and describes the writing sufficiently to permit its identification.” Minn. Stat. § 524.2-510 (2016). Here, the antenuptial agreement was in existence when the will was executed. Because the will specifically refers to the ante-nuptial agreement as the Antenuptial Agreement” and the separate written instrument dated September 28, 2006,” it sufficiently identifies the antenuptial agreement and manifests an intent to incorporate the document.
. Frederick appealed, but the parties settled their dispute in appellate mediation.
. Although Frederick asserts that he has separate claims—malpractice, negligent and reckless misrepresentation, and breach of fiduciary duty—each of his claims is dependent on the resolution of a single issue: whether Wallerich’s post-2006 acts were independent acts of negligence. Cf. Antone, 720 N.W.2d at 338 (dismissing all three of plaintiff’s claims under the same accrual analysis).
. Frederick, importantly, is not asking us to adopt a continuous-representation” theory to toll the statute of limitations. See generally Carlson v. Houk, No. A14-0633, 2014 WL 6090685, at *2-5 (Minn. App. Nov. 17, 2014) (reviewing the continuous-representation doctrine” and noting that no Minnesota case has ever adopted or explicitly rejected the doctrine).
. Although we found these facts helpful in our analysis here, we do not suggest that these are the exclusive considerations, nor that these considerations will be helpful in every case.
. Frederick also proposes that we adopt a "second lawyer” rule. Frederick argues that if he had retained a different lawyer for his will drafting, the second lawyer would be subject to a malpractice claim for failing to inform him that the antenuptial agreement was invalid, and therefore, Wallerich, too, is automatically subject to malpractice liability. Because we conclude that Frederick has sufficiently alleged a claim for legal malpractice against Wallerich, it is unnecessary to analyze the merits of this proposal.
. We note that this is a different question than whether Wallerich’s subsequent acts were a "superseding cause” that would break the causal chain arising out of Wallerich’s original negligent act. See Wartnick v. Moss & Barnett, 490 N.W.2d 108, 112-14 (Minn. 1992). Here, Frederick only needs to reasonably allege that the second act was a “substantial factor.”
. Although Frederick’s breach of fiduciary duty claim and negligent and reckless misrepresentation claims also involve consideration of whether Wallerich’s post-2006 acts were independent acts of negligence, we only decide today that, for purposes of Wallerich’s motion to dismiss, Frederick has sufficiently alleged a timely legal-malpractice claim. See Dalton v. Dow Chem. Co., 280 Minn. 147, 158 N.W.2d 580, 584 (1968) (explaining that an analysis of when a claim accrues requires consideration of all elements of the claim). We remand to the district court to determine the accrual date of Frederick’s other claims consistent with this opinion.