*274 OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
Appellants, Ganana Tesfa, M.D. and his professional association, appeal an adverse judgment in a medical malpractice suit. In three issues, Appellants claim that: Harris County v. Smith error exists in the trial court’s broad-form damages question because the record contains no evidence of disfigurement and that element of damages was submitted over objection; no evidence exists that the total damages awarded by the jury resulted from Dr. Tesfa’s negligence; and the judgment’s pre and postjudgment interest rates should be recalculated based on the 2003 amendments to the Texas Finance Code. We will affirm.
II. Disfigurement
In their first issue, Appellants contend that no evidence of disfigurement exists and that, therefore, the trial court erred by submitting this element of damages in a broad-form damage question over Appellants’ objection. 1 Appellee, Nelson Lee Stewart, as Executor of the Estate of George Preston Foster, contends that Appellants did not object to the form of the court’s charge and that legally sufficient evidence of disfigurement exists.
Special question number 3 of the court’s charge provides:
What sum of money would have fairly and reasonably compensated George Preston Foster for injuries prior to his death, if any, that reasonably resulted from the conduct referred to in Question No. 1?
Consider the elements of damages listed below and none other. Consider each element separately. Do not include damages for one element in any other element. Do not include interest on any amount of damages you find.
Answer in dollars and cents, if any, for the following elements of damages:
a. Pain and mental anguish.
“Pain and mental anguish” means the conscious physical pain and emotional pain, torment, and suffering experienced by George Preston Foster.
b. Disfigurement.
c. Physical impairment.
Answer: [the jury answered $1,000,000]
d. Medical expenses.
“Medical expenses” means the reasonable and necessary expenses and hospital care received by George Preston Foster.
Answer: [the jury answered $425,000]
Appellants asserted a no-evidence objection to each subsection of special question number 3. 2 Appellants did not object to the broad-form submission of the damages question or advise the court that any particular element of damages should not be submitted in broad form.
At the outset, we must address whether Appellants preserved their charge error complaint for appeal. The trial
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court is required by the rules of civil procedure to submit controlling questions, including damage questions, in broad form whenever feasible. Tex.R. Civ. P. 277;
see also Tex. Dep’t Human Servs. v. E.B.,
Additionally, Rule 274 of the rules of civil procedure provides that a party’s charge objection is untenable if it is “obscured or concealed by voluminous unfounded objections, minute differentiations or numerous unnecessary requests.” Tex.R. Civ. P. 274. The standard for reviewing the sufficiency of a charge objection is whether it called the trial court’s attention to the issue. Tex.R.App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A) (requiring an objection to grounds for the ruling the party sought from the trial court with sufficient specificity to make the trial court aware of the complaint, unless the specific grounds were apparent from the context);
State Dep’t of Highways & Pub. Transp. v. Payne,
Appellants here objected to the submission of all four elements of damages submitted to the jury, including medical expenses, on no-evidence grounds, essentially asserting that no damage question should be submitted to the jury at all. Appellants did not object in any respect to the form of the damages question, did not contend that some proper element of dam
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ages was improperly comingled in a list with a damage element supported by no evidence, and did not plainly inform the trial court that any specific element of damages — as opposed to every element of damages — should not be included in the broad-form submission.
Cf. B.L.D.,
113 S.W.Sd at 349-50 (requiring specific objection that particular damage element should not be included in broad-form list);
Harris County,
Liberally construing Appellants’ first issue, as we must, the issue also challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence of disfigurement. Tex.R.App. P. 38.1, 38.9. Consequently, we address the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support submission of disfigurement. In determining a no-evidence issue, we consider only the evidence and inferences that tend to support the finding and disregard all evidence and inferences to the contrary.
Bradford v. Vento,
Foster’s medical records demonstrate that Foster suffered scarring from surgeries which experts testified were necessitated by Dr. Tesfa’s negligence. Specifically, Dr. Greenstein testified that as a result of Dr. Tesfa’s negligence Foster developed an empyema, an infection in the pleural space of his chest cavity. The empyema necessitated two thoracostomys by Dr. Norcross to insert chest tubes into Foster’s chest cavity. The medical records, including nurses’ notes and photographs, demonstrate that Foster suffered scars as a result of the thoracostomy surgeries. Surgical scars may constitute compensable disfigurement.
See, e.g., Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Tinsley,
Moreover, two experts,
Dr.
Campbell and Dr. Greenstein, testified that they had reviewed Foster’s medical records and that Foster suffered disfigurement as a result of Dr. Tesfa’s negligence. Appellants claim that, although they did not object to Dr. Campbell’s or Dr. Green-stein’s expert testimony, it is no evidence of disfigurement because it is conclusory. Appellants urge us to disregard Dr. Campbell’s and Dr. Greenstein’s disfigurement testimony in conducting our legal sufficiency review. To preserve a complaint that an expert’s opinion constitutes no evidence, a party must object to the evidence before trial, object when the evidence is offered, or move to strike the testimony after cross-examination reveals that the opinion is not supported by facts or data.
See Kerr-McGee Corp. v. Helton,
III. Unliquidated Damages Awakd
In their second issue, Appellants contend that pursuant to the dictates of
Tex-
*278
arkana Memorial Hospital v. Murdock
the jury’s award of unliquidated damages for pain and mental anguish, disfigurement, and physical impairment must be reversed because the total damage award for these elements fails to segregate damages Foster suffered in a June 1997 automobile accident from damages attributable to Dr. Tesfa’s alleged subsequent negligence beginning in August 1997.
In Murdock, the supreme court held that a plaintiff should recover only for past medical expenses arising from treatment necessitated by the defendant’s negligence, as opposed to other causes, where such a differentiation is possible. Id. at 840. The supreme court recognized that an award of past medical expenses is typically capable of such a differentiation because past medical expenses are incurred in specific amounts for specific purposes, unlike unliquidated damages such as pain and suffering where the jury has broad discretion in determining an appropriate award. Id. at 841. Consequently, Murdock requires a plaintiff who is being treated for more than one condition, when the conditions are brought on by causes independent of each other (one cause being the alleged negligence of the defendant), when possible, to segregate the past medical expenses attributable to each condition. Id. at 840. The failure to segregate does not render an unsegregated total damage award legally insufficient; it entitles the defendant to a new trial so that the plaintiff can prove which medical expenses were necessitated by the defendant’s alleged negligence and so that the defendant is held accountable only for the past medical expenses attributable to his alleged negligence. Id.
Here, unlike in Murdock, Appellants do not challenge the jury’s award of past medical expenses. They instead complain that the jury’s damage award for pain, mental anguish, disfigurement, and physical impairment does not segregate what amount of these damages directly resulted from alleged medical malpractice by Dr. Tesfa, as opposed to the ear accident. The supreme court limited its segregation holding in Murdock, however, to past medical expenses, expressly noting that past medical expenses are “readily capable of measurement by a certain standard” ... “unlike more nebulous measures of damages such as pain and suffering where the jury has broad discretion when fixing an amount to award.” Id. at 841. The Mur-dock holding cannot and does not apply to unliquidated damages. Id.
Moreover, as noted by Appellee, the jury was instructed to determine the damages, “if any, that reasonably resulted from the conduct referred to in Question No. 1,” the negligence question.
4
Unless the record demonstrates otherwise, we must presume that the jury followed this instruction in answering special question number 3.
See, e.g., Golden Eagle Archery,
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Inc. v. Jackson,
IV. INTEREST
In their third issue, Appellants contend that the 2003 amendments to the Texas Finance Code altering postjudgment interest rates apply to the judgment signed in this case.
See
Tex. Fin.Code Ann. § 304.003 (Vernon Supp.2004). The judgment in this case was signed on April 25, 2003. The finance code amendments apply to a final judgment that “is signed or subject to appeal on or after the effective date of this Act.”
See
Act of June 2, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 6.04, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 862, 862 (effective date Sept. 1, 2003); Act of June 1, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 676, § 2(a), 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 2096, 2097 (effective date June, 20, 2003). A judgment is “subject to appeal” when it is capable of being appealed.
Columbia Med. Ctr. v. Bush,
Appellants contend that because they did not file their notice of appeal until July 17, 2003, the judgment was not “subject to appeal” until that date. We cannot agree. A final judgment is subject to appeal when it is capable of being appealed. Id. The final judgment here was capable of being appealed on April 25, 2003, the date it was signed. Appellants’ decision to file a motion for new trial and to proceed under the extended appellate timetable, delaying perfection of their appeal until July 17, 2003, does not alter the date that the final judgment in this case was subject to appeal: April 25, 2003. We overrule Appellants’ third issue.
V. Conclusion
Having overruled Appellants’ issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Appellants’ issues do not challenge the legal or factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s findings that Dr. Tesfa was negligent and that Dr. Tesfa’s negligence proximately caused Foster to suffer some injuries or the jury’s award of $425,000 for past medical expenses. Accordingly, we forego a general statement of facts and instead recite the facts in conjunction with our disposition of Appellants’ issues.
. Specifically, Appellants objected “to question number 3-A on the grounds that there is no evidence, or alternatively, there's legally insufficient evidence as would support submission of such issue to the jury in this case.” Appellants asserted an identical objection to subsections 3-B, 3-C, and 3-D.
. During oral argument, Appellants contended that proof of disfigurement requires evidence that the plaintiff was embarrassed by the deformity. Because Appellants’ brief does not address or present authorities for this argument, we do not consider it.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 38.1(h).
But cf. Terry v. Garcia,
. In special question number 1, the jury determined that the negligence of only Dr. Tesfa proximately caused injury to Foster.
. As pointed out by Appellee, Appellants do not challenge the factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury's total damage award for pain, mental anguish, disfigurement, and physical impairment.
