Before Sudderth, C.J.; Kerr and Pittman, JJ. Opinion by Chief Justice SudderthOPINIONIn six issues, Appellant Gregory A. Jones appeals the trial court’s order that he be committed as a sexually violent predator. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 841.003. We hold that the evidence presented at trial was legally sufficient, but we reverse the trial court’s order of commitment and remand these proceedings to the trial court for a new trial because the trial court erred in rejecting Jones’s request for a jury instruction.BackgroundI. Testimony at trialThree witnesses testified at trial: psychologist Jason Dunham, psychiatrist Sheri Gaines, and Jones.Dunham and Gaines testified to their evaluations of Jones and their opinions that Jones suffered from a behavioral abnormality that made him likely to commit a sexually violent offense. Each expert met with Jones individually and interviewed him for about two and a half hours. Additionally, Dunham administered two actuarial tests, the Static-99R and the Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCLR).Both experts explained how they reviewed records related to Jones’s criminal history, including indictments, police reports, witness statements, victim statements, and prison materials including parole case summaries, medical records, and disciplinary records; and that they reviewed each other’s deposition and Jones’s deposition. The remainder of Dunham’s and Gaines’s testimony can be summarized into four categories: (A) Jones’s criminal history, (B) other risk factors, (C) protective factors, and (D) diagnoses and conclusions.A. Jones’s criminal historyBoth Dunham and Gaines explained that the details of a sex offender’s past offenses—both sexual and nonsexual in nature—were important to consider in their evaluations, as well as the person’s lifestyle before and after he committed the crimes. Details of Jones’s past offenses emerged largely through Dunham’s testimony, which conveyed to the jury the details of the offenses as Dunham knew them from the criminal records. Those offenses included convictions for attempted sexual assault, assault, attempted aggravated sexual assault with a deadly weapon, and burglary with intent to commit assault. We have summarized the details of Jones’s convictions as testified to primarily by Dunham based upon his review of Jones’s criminal records. Where appropriate, we have incorporated Jones’s trial testimony regarding the convictions.1. February 1996: Attempted sexual assaultThe first sexual-offense conviction described at trial was Jones’ February 1996 attempted sexual assault of a 24-year-old college student. Jones attacked the woman in the early morning hours when she was returning to her apartment with her one- year-old son after taking him to the emergency room. Dunham testified,[Jones] came up behind her and grabbed her from behind and she was holding her baby, but he put his hand over her mouth when she tried to scream and . . . she said he had a latex glove on – - on the hand that he covered her mouth with. He – - he pushed her against the wall. He tried to – - he pulled her pants down. He tried to rip her underwear off. She fell. She hit her head . . . against a – - a brick wall and the baby fell to the ground and Mr. Jones began dragging her across the grass and she was kicking and screaming and some neighbors came out and – - and started to yell at him and then he took off and he ran off and then he turned around and came back and he picked up something off the ground and it was like a ski mask that he picked up off the ground and he got away.In his interviews with Dunham and Gaines and in his testimony at trial, Jones denied any wrongdoing and offered his own version of events. His explanations asserted that he was visiting a friend in that apartment complex when he bumped into a woman and pushed her because he was startled. In his testimony at trial, Jones claimed that he tried to help her up, but “she became frightened and started to scoot back on the grass and as she was scooting back on the grass, her – - her pants started to come down.” Jones denied noticing a baby but thought he heard a baby crying in the distance.Jones pleaded guilty to attempted sexual assault related to the incident and was sentenced to 10 years’ incarceration. During the commitment trial, Jones denied his guilt and claimed that he only pleaded guilty to avoid a longer sentence.Dunham testified that he believed the victim’s story. Characterizing the incident as a “callous sexual act,” Dunham distinguished it from “a typical sexual assault or attempted sexual assault” because Jones attacked his victim while she was holding a baby. Dunham testified, “To me that kind of raises sort of the psychopathic type of nature of it to a point where you would attempt to sexually assault, you know, a woman holding a one-year old, you know, in her arms, but that did not deter him.”Dunham emphasized both the public and planned nature of the offense. It occurred in public, indicating to Dunham an “inability to control urges.” Jones was also prepared—with a ski mask and latex glove—and it appeared that he had been following the woman prior to the attack. Dunham also remarked on the nature of the victim as a stranger to Jones and explained, “A stranger situation elevates somebody’s risk” to reoffend.2. 1997: “Offensive or Provocative” AssaultDunham testified that in September 1997 Jones was convicted of three assault[1] charges that occurred in Arlington. Dunham described the events leading to the convictions as follows: Jones approached a woman who was trying to open her apartment door, lifted up her dress or skirt, and grabbed her buttocks. When the woman turned around, he smiled at her and then left. Jones approached a woman who was walking down the sidewalk and pulled on the bottom of her shorts. Jones approached a woman at her apartment complex mailboxes and lifted her dress as she walked by. Dunham also testified that, based on the records he reviewed, Jones was suspected of committing several more assaults but was never charged, although Jones supposedly admitted to one of them. Dunham testified that, in all, Jones was a suspect in 12 separate Arlington cases, three of which resulted in the above-described convictions. Those cases in which he was not charged or convicted included an instance when a man sexually assaulted a woman at knifepoint in an apartment laundry room early in the morning and then made her walk back to her apartment naked, an instance when a man grabbed a woman’s buttocks while she was walking past an apartment-complex swimming pool, and an instance when a man fondled a woman over her clothes while she was taking boxes out of her vehicle outside her apartment.According to police records, Jones told Arlington police that he enjoyed grabbing women because he liked to see the surprised looks on their faces. Dunham found this admission to be clinically important because it indicated that Jones was aroused by the “shock value” and “seeing the fear in [the women's] faces.”At trial, Jones admitted that he pleaded guilty to the three assault charges committed in Arlington in 1997, but he denied committing the crimes and provided dubious explanations for his conduct. For instance, he claimed that his watch caught on a woman’s dress and that he did not raise her dress on purpose. He further denied making a statement contained in a 1997 police record admitting to police that he had committed other offenses for which he was never caught. February 1998: Attempted aggravated sexual assault with a deadly weapon In February 1998, Jones approached a woman in an apartment laundry room one evening, held a gun to her head, threatened to kill her, unfastened her belt, and put his hand up her shirt and fondled her breasts. He was interrupted when another woman walked into the laundry room, at which point he put the gun into his coat pocket and then fled the scene. Dunham pleaded guilty to attempted aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment, which he was serving at the time of these civil-commitment proceedings.Again, despite pleading guilty, Jones denied committing this offense and claimed that he pleaded guilty only to avoid a longer sentence.Dunham described this offense as “callous” in light of the weapon and also viewed this offense as an escalation of Jones’s sexually-offensive behavior against adult females with whom Jones had no relationship. Dunham testified that this second serious offense established a pattern and separated Jones from “[m]ost sexual offenders,” as he testified that most sexual offenders “don’t do it multiple times.” May 1998: Attempted sexual assault Jones assaulted another woman a mere three months later. Around 1:00 or 2:00 a.m. one night, Jones broke into a woman’s apartment by climbing through a front window. The woman woke up and tried to call 9-1-1, but Jones approached her, held a gun to her head, and told her to hang up. Jones proceeded to steal some of the woman’s property and then sexually assaulted her—he forced the woman to disrobe, fondled her genitals, and said, “[Y]ou know, it’s too bad that you called 9-1-1. I was going to – - I would have had sex with you, but I’ve got to go because you called the police.” Jones then left the apartment.Jones pleaded guilty to the offense and was sentenced to 20 years, to be served concurrently with the February 1998 offense sentence. Again, despite his guilty plea, Jones denied his guilt. He testified that his friend lived in the complex and his friend had given Jones permission to stay in the apartment even if the friend was not home. Jones claimed that he went into the wrong window and pulled his gun on the woman inside. He told Dunham and Gaines that he put his hand in the woman’s underwear to check for a gun; at trial, he testified that he “patted in the front of her panties to see if did she have . . . maybe a razor blade, box cutter, knife.” He also testified that the woman gave him a necklace and a VCR, which he then pawned. Unsurprisingly, Dunham and Gaines did not believe Jones’s version of events, a story Gaines described as “just really not even believable.”5. August 1998: Burglary with intent to commit assaultContinuing this pattern, a few months later in August 1998, Jones assaulted another woman in an apartment complex. The woman had noticed someone peering through her window around 6:45 a.m. and when her boyfriend left for work about 15 minutes later, leaving the door unlocked, Jones entered the apartment. The woman reported that Jones claimed to be a maintenance man there to fix a leaky faucet but that he quickly grabbed her arm, held a screwdriver to her throat, and told her to be quiet. The woman was able to escape out of a back window and Jones fled.Jones again denied committing the offense despite pleading guilty to burglary with the intent to commit assault. For this offense, Jones received another concurrent 20-year sentence.Despite the fact that this offense was not sexually violent, Dunham considered it to be significant. Dunham explained that he considered it to be a sex-related offense because the victim related that she felt Jones was about to rape her and it fit Jones’s pattern of sexual offenses. Arrest for 1998 offenses Dunham testified Jones was not arrested until December 1998 when he was identified as a suspicious person loitering in an apartment complex. Jones was arrested with an unregistered weapon in his car, and Dunham also believed that the police found a screwdriver in his car. While Jones was being held in jail for unlawfully carrying a firearm, the victims identified him in a photo lineup and he was charged with the 1998 offenses. Nonsexual offenses Dunham also reported Jones’s nonsexual criminal history, explaining why it was important to determining his antisocial tendencies. Jones had been convicted of assaulting his ex-wife and causing bodily injury for which he received a six-month term of probation. Additionally, Jones’s nonsexual criminal history included a DWI, driving without a license, failure to pay traffic tickets, and driving without insurance. Dunham explained that even though these were nonsexual and—with the exception of the assault of his ex-wife—nonviolent, it was irresponsible behavior that later escalated to the multiple sexual assaults. And in Gaines’s view, Jones’s nonsexual criminal history was indicative of antisocial personality traits.B. Other risk factorsDunham and Gaines identified a number of other risk factors including: The number of victims. The fact that his victims were strangers. The force and weapons used. The locations of the offenses in public places. Gaines testified that forensic psychiatry literature “indicate[s] that offending in a public place poses a risk factor for re-offending because it’s brazen.” Jones’s hypersexual nature. Dunham testified that Jones’s ex-wife had described Jones as sexually promiscuous and that Jones had admitted to hiring a prostitute. Jones’s denial of the offenses. Jones’s lack of remorse. Jones’s denial that he is a sex offender. Jones’s refusal to acknowledge his need for sex-offender treatment and to avoid high-risk situations. Protective factors Dunham and Gaines also identified protective factors that statistically reduce an offender’s level of risk. These included: Jones’s age. At the time of trial, Jones was 52 and both experts testified that an individual’s risk of reoffending decreases as they age. Dunham noted, however, that Jones appeared “much younger” than 52 and Jones’s sex drive still appeared to be high. Jones’s good behavior in prison. Dunham even noted that this was surprising considering Jones’s escalating antisocial behavior before prison. Jones’s stable childhood, family support system, and positive employability. But Dunham also explained that Jones’s stable childhood and his positive adjustment to prison indicated that Jones does well in a structured environment and did not start committing crimes until he was in an unstructured environment. This led Dunham to believe that the fact that Jones would be required to register as a sex offender may not be sufficient to deter future violent sexually-offensive behavior by Jones, especially because Jones had committed sexual offenses while on parole. According to Dunham’s observations, there was no evidence at the time of trial that Jones had a current sexual preoccupation. Dunham’s and Gaines’s diagnoses and conclusions 1. Static-99R and PCLR resultsDunham administered two actuarial tests as part of his evaluation of Jones: the Static-99R, which is designed to measure a person’s risk of committing another sex offense in the future, and the PCLR, which Dunham described as “a measure of how psychopathic somebody is.” Dunham scored Jones as a five on the Static-99R, placing Jones in the “above average risk category” in comparison to “the average sex offender.” Dunham testified that the average score of a “typical sex offender” is from one to three, the average risk range. He also explained that Jones would have been a six when he was younger, placing him in the range of a well-above-average risk. Dunham scored Jones as a 20 on the PCLR, indicating a “[m]oderate level of psychopathic characteristics.” Gaines took into account these test results but also criticized placing too much reliance on such tests because they do not take into account the individual facts of an offender’s crimes.2. Sexual SadismBoth Dunham and Gaines acknowledged Jones’s history of a pattern of violent sexual offenses over multiple years. And both experts testified regarding Jones’s sadistic behavior, but their opinions differed slightly regarding whether he could be diagnosed with a sexually sadistic disorder.As Gaines explained, sexual sadism disorder involves deriving sexual gratification from someone else’s suffering or humiliation or from putting someone else down. According to Gaines, to warrant a diagnosis, the disorder must last at least six months and be problematic, i.e., cause the person problems in life, such as in relationships, the person’s job, or result in criminal convictions. Gaines identified several signs of sexual sadism in Jones’s sexual offenses—attacking a woman holding a crying infant, ripping off a woman’s pants in public to humiliate her, threatening a woman, “Don’t make a move or I’m going to kill you,” and assaulting two women at gunpoint. Gaines diagnosed Jones as a full-blown sexual sadist because she concluded that Jones derived intense sexual arousal from his victims’ physical and psychological suffering based upon his continued pattern of behavior of approaching women sexually and grabbing their bodies.Dunham, on the other hand, stopped short of diagnosing Jones as a sadist because he was unsure of the source of Jones’s arousal. Dunham testified, “The reason I lean towards the sexual sadistic side is his comment to the officers saying that he liked to enjoy the surprised look on [the women's] faces when he was describing why he was groping women and lifting up the[ir] skirts.” Despite his hesitancy to fully diagnose Jones as a sadist, Dunham nevertheless testified that this paraphilic disorder affected Jones’s emotional and volitional capacity in the past and made him a menace to the health and safety of other people.3. Antisocial behaviorDunham and Gaines both identified Jones as having certain antisocial personality traits. As Dunham testified, “Antisocial means kind of criminal mindset, law-breaking behavior, violating the norms of society. . . . Adult antisocial behavior indicates that . . . as an adult he has gotten into trouble, law-breaking behavior, violating societal norms[.]” Gaines emphasized Jones’s lack of remorse, his denial of his offenses, and his tendency to lie as an antisocial personality trait; she described Jones’s renditions of his past offenses as “ absurd” and “pathological” lies that could even be indicative of some degree of psychopathy. Substance abuse Dunham and Gaines also diagnosed Jones with a history of cannabis and alcohol abuse. According to Gaines, Jones took a course about substance abuse “a long time ago” in prison but he could not remember anything he learned in the course. Gaines also expressed concern about Jones’s admission that before he was incarcerated he had regularly smoked marijuana in combination with prescription medication. The experts’ conclusions Dunham and Gaines both concluded that Jones suffers from a behavioral abnormality that makes him likely to commit predatory acts of sexual violence. In addition to the above observations, Dunham expressed his concern that Jones had not received any sex-offender treatment and that Jones did not believe he needed any such treatment. Dunham described Jones’s attitude as “a poor – - poor appraisal of his own risk. It just shows that he doesn’t – - there’s a difference between denial and actually not understanding one’s risk and I – - I don’t think he understands his risk.” Dunham testified that Jones was “clearly” a high-risk offender when he entered prison and expressed doubt that Jones’s age or the controlled environment of prison had any effect of reducing that high risk. Dunham continued, “[Jones's] current beliefs and attitudes about it[,] that has not changed. He hasn’t had any type of intervention to help him understand his triggers, understand his high-risk situations, understand his offending cycle. And he’s about to be released without any – - without any knowledge of – - of how to encounter those . . . temptations in the future.”II. The jury’s verdictThe jury found that Jones is a sexually violent predator and the trial court entered an order of commitment.DiscussionJones brings six issues on appeal. In his first two issues, Jones argues that the trial court erred by allowing Dunham to testify to “basis” evidence that described the underlying facts related to Jones’s convictions. In his third and fourth issues, Jones attacks the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s finding that he is a sexually violent predator. In his fifth issue, Jones complains of the trial court’s submission of an Allen charge to the jury. And in his sixth issue, Jones argues that the trial court erred by denying his request that the jury be instructed that it could render a verdict in his favor by a 10-2 vote.We will first address the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the order of commitment because, if sustained, it would afford Jones the greatest relief. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.3; Bradleys’ Elec., Inc. v. Cigna Lloyds Ins. Co., 995 S.W.2d 675, 677 (Tex. 1999).I. Sufficiency of the evidenceA. Legal sufficiencyWe review sexually-violent-predator civil commitment proceedings for legal sufficiency of the evidence using the appellate standard of review applied in criminal cases. In re Commitment of Short, 521 S.W.3d 908, 911 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2017, no pet.). We assess the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict to determine whether any rational trier of fact could find the statutory elements required for commitment beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.To have an offender civilly committed, the State must show beyond a reasonable doubt that the person (1) is a repeat sexually violent offender, and (2) suffers from a behavioral abnormality that makes him likely to engage in a predatory act of sexual violence. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§ 841.003 (defining “Sexually Violent Predator”), 841.062(a) (imposing a “beyond a reasonable doubt” burden of proof). Jones does not dispute his status as a sexually violent offender because he has more than one conviction for a sexually violent offense. See id. § 841.003 (defining “repeat sexually violent offender” as a person who has been convicted of more than one sexually violent offense).Jones argues that the evidence supporting the jury’s verdict is legally insufficient because Dunham’s and Gaines’s expert opinions relied upon facially unreliable evidence and therefore constituted no evidence. To support his argument, Jones points to supreme court holdings that a conclusory, unsupported expert opinion cannot be considered probative evidence, regardless of whether there is no objection. But reliance on these cases for support of this argument is misplaced. City of San Antonio v. Pollock, 284 S.W.3d 809, 818 (Tex. 2009).Pollock involved claims for negligence and nuisance related to a child’s in utero exposure to harmful gases from a closed municipal landfill. Id. at 812. An expert testified to the recorded gas levels in a sealed monitoring well on the child’s family’s property and concluded that the family was exposed to the same gas level elsewhere on their property, outside of the sealed monitoring well. Id. at 818. The supreme court held that the expert’s opinion suffered from a fatal analytical gap because there was no evidence allowing an inference that the gas concentration in the ambient air of the home and yard would have been remotely close to the gas concentration within the sealed monitoring well. Id. at 818—19. The expert’s “naked conclusion” therefore constituted no evidence. Id. at 819.But here Jones does not demonstrate a similar analytical gap within Dunham’s or Gaines’s opinions. Instead, Jones argues that their opinions constituted no evidence because, in his view, they relied upon “facially unreliable evidence” gathered from Jones’s criminal records. Pollock and other cases recognize the difference in this argument: “When a scientific opinion is admitted in evidence without objection, it may be considered probative evidence even if the basis for the opinion is unreliable.” Id. at 818 (emphasis added); see also Coastal Transp. Co., Inc. v. Crown Cent. Petroleum, 136 S.W.3d 227, 233 (Tex. 2004) (distinguishing between challenges to an expert’s scientific methodology and “no evidence challenges where, on the face of the record, the evidence lacked probative value”) (citing Maritime Overseas Corp. v. Ellis, 971 S.W.2d 402, 412 (Tex. 1998), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 1017).Furthermore, to preserve his argument that these opinions were based on unreliable evidence, Jones was required to lodge an objection to such opinion testimony at trial. Coastal, 136 S.W.3d at 233 (concluding that “when a reliability challenge requires the court to evaluate the underlying methodology, technique, or foundational data used by the expert, an objection must be timely made so that the trial court has the opportunity to conduct this analysis”). Jones’s only objection to Dunham’s and Gaines’s testimony related to the contents of the criminal records was based on hearsay. He therefore failed to preserve any objection that the expert opinions were based upon supposedly unreliable evidence. See id.; see also Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a).Even if we consider Jones’s argument as one that Dunham’s and Gaines’s opinions lacked any probative value because they were unsupported by the record, it fails. Dunham’s and Gaines’s opinions are not conclusory or speculative in such a way as to render them non-probative. Both experts explained the basis of their opinions, which included, among other things, a review of Jones’s criminal history, including his convictions and uncharged behavior. Based upon their reviews of his criminal history—which included multiple sexual offenses that escalated from lifting strange women’s skirts to sexually assaulting women at gunpoint—and other risk factors, both experts concluded that Jones suffers from a behavioral abnormality that makes him likely to commit sexual offenses in the future. Their opinion testimonies were not bare conclusions but instead were based upon research and reason. Their opinions were legally sufficient to support the jury’s verdict.We overrule Jones’s third issue.II. Nonunanimity jury instructionIn his sixth issue, Jones argues that the trial court erred by declining to issue a jury instruction that the jury could render a verdict in Jones’s favor nonunanimously, by a vote of 10-2.[2] Whether a jury can render a “No” verdict upon agreement of ten jurors appears to be an issue of first impression.[3]This is an issue of statutory construction, a matter of law that we review de novo. Me/den & Hunt, Inc. v. East Rio Hondo Water Supply Corp., 520 S.W.3d 887, 893 (Tex. 2017). When the text of a statute is clear, as it is here, we do not resort to rules of construction or extrinsic aids to construe the text; we give effect to the ordinary or common meaning of each word of the statute. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 312.002(a); Melden, 520 S.W.3d at 893.Section 841.062 provides: The judge or jury shall determine whether, beyond a reasonable doubt, the person is a sexually violent predator… A jury determination that the person is a sexually violent predator must be by unanimous verdict. Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 841.062.This statute unambiguously requires that the jury must be unanimous in its determination that a person is a sexually violent predator. But by its plain words, the statute clearly does not require that the jury be unanimous in a determination that a person is not a sexually violent predator. Consequently, the rules of civil procedure apply and such a determination only requires the agreement of 10 jurors. Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 841.146(b) (“Except as otherwise provided by this subsection, a civil commitment proceeding is subject to the rules of procedure and appeal for civil cases.”); Tex. R. Civ. Proc. 292(a) (“a verdict may be rendered in any cause by the concurrence . . . of the same ten or more members of an original jury of twelve”).The contrast between the wording of subsections (a) and (b) further supports this conclusion. The legislature chose to write subsection (a) as requiring the judge or jury to “determine whether . . . the person is a sexually violent predator.” Id. § 841.062(a). If the legislature intended to require a unanimous jury to find that a person is not a sexually violent predator, it could have similarly worded subsection (b), to wit: A jury determination of whether the person is a sexually violent predator must be by unanimous verdict. Or it could have omitted subsection (b) altogether and stated in subsection a, “The judge or jury, by unanimous verdict, shall determine whether . . . the person is a sexually violent predator.” See, e.g., Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 54.03(c) (requiring juvenile-delinquency jury determinations to be unanimous: “Jury verdicts under this title must be unanimous”). Instead, the legislature specifically directed the unanimous verdict requirement in subsection (b) to a determination “that the person is a sexually violent predator.” Id. (b) (emphasis added). We presume that the legislature meant what it said and that it intended to require unanimity only for a determination that a person is a sexually violent predator, not for a determination that a person is not. See Fitzgerald v. Advanced Spine Fixation Sys., Inc., 996 S.W.2d 864, 866 (Tex. 1999) (“[I]t is a fair assumption that the Legislature tries to say what it means, and therefore the words it chooses should be the surest guide to legislative intent.”).At trial, the State argued that the legislature has “never . . . contemplated in any type [of] trial for it to be unanimous for one [jury answer] and ten to two for another [jury answer].” The State was wrong; the legislature has contemplated exactly that in the closely analogous situation of exemplary damage awards. By statute, “[e]xemplary damages may be awarded only if the jury was unanimous in regard to finding liability for and the amount of exemplary damages.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 41.003(d); see also Tex. R. Civ. P. 292(b) (“A verdict may be rendered awarding exemplary damages only if the jury was unanimous in finding liability for and the amount of exemplary damages.”). Conversely, only 10 jurors need to agree that exemplary damages are not warranted. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 226a, comment (“You are instructed that in order to answer ‘Yes’ to [the question of liability for exemplary damages], your answer must be unanimous. You may answer ‘No’ to [the question of liability for exemplary damages] only upon a vote of 10 . . . or more jurors.”); see also Comm. on Pattern Jury Charges, State Bar of Texas, Texas Pattern Jury Charges: General Negligence, Intentional Personal Torts & Workers’ Compensation PJC 4.2C, 7.11B, 10.14C (2018).[4] We therefore hold that the trial court erred by declining to instruct the jury that it may render a “no” finding with 10 jurors’ concurrence.Having found error, we must determine harm. To obtain a reversal of a judgment on the basis of trial-court error in civil cases, the appellant must show that the error occurred and that it probably caused rendition of an improper judgment or probably prevented the appellant from properly presenting the case to this court. Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(a); Romero v. KPH Consolidation, Inc., 166 S.W.3d 212, 225 (Tex. 2005). Charge error is generally considered harmful if it relates to a “contested, critical issue.” Transcon. Ins. v. Crump, 330 S.W.3d 211, 225 (Tex. 2010) (quoting Columbia Rio Grande Healthcare, L.P. v. Hawley, 284 S.W.3d 851, 856 (Tex. 2009)). Unless the appellate court is reasonably certain that the jury was not significantly influenced by issues erroneously submitted to it, the error is reversible. Romero, 166 S.W.3d at 227-28.The State argues that Jones has failed to show harm because there is no evidence in the record of how the jurors’ vote may have been split. This cannot be the test. To accept the State’s argument would create an insurmountable barrier to any defendant’s ability to show harm in such circumstances, given that polling a potentially deadlocked jury is generally considered improperly coercive and therefore error. See Lowenfield v. Phelps, 484 U.S. 231, 232, 108 S. Ct. 546, 548 (1988) (discussing Brasfield v. United States, 272 U.S. 448, 47 S. Ct. 135 (1926) and the impropriety of polling a jury prior to the delivery of a verdict); Stevens v. Travelers Ins. Co., 563 S.W.2d 223, 229 (Tex. 1978) (approving of the use of verdict-urging instructions in civil cases but warning of the inherent “danger of coercion” in their use); Barnett v. State, 161 S.W.3d 128, 134 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2005) (“Courts have found jury coercion when . . . the trial court continues to poll the jury after a lack of unanimity is revealed.”), aff’d, 189 S.W.3d 272 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006).[5]Although we do not know precisely how the vote among the jurors was split during deliberations, we know that a split existed. The jury issued four notes concerning the substance of the case: three requested portions of the record to review testimony or definitions of certain terms and one, issued four-and-a-half hours after the jury began deliberating, declared that the jury was deadlocked. In response, a modified Allen charge was delivered by the trial court, urging the jury to continue deliberating. A unanimous verdict was delivered about an hour and fifteen minutes later. Because we know that a split existed, a 10-2 instruction could have had a significant impact on this situation.It is beyond argument that the requested charge relates to a contested element—indeed, the central question for the jury to resolve—and is therefore generally considered harmful. See Transcon, 330 S.W.3d at 226 (holding that charge error relating to question of causation in worker’s compensation case related to the sole issue in the case and was therefore harmful). Considering this, the jury’s temporary deadlock, and the record as a whole, we cannot be reasonably certain that the verdict was not significantly influenced by the trial court’s error. See Romero, 166 S.W.3d at 227-28. Having found harmful error, we sustain Jones’s sixth issue.ConclusionHaving held that the trial court committed reversible error by denying Jones’s request for a 10-2 jury instruction, we reverse the trial court’s order of commitment and remand this case to the trial court for a new trial.[6] See Transcon, 330 S.W.3d at 227 (reversing and remanding case for a new trial where trial court committed harmful error by rejecting defendant’s requested jury instruction)./s/ Bonnie SudderthBonnie SudderthChief JusticeDelivered: February 28, 2019