OPINION
¶ 1 In this wrongful death and survival action bi’ought under state law and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Jennifer Braillard (Braillard) sued Maricopa County (the County), Maricopa County Sheriff Joseph Arpaio, the Maricopa County Sheriffs Office (MCSO), and seven individual MCSO and County employees, for damages arising from the death of her mother, Deborah Braillard (Deborah).
¶ 2 On appeal, Braillard argues the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motions for summary judgment on her substantive claims and on her claims for punitive damages and damages for Deborah’s pain and suffering pursuant to § 1983. On cross-appeal, the defendants argue the court erred in denying their motion to dismiss MCSO as a nonjural entity; denying their motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s standing to bring a wrongful death action under § 1983; denying their motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s state-law negligence and gross negligence claims; and in its rulings on two discovery-related disputes.
¶ 3 For the reasons stated below, we reverse the trial court’s grants of summary judgment in favor of all defendants on Brail-lard’s § 1983 survival claims and her associated claims for damages and on her state-law claims with respect to defendant Cincy Rodriguez. We also reverse the court’s denial of summary judgment with respect to Brail-lard’s standing to file a wrongful death claim pursuant to § 1983 and its denial of the defendants’ motion to dismiss MCSO as a nonjural entity. However, we affirm the court’s discovery rulings and its denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s state claims.
Factual and Procedural Background
¶ 4 We view the facts in the light most favorable to Braillard, the party against whom summary judgment was granted.
See Corbett v. ManorCare of Am., Inc.,
¶ 5 On January 3, other inmates observed Deborah “moaning and groaning” and vomiting. By the evening of January 4, “[s]he was basically unconscious.... She couldn’t speak. She couldn’t eat.... She defecated on herself several times.” Inmates who asked the detention officers on duty to get help for Deborah were told: “There’s nothing we can do about it. You just have to deal with it. This is jail. Get over it.”
¶ 6 At 3:00 p.m. on January 4, defendants Karyn Schwartz and Randal Harenberg, MCSO detention officers, started their shift in K-Dorm. Schwartz saw Deborah sitting at a table and believed she was sitting there because she was not feeling well. Other-inmates apparently informed Harenberg that Deborah was suffering from drug withdrawal, and two of them helped walk her to her bunk. Harenberg was “concerned ... to the point where every time [he] went on a security walk ... [he] stopped by her bunk and checked on her.” At 3:25 p.m., Harenberg noted in the K-Dorm logbook that Deborah was “complaining of being sick [and] can’t breathe” and that he had called CHS. However, none of the CHS staff on duty acknowledged having received such a call, and no one from CHS came to K-Dorm to cheek on Deborah. At 6:30 p.m., she was too sick to stand in line for her dinner, and Harenberg allowed another inmate to bring her a meal.
¶ 7 At 8:17 p.m., Deborah’s friend Michael Amsberry attempted to visit her at the jail but was told she was too ill to come to the visitation area. At 9:42 p.m., another friend, Debbie Fouts, called MCSO, concerned that Deborah had not received medication while in jail. The MCSO officer who received the call, Brenda O’Neil, sent a facsimile to inform Estrella Jail’s medical clinic, but the facsimile apparently was neither picked up nor read by anyone there.
¶ 8 The next shift started at 11:00 p.m.' During this shift, only one detention officer was on duty in K-Dorm, defendant Sandra Garfias. Another officer, defendant Diane Galaviz, was assigned to escort duty and conducted a security walk during the shift. Garfias heard Deborah vomiting more than twice, and at 2:45 a.m. on January 5, moved Deborah from the dormitory to the day room because her “groaning [and] yelling” were keeping the other inmates awake. Deborah continued groaning and calling out, “Why me?” and “Help me” until around 5:00 a.m. Defendants Lucy Akpan and Stephanie Lep-pert took over from Garfias at 7:00 a.m. Deborah was moved back to her bunk, where she vomited again. Akpan observed that she appeared weak and “very sick.”
¶9 That morning, Braillard telephoned CHS risk manager Dennis Flynn and expressed concern that Deborah might not have been receiving appropriate treatment for her diabetes while she was in jail. Flynn contacted a nurse at the Estrella Jail medical clinic, who had Deborah brought to the clinic. She was given insulin and oxygen and transferred by ambulance to Maricopa County Medical Center, where she died eighteen days later from diabetic ketoacidosis.
¶ 10 Braillard brought this action, in her individual capacity and on behalf of Deborah’s estate, against Sheriff Arpaio, MCSO, and detention officers Karyn Schwartz, Randal Harenberg, Sandra Garfias, Diane Galav-iz, Lucy Akpan, and Stephanie Leppert (collectively, the MCSO defendants), and also against Maricopa County and CHS nurse Cincy Rodriguez (collectively, the County defendants). 1 The trial court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment *487 with respect to Braillard’s § 1983 claims and entered an order of final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ariz. R. Civ. P. Braillard timely filed a notice of appeal, and the County defendants and MCSO defendants filed separate and timely notices of cross-appeal.
Discussion
Capacity to Sue and be Sued
¶ 11 Before addressing the trial court’s grant of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s § 1983 claims, we consider two cross-appeal arguments affecting Braillard’s standing to sue and MCSO’s capacity to be sued with respect to those claims. These are legal issues we review de novo.
See Aegis of Ariz., L.L.C. v. Town of Marana,
¶ 12 First, the MCSO defendants argue the trial court erred in denying their motion to dismiss both the § 1983 claims and state tort claims against MCSO on the ground that it is a nonjural entity.
2
Governmental entities have no inherent power and possess only those powers and duties delegated to them by their enabling statutes.
Schwartz v. Superior Court,
¶ 13 Braillard nevertheless asserts that in prior cases MCSO has “admitted in court proceedings that it is a separate entity from the County.” However, “there is no doctrine of jural status by estoppel, at least without detrimental reliance in the case at hand.”
Payne v. Arpaio,
¶ 14 The MCSO defendants
3
next contend the trial court erred in denying their motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s individual standing to bring a wrongful death
*488
action pursuant to § 1983.
4
Although the denial of a motion for summary judgment generally is not appealable, “once we have jurisdiction over an order granting summary judgment, we may consider the merits of an order denying summary judgment and direct entry of summary judgment if there are no issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Kaufmann v. M & S Unltd., L.L.C.,
¶ 15 The MCSO defendants argue that, in the absence of direct interference by the state in a particular relationship, there is no violation of any constitutional right to association between a parent and an adult child and thus no basis for Braillard’s § 1983 wrongful death claim.
See Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
¶ 16 Braillard relies on
Smith v. City of Fontana,
¶ 17 However, the Seventh Circuit overruled
Bell in Russ v. Watts,
¶ 18 Moreover,
Morrison
itself involved the state’s direct interference in a particular relationship, namely, “county offieials[’] re-mov[al of] a mentally ill boy from his mother’s custody on the ground that she could not adequately care for him.”
Smith,
§ 1983 Survival Claims
¶ 19 Braillard argues the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants on her § 1983 survival claims. “On appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, we review de novo whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and whether the trial court erred in applying the law.”
Eller Media Co. v. City of Tucson,
¶ 20 Section 1983 allows a plaintiff to assert a cause of action against any person who, under color of state law or authority, deprives another person of “any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” of the United States. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Pretrial detainees are entitled to at least as much protection under the Fourteenth Amendment as convicted prisoners receive under the Eighth Amendment.
Riggins v. Nevada,
deliberate indifference to serious medical needs of prisoners [is unconstitutional] ... whether the indifference is manifested by prison doctors in their response to the prisoner’s needs or by prison guards in intentionally denying or delaying access to medical care____ Regardless of how evidenced, deliberate indifference to a prisoner’s serious illness or injury states a cause of action under [§ ] 1983.
Estelle v. Gamble,
(i) CHS and MCSO staff
¶ 21 Viewing the evidence and reasonable inferences derived therefrom in the light most favorable to Braillard, we conclude Braillard produced sufficient facts for a jury to find that Nurse Rodriguez and the named detention officers “failed to act despite [their] knowledge of a substantial risk of serious harm” to Deborah.
See Farmer,
¶ 22 Either Harenberg or Schwartz apparently informed the visitation officer that Deborah was too sick to have visitors and told Officer Galaviz, who was working the next shift, that Deborah was suffering from drug withdrawal. Galaviz passed that information on to Officer Garfias, who heard Deborah vomiting several times, was informed by other inmates she had defecated on herself, and observed she was in pain. Garfias subsequently arranged for Deborah to be moved from the dormitory to the day room because she was “groaning, yelling, and keeping the whole dorm up.” By this time, Deborah apparently was unable to respond to Garfi-as’s questions, looked weak, and needed to be supported by two other inmates. She continued groaning and crying throughout the night within hearing of the detention officers, calling out, “Help me” and “Why me?” Ga-laviz conducted a security walk during the shift and reportedly told an inmate, “Don’t worry about Deborah Braillard. She’s getting what she deserves. She’s coming off drugs.”
¶23 The next morning, Garfias informed Officer Leppert that Deborah was withdrawing from drugs and explained that she had been moved into the television room during the night because she was yelling, vomiting, and defecating on herself. Leppert passed this information on to Officer Akpan, who observed Deborah appeared weak and “very sick” and was “screaming ... in pain.” And shortly after the beginning of her shift, Lep-pert was informed by one of the other inmates that Deborah had vomited again.
¶ 24 Despite being aware of Deborah’s severe symptoms and believing she was suffering symptoms of drug withdrawal, which they arguably knew could be a life-threatening condition, 7 the officers did little or nothing to obtain medical assistance. Although Harenberg, Akpan, and Leppert asserted they had called CHS, none of the medical staff on duty at the time recalled receiving any such calls, and CHS had no record of them. In any event, none of these officers followed up with any further calls when CHS failed to respond. None of the officers mentioned Deborah’s condition to the CHS nurses who went to the unit to dispense medications during each shift. And only Garfias and Leppert claim to have attempted to talk directly to Deborah about her condition.
¶ 25 Nurse Rodriguez testified she was aware of the importance of conducting intake interviews effectively to ascertain the medical histories and medical needs of inmates and knew that denying insulin to a diabetic potentially could be fatal. Nevertheless, her own affidavit suggests she completed the interview with Deborah in fifty-nine seconds,
8
which, according to evidence
*491
produced by Braillard, was substantially less time than necessary to do so completely and thoroughly. And another CHS nurse testified she had observed nurses recording inmates’ purported responses at intake interviews when inmates had provided no response or had not even been asked the questions. Furthermore, the parties dispute whether Rodriguez had access to but failed to further investigate information on Deborah’s arrest record showing she was on prescribed medication. In any event, even absent her knowledge that Deborah was personally at risk, a jury could find Rodriguez had failed to interview Deborah adequately while knowing her actions could pose a substantial risk of serious harm to any inmate who was insulin-dependent or had other serious medical needs.
See Farmer,
¶ 26 Because there was sufficient evidence for a jury to find the detention officers and Rodriguez liable under a deliberate indifference standard, the court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of these defendants both on Braillard’s § 1983 claims and her state claims against Rodriguez.
See Farmer,
(ii) Sheriff Arpaio
¶ 27 A jury similarly could find Sheriff Arpaio was aware that his actions or inaction posed a substantial risk of harm to inmates with serious medical needs in Maricopa County jails. “[Vjicarious liability is inapplicable to ... § 1983 suits.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
- U.S. -, -,
¶28 To demonstrate “deliberate indifference” in the context of inadequate training or supervision, a plaintiff must show that the supervisor “had notice that the training procedures and supervision were inadequate and likely to result in a constitutional violation.”
Herrin v. Treon,
¶29 Braillard presented some evidence that Arpaio had failed to fulfill his obligations under the agreement and that these failures were causally related to Deborah’s death. Specifically, detention officers involved in this case testified that, in the absence of a formal request from an inmate, they were not trained to “aet[] as medical liaisons between medical staff and the inmate” or to call for assistance even when the *492 inmate had diarrhea, was vomiting, and apparently was too weak to request medical assistance. They also stated they had been given no training in recognizing the symptoms of drug withdrawal nor had they been trained to notify CHS when they believed an inmate was withdrawing from drugs. As a result, although some of the detention officers allegedly contacted CHS on their own initiative, a jury could find the lack of appropriate training led to an inconsistent and inadequate response to Deborah’s symptoms and ultimately caused her death.
¶30 O’Neil, the MCSO officer who was alerted by one of Deborah’s friends that Deborah had not received medication for two days, testified that MCSO staff were not trained “to ensure that medical information [about an inmate] ... was conveyed and acted upon in a timely fashion.” Rather, their training and MCSO’s applicable procedures apparently provided that their responsibility was limited to faxing such information immediately to the medical staff where the inmate was housed and did not extend to calling the facility or otherwise ensuring the information was being acted upon, even when the information “warranted immediate attention.” This practice apparently was in direct conflict with CHS policy and resulted in a delay of approximately twelve hours before Deborah finally received medical assistance.
¶ 31 Moreover, Arpaio apparently instituted no disciplinary proceedings against any of the detention officers involved nor changed any MCSO training or procedures to prevent similar deaths from occurring in the future. And “[t]he jury properly could find [a] policy or custom from the failure of [Arpaio] to take any remedial steps.”
See Larez,
(iii) Maricopa County
¶ 32 A municipality or county is liable under § 1983 “when implementation of its official policies or established customs inflicts the constitutional injury.”
Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of New York,
¶ 33 Here, Braillard has provided sufficient evidence for a jury to conclude that deficiencies in staffing, procedures, and training evinced deliberate indifference to the medical needs of pretrial detainees and that these deficiencies were causally related to Deborah’s death. The DOJ investigation had concluded that unconstitutional conditions existed with respect to inmates’ medical needs and specifically had identified as problems “perfunctor[ ]y” medical intake interviews and “significant delays in medical treatment.” The DOJ found that “a severe lack of resources” was the primary “[s]ystemie factor[ ] responsible for inadequate medical care” and recommended increases in staffing levels.
¶ 34 Under the 1999 settlement agreement with the DOJ, the County agreed to hire “sufficient general medicine nursing positions ... to provide adequate medical care to inmates.” However, Jon Bosch, a consultant hired to cany out a review of CHS staffing, found in 2003 that “the current correctional health care program at Maricopa County [wa]s not in compliance with the basic health care rights provided to inmates under the U.S. Constitution,” and his final report to the County concluded that “current staffing [wa]s insufficient to meet the needs of the inmate population.” Specifically, Bosch observed:
*493 Frequently inmates do not report their health care needs at the time of intake and therefore their conditions go untreated until they request care .... However, because sick call requests are not responded to in a timely manner ... an inmate’s health status is likely to deteriorate while in the custody of ... Maricopa County.
He found the number of nursing personnel generally to be inadequate and, in particular, recommended an increase in the number of medical assistants available to conduct the intake health-screening process, based on his finding that the screening form could be completed in “approximately eight minutes.”
¶ 35 Dr. Todd Wilcox, the CHS medical director at the time of Deborah’s death, testified that Bosch’s “staffing recommendations were higher than [the County] wanted to fund” and that, when he was appointed in December 2004, CHS “w[as]n’t anywhere close to” adequate staffing and was “deliberately indifferent to the needs of its patients.” 9 He testified that then, as now, “the capacity of CHS to see [inmates] d[id] not match the demand for care,” the preintake screening was “extremely cursory ... [, a]nd the level of staff doing [it wa]s not what we would like it to be so that it would be effective.”
¶ 36 However, despite Deborah’s death, the County declined to implement Wilcox’s proposals for change or to do anything “that was truly effective ... because to really fix that mismatch [between capacity and demand] requires a significant investment in staff and in resources.” Wilcox thus ultimately “reached the conclusion that the County was very much aware of the inadequate healthcare that was provided for the inmates and it just decided not to make the changes.” Furthermore, one of the nurses at the Estrella clinic when Deborah died testified that, as a result of inadequate staffing, the clinic was “always overbooked on seeing inmates” and that it could be “days before [requests for medical care] would be looked at.”
¶ 37 Braillard thus presented sufficient evidence for a jury to find that the County was aware of and disregarded “systemic and gross deficiencies” in CHS staffing and procedures and that it knew these deficiencies could result in a violation of inmates’ constitutional rights. A jury further could find from this evidence that these deficiencies were a cause of Deborah’s death, either because her health screening was inadequate to identify her as an insulin-dependent diabetic or because MCSO staff did not respond timely to her pleas for medical care.
See City of Canton,
¶ 38 Moreover, the County defendants concede Braillard provided evidence that “hypothetically supports] a Monell claim based on the MCSO’s training of its detention officers.” Because we have concluded MCSO is a nonjural entity, such a claim, based on the training issues identified in our discussion of Arpaio’s liability, can be made properly against the County. And, like Arpaio, the County was a signatory to the settlement agreement with the DOJ and therefore was aware that failure to train detention officers to report the serious medical needs of inmates to CHS staff likely would violate those inmates’ constitutional rights.
(iv) Qualified immunity
¶39 Nor are we persuaded by the claims of qualified immunity asserted by the detention officers, Rodriguez, and Arpaio in his personal capacity.
10
The doctrine of qualified immunity protects government officials “from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of
*494
which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
¶40 The constitutional right of pretrial detainees to adequate medical care is well established.
See City of Canton,
Damages
¶ 41 Braillard argues the trial court erred in granting the MCSO defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the issues of punitive damages and damages for Deborah’s pain and suffering pursuant to § 1983. We consider each issue in turn.
12
Because federal civil rights law provides no statutory rule with respect to damages, we look to “the most closely analogous state law ... if it is consistent with the meaning and purpose of constitutional and federal statutory law. If state law is inconsistent, it must be disregarded in favor of the federal common law.”
Bass v. Wallenstein,
¶ 42 “[A] jury may be permitted to assess punitive damages in an action under § 1983 when the defendant’s conduct ... involves reckless or callous indifference to the federally protected rights of others.”
Smith v. Wade,
¶ 43 The MCSO defendants nonetheless argued below that punitive damages claims under § 1983 are precluded in Arizona by A.R.S. § 12-820.04, which provides that “[n]either a public entity nor a public employee acting within the scope of his employment is liable for punitive or exemplary damages.” In support of this argument, the MCSO defendants suggested the Arizona statute is not inconsistent with the purpose of § 1983 and therefore controls with respect to punitive damages claims because “compensatory damages” are an adequate remedy for civil rights violations under § 1983 and the immunity in § 12-820.04 is “narrowly tailored to public employees acting in the scope of employment.” We disagree.
¶ 44 Far from being narrowly tailored, the application of § 12-820.04 suggested by these defendants would preclude punitive damages for most, if not all, § 1983 claims, which require that the defendant have acted “under color of state law or authority.” 42 U.S.C. § 1983. And, under circumstances like those present here, any compensatory damages are likely to be modest. Thus, “‘[t]o disallow punitive damages in Section 1983 actions solely on the basis of [§ 12-820.04] would seriously hamper the deterrent] effect of Section 1983/ ”
See Bass,
¶ 45 Moreover, such a conclusion is congruent with this court’s prior decisions.
See Badia,
¶ 46 On the issue of damages for Deborah’s pain and suffering, the MCSO defendants argued that A.R.S. § 14-3110, which bars such claims under state law, should also preclude those damages under § 1983. There is no Arizona case deciding this issue where the constitutional violation asserted was the cause of the victim’s death.
14
However, of the courts in other jurisdictions that have addressed the issue, the overwhelming majority have concluded it would be inconsistent with the purposes of § 1983 to preclude pain and suffering damages pursuant to state law.
See Andrews v. Neer,
¶ 47 In Berry, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals addressed whether, under circumstances such as these, damages in a survival action under § 1983 were limited to those recoverable in a survival action under Oklahoma law, which, like § 14-3110, did not include damages for pain and suffering. 900 *496 F.2d at 1500. It found that Oklahoma law, “[a]s applied to th[at] ease, ... would provide extraordinarily limited recovery, possibly only damages [for] property loss, of which there were none, and loss of decedent’s earnings between the time of injury and death, of which there also were none.” Id. at 1504. The court therefore concluded “the Oklahoma survival action is clearly deficient in both its remedy and its deterrent effect” and a survival action under § 1983 “must make available to plaintiffs sufficient damages to serve the deterrent function central to the purpose of § 1983,” including damages for “pain and suffering before death.” Id. at 1504,1507.
¶48 Here, applying § 14-3110 to bar damages for Deborah’s pain and suffering similarly would defeat the remedial and deterrent functions of § 1983. Under the circumstances in this ease, any economic damages would be relatively insignificant.
15
And although, as discussed above, Braillard is not barred from seeking punitive damages, such damages are “never awarded as of right, no matter how egregious the defendant’s conduct”; unlike compensatory damages, they are awarded only in the jury’s discretion.
Smith,
Negligence Claims
¶ 49 In their cross-appeal, the MCSO defendants argue the trial court erred in denying their motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s state claims for negligence and gross negligence. They contend Deborah’s failure to disclose her diabetes was “an intervening and superseding cause, and therefore the proximate cause of her own death, excusing any defendant from liability.”
¶ 50 “The proximate cause of an injury is that which, in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces an injury, and without which the injury would not have occurred.”
McDowell v. Davis,
¶ 51 Whether and to what extent Deborah deliberately concealed the fact and severity of her diabetes are themselves contested questions of fact. And, as discussed above, Braillard presented sufficient evidence for a jury to find that the detention officer defendants had failed to respond adequately to Deborah’s obvious signs of serious illness and that this failure contributed at least “a little” to her death, regardless of whether they knew the medical cause of those symptoms.
18
See Robertson,
Discovery Issues
¶ 52 On cross-appeal, the County defendants argue the trial court erred in its resolution of two discovery disputes. “[I]n matters of discovery a trial court has broad discretion which will not be disturbed absent a showing of abuse.”
Brown v. Superior Court,
¶ 53 First, the County defendants contend the trial court erred in denying the motion to compel production of Deborah’s computer, which they believe contains information regarding business transactions Deborah made before her death, including allegedly illicit activity. “Evidence of the decedent’s capacity and disposition to earn money” is generally relevant to the issue of damages in a wrongful death action.
Kemp v. Pinal County, 8
Ariz.App. 41, 45,
¶ 54 The trial court found the information allegedly contained on Deborah’s computer to be irrelevant because “no economic relief is being sought, other tha[n] relief for loss of consortium.” The County defendants nonetheless reassert the claim they made below that not only is the information relevant to Deborah’s earning capacity but that “evidence showing that [Deborah] was involved in illicit activities on the internet, including credit card fraud and selling stolen property, is pertinent to the jury’s determination of damages for ... Braillard’s asserted loss of companionship, guidance, and comfort as a result of [Deborahj’s death.” However, any connection between any such activities and the quality of the two women’s relationship is facially tenuous and, in the absence of any evidence, completely speculative.
See Brown,
¶ 55 The County defendants next argue the trial court erred in granting Braillard’s motion for a protective order quashing defendants’ subpoena duces tecum for the disclosure of employment records of one of her witnesses, Jacqueline Moore, who was listed as an expert on the standard of care for correctional health facilities. A trial court may “make any order which justice requires to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense.” Ariz. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1).
¶56 The County defendants issued the subpoena after discovering that Moore’s curriculum vitae omitted her recent prior employment with a healthcare management company. The subpoena initially requested Moore’s entire employment file but, following Braillard’s motion for a protective order, was modified to include “only those documents that address, arise [sic], or otherwise concern Dr. Moore’s job performance and termination, including but not limited to, any and all performance evaluations, memoranda, discipline notices, e-mails, correspondence, and termination notices.”
¶ 57 The County defendants contend that “Dr. Moore’s job performance and the reasons for her termination relate directly to her expertise and to her qualification to give opinions pertaining to the applicable standard of care for correctional health providers.” We disagree. In
Banta v. Superior Court,
¶ 58 Even where this court has found evidence to be relevant for impeachment purposes, we have “recognized that overbroad discovery requests have a chilling effect on would-be experts” and have been reluctant to approve requests that unreasonably invade an expert’s privacy when less intrusive means of obtaining evidence are available.
Am. Family,
Disposition
¶ 59 For the reasons stated above, we reverse the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of all defendants on Brail-lai’d’s § 1983 survival claims and her associated claims for damages and in favor of Rodriguez on Braillard’s state claims. We also reverse the eoui’t’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Braillard with respect to her standing to bring a wrongful death action pursuant to § 1983 and its denial of the defendants’ motion to dismiss MCSO. And, we direct the trial court to enter judgment dismissing the claims against MCSO. However, we affirm the court’s discovery rul *499 ings and its denial of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Braillard’s state claims.
¶ 60 Braillard requests attorney fees on appeal.
20
However, she has not “articulate[d] an appropriate statutory basis for that request.”
See Fid. Nat’l Title Co., Inc. v. Town of Marana,
Notes
. Braillard’s complaint named additional defendants who subsequently were dismissed from the action. Pursuant to stipulations between the parties, the claims against another CHS nurse, Gloria Eppinger, were dismissed without prejudice and against Maricopa Integrated Health System with prejudice. And CHS was dismissed as a nonjural entity.
. In discussing this issue, the parties touch on the question whether the Maricopa County Sheriff, acting in his official capacity, is a jural entity. However, none of the parties has argued the sheriff should be dismissed from this action. We therefore decline to reach this question. In any event, “Maricopa County pays its own debts, and it funds the Sheriffs official functions. Whether the County or the Sheriff is liable is of no practical consequence. One or both paths must be good, and they both lead to the same money.”
Payne
v.
Arpaio,
. Although we have concluded MCSO is a non-jural entity, the individual MCSO defendants, Sheriff Arpaio and the detention officers, remain parties to the litigation.
. The MCSO defendants do not challenge Brail-lard's standing, in her capacity as representative of Deborah's estate, to bring a survival action under § 1983.
See Smith v. City of Fontana,
. The Ninth Circuit has not revisited this issue following the Seventh Circuit’s overruling of
Bell.
And, although we "may choose to follow substantive decisions of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,” we are not persuaded that doing so here would “further predictability and stability of the law.”
See Weatherford ex rel. Michael L.
v.
State,
. Nothing in this decision should be perceived as trivializing Braillard's loss. However, "even an interest of great importance may not always be entitled to constitutional protection.”
Valdivieso Ortiz,
. Both Harenberg and Akpan testified they had been trained by MCSO that withdrawing from drugs could be life threatening.
. Rodriguez stated, "Each time I asked her a question, [Deborah] answered and I immediately recorded her answer on a computer terminal.” Computer records showed fifty-nine seconds elapsed as she typed the responses into Deborah's online medical record.
. We find no merit to the County defendants' assertion that Wilcox's testimony would be inadmissible at trial on hearsay grounds. Although not a binding admission on behalf of the County,
see City of Tucson v. Wondergem,
. Qualified immunity "is unavailable '... in an action against a municipality,’ "
Pearson v. Callahan,
— U.S.-,-,
. Furthermore, the limits of the "right” proffered by the defendants prejudge the extent to which Deborah concealed her diabetes, itself a question of fact for the jury to determine. And, when considering qualified immunity issues on summary judgment, we "view the facts and draw reasonable inferences 'in the light most favorable to the party opposing the [summary .judgment] motion.' ”
Scott
v.
Harris,
. Braillard asserts correctly that the defendants have failed to address these issues in their answering briefs, an omission which "c[ould] be considered a confession of error.”
See In re 1996 Nissan Sentra,
. The parties agree punitive damages are not available against the County or Arpaio in his official capacity.
See Mitchell v. Dupnik,
. In
Badia,
this court followed the United States Supreme Court's precedent in
Robertson v. Weg-mann,
. In any event, Braillard is not seeking economic damages.
. We thus are not persuaded by the single line of California cases cited by the MCSO defendants, which held that provisions of California law, including the authorization of punitive damages, were sufficient "to fulfill the compensatory and deterrent purposes of the federal Civil Rights Act” and hence that California's prohibition of damages for pre-death pain and suffering was not inconsistent with § 1983.
Garcia v. Superior Court,
. Although the minimal damages otherwise available would undercut the potential effectiveness of § 1983 both as a deterrent and as a remedy, we do not presume to assess the actual deterrent value of permitting the survival of a decedent’s claim for pain and suffering. A serious analysis of this issue "would be quite complex and require extensive empirical work” that an appellate court is ill-equipped to undertake.
See Venerable v. City of Sacramento,
. Nor are we persuaded by the MCSO defendants' related argument that, because of Deborah's alleged failure to disclose her diabetes, “no reasonable juror could conclude that the standard of care was breached.” As discussed above, a juror could find the officers' failure to react appropriately to her severe symptoms was unreasonable, even if they were ignorant of the cause of those symptoms.
. Nor are we persuaded that Braillard waived her objection to the County's request for production of the computer by failing to respond ade *498 quately within the forty-day period for such objections provided by Rule 34(b), Ariz. R. Civ. P. Although the County contends Braillard's response by electronic mail within the requisite time did not constitute a sufficient “formal written response,” it cites no authority to support this contention. And, in any event, the rule permits the trial court to allow a longer time for such responses. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 34(b).
. Because the County defendants are not the prevailing party on cross-appeal, we do not consider the merits of their request for attorney fees. And, to the extent the County defendants seek an award of attorney fees in the action below, any such award would be premature.
See Esmark, Inc. v. McKee,
