OPINION
¶ 1 After a twelve-day trial, a jury found defendants Southwest Ambulance and Rural/Metro Corporation, the City of Tucson, the Tucson Fire Department, the Tucson Police Department, and various individual employees of each (collectively, defendants) not liable in this wrongful death action. Appellant Alice Romero contends the trial court erred by admitting certain evidence about the decedent, her son; denying a motion to bifurcate the trial into liability and damage phases; and instructing the jury pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-711. We affirm primarily on procedural grounds, Romero having failed to provide a sufficient record on appeal. The record does support, albeit marginally, reaching the merits of Romero’s constitutional challenge to the statute, which we reject.
Procedural and Factual Background
¶ 2 We view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to upholding the jury’s verdict.
1
Crackel v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
¶3 The first trial of this case in March 2002 ended in a mistrial after six days, and the second trial was held in September 2003. Before each trial, Romero sought to preclude evidence of Mark’s past illegal drug use, substance abuse treatment, criminal record, incarcerations, and diagnosis of hepatitis and *203 to bifurcate the trial into liability and damage phases pursuant to Rule 42(b), Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 1. Before the first trial, the court denied Romero’s motions with the exception of testimony about Mark’s diagnosis of hepatitis C, which the court precluded. Before the second trial, Romero refiled the motions and reargued the motion to bifurcate. The trial court denied all of Romero’s motions, including the motion to preclude testimony about Mark’s hepatitis C.
Other Act Evidence
¶4 Romero contends the trial court erred in admitting irrelevant and unfairly prejudicial character evidence about Mark. Defendants respond that, in the absence of any transcripts, the trial court’s discretionary rulings must be upheld. Although, in a civil case, a motion in limine may serve as a substitute for an evidentiary objection at trial,
Premium Cigars International, Ltd. v. Farmer-Butler-Leavitt Insurance Agency,
Bifurcation of Trial
¶ 5 Romero next argues that the trial court erred in refusing to bifurcate the trial into liability and damage phases in view of its allegedly erroneous admission of the character evidence. We review a trial court’s decision on bifurcation for an abuse of discretion.
Williams v. Thude,
A.R.S. § 12-711
¶ 6 At the end of the trial, over Romero’s objection, the court apparently instructed the jury pursuant to § 12-711. That statute provides:
In any civil action, the finder of fact may find the defendant not liable if the defendant proves that the claimant was under the influence of an intoxicating liquor or a drug and as a result of that influence the claimant was at least fifty per cent responsible for the accident or event that caused the claimant’s harm.
Romero argues § 12-711 is unconstitutional, citing five bases. But the record contains no written challenge to the statute and only one oral objection — that the jury instruction based on the statute abrogated Romero’s right of action in violation of article XVIII, § 6 of the Arizona Constitution.
2
“The only
*204
objection which may be raised on appeal ... is that made at trial.”
Selby v. Savard,
¶7 Romero argues that § 12-711 violates article XVIII, § 5 of the Arizona Constitution by removing the issues of contributory negligence and assumption of the risk from the jury; article II, § 13, the Equal Protection Clause, by depriving a particular class of citizens of a right of action; and article II, § 4, the Due Process Clause, by depriving her of a protected right. The record does not show Romero presented any of these issues to the trial court save possibly one; therefore, they are waived on appeal. 3 See Selby; Englert. Romero also argues that § 12-711 is unconstitutional because it conflicts with Arizona’s Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Act, A.R.S. §§ 12-2501 through 12-2509. This argument, on its face, appears to lack merit given the permissive language of § 12-711. In any event, it too was not presented to the trial court and has thus been waived. See Selby; Englert.
¶ 8 In the one argument we can infer she raised below, Romero contends generally that the trial court’s jury instruction based on § 12-711 abrogated her right of action in violation of article XVIII, § 6 of the Arizona Constitution.
4
She relies on
Gunnell v. Arizona Public Service Co.,
¶ 9 Romero’s argument is unavailing because neither Halenar nor Gunnell supports it. In Halenar, a decedent’s survivors sued his coworkers for negligence. The trial court found that Arizona’s workers’ compensation statutes precluded the action. Our supreme court held that the statutes in question, in accordance with the Arizona Constitution, did not preclude an action against fellow employees, but only barred an action against the employer in exchange for statutory benefits. Id.
¶ 10 In
Gunnell,
an excavator who was injured through both his own and the defendant utility’s negligence sought to recover damages under Arizona’s Underground Facilities Act, A.R.S. §§ 40-360.21 through 40-360.32. The trial court granted summary judgment and Division One of this court affirmed, finding that Gunnell’s own negligence prevented him from recovering any damages. Our supreme court reversed, holding that, although both parties had, in fact, been negligent, the Act created a “comparative negligence regime” that required the issue to be submitted to a jury.
¶ 11 Romero is correct that a claimant has a fundamental right under the Arizona Constitution “to bring an action to recover damages.”
See Lerma v. Keck,
¶ 12 When a statute “does not abrogate any viable ‘right of action to recover damages,’ it does not violate article 18, § 6.”
Ramirez,
¶ 13 Absent any constitutional infirmity, a jury instruction should be given if the evidence tends to establish a theory supported by the instruction.
Anderson v. Nissei ASB Mach. Co.,
¶ 14 Defendants have requested attorney fees on appeal pursuant to Rule 21(e), Ariz. R. CivApp. P., as a sanction against Romero for failing to comply with the rule requiring transcripts. In our discretion, we decline to award such fees.
¶ 15 Based on the foregoing, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Romero has failed to provide this court any transcripts of the trial as required by Rule 11(b), Ariz. R. Civ.App. P., 17B A.R.S. Romero has also failed to adequately cite the trial record in her briefs as required by Rule 13(a)(6), Ariz. R. Civ. App. P.
See Ramirez v. Health Partners of S. Ariz.,
. We granted Romero's motion to supplement the record, which added two pages of the trial *204 transcript in which this jury instruction was briefly discussed. It is from these pages that we infer Romero presented this argument to the trial court.
. Romero argues in her reply brief that these issues raise questions of fundamental error. However, we are not required to address issues raised for the first time in a reply brief.
Nelson v. Rice,
. That section provides: "The right of action to recover damages for injuries shall never be abrogated, and the amount recovered shall not be subject to any statutory limitation.”
