“Eman really knows his stuff and we were very pleased with our end result.”
Myretta & Thomas Knorr
✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
Did the claims adjuster deny your Culver City workers' comp case, or shut off treatment your doctor says you still need? Take a breath. A denial is not a locked door. It is the first round of a fight, and most denials can be challenged.
Maybe you build sets at Sony Pictures, or work a creative office in the Hayden Tract. Maybe you lift patients at Culver City Hospital, or run a kitchen on Washington Boulevard. However you got hurt, an insurer's "no" is rarely the last word. California gives you clear appeal routes, firm deadlines, and the right to a lawyer who costs you nothing up front.
If a denial just landed, do these three things now:
Most likely yes. A denied treatment goes to Independent Medical Review within 30 days. A denied claim or a bad judge's ruling goes to a Petition for Reconsideration, often within 25 days.
Nearly every worker who calls after a denial asks one thing: is it over? It is not. Insurers reject valid claims all the time, betting that you will give up. Many do. Say the insurer just sat on your claim. They had only 90 days to accept or deny it. They also owed up to $10,000 in care while they decided. The workers who push back on time give themselves a real shot at restored care and a fair award.
Which path you take depends on what got denied. If they refused a surgery, an MRI, or therapy your doctor ordered, that is a medical denial. It follows one road. If they rejected the whole claim, or a judge ruled against you, that is a different road. It has a different deadline. The next section sorts out which one is yours.
A denied treatment runs through Utilization Review, then Independent Medical Review. A denied claim or a judge's decision runs to a Petition for Reconsideration, then a Writ of Review.
When your doctor asks for surgery or therapy, the insurer sends that request to Utilization Review. That is a paper review by a doctor who never examines you. If the reviewer says no, you do not argue with the adjuster. You appeal to Independent Medical Review, where an outside physician checks the request against California's treatment guidelines. You have 30 days from the denial to file. Miss it, and the denial stands.
Independent Medical Review is built to be the end of the medical road. Under §4610.6, its decision is final and binding. A judge can overturn it only on narrow grounds, such as fraud, a reviewer's conflict of interest, bias, or a plain mistake of fact. That is why the appeal has to be done right the first time. We assemble the records, the imaging, and your treating doctor's report so the reviewer has every reason to say yes.
A rejected claim, or a bad ruling from a workers' compensation judge, takes the other road. You file a Petition for Reconsideration, asking the seven-member Appeals Board to review what the judge did. This is the heart of a comp appeal, and §5903 lists the only grounds the Board will consider.
Labor Code §5903: "At any time within 20 days after the service of any final order, decision, or award made and filed by the appeals board or a workers' compensation judge granting or denying compensation, or arising out of or incidental thereto, any person aggrieved thereby may petition for reconsideration upon one or more of the following grounds and no other..."
The statute gives you 20 days. If the decision came by mail, you get 5 more, so the real deadline is 25 days for a mailed ruling and 20 days for an electronic one. The grounds matter too. You cannot just say the judge was wrong. Maybe the Board acted beyond its power. Maybe the decision came from fraud, or the evidence does not support the findings. Maybe you have new evidence you could not have produced before. We frame your petition around the ground that fits your facts.
If the Appeals Board turns you down, the fight still is not over. You can take the case up to the Court of Appeal through a Writ of Review. For Culver City cases, that means the California Second District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles. And if your case already closed but your injury has grown worse, a Petition to Reopen can bring it back, as long as you act within five years of the original injury.
Not long. A treatment denial gives you 30 days for Independent Medical Review. A judge's decision gives you 25 days, or 20 if served electronically, for a Petition for Reconsideration.
This is what sinks more appeals than any weak argument: the deadline. Comp appeal windows are short and strict, and the insurer is counting on you to blow one. Find the service date on your letter or order, count from there, and file early. Here is every route and its clock in one place.
| What was denied | Your appeal route | Deadline | Law |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment denied at Utilization Review | Independent Medical Review | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
| IMR upheld the denial | Appeal only on narrow grounds (fraud, bias, conflict) | 30 days | §4610.6 |
| A judge's decision (Findings & Award) | Petition for Reconsideration | 25 days if mailed, 20 if served electronically | §5903 |
| Reconsideration denied | Writ of Review to the Court of Appeal | 45 days | §5950 |
| New or worse disability after a closed case | Petition to Reopen | Within 5 years of the injury | §5803 |
Not sure which clock is running on your case? One free call sorts it out: (661) 273-1780.
You file the petition on time, the Board reviews the record from your hearing, then either fixes the decision, sends it back for more evidence, or denies it.
An appeal is not a brand-new trial. The Appeals Board reads what already happened, so the case you built below decides the case above. For a Petition for Reconsideration, you file with the Los Angeles WCAB. The judge who ruled gets a chance to answer in a report. Then the file travels to the Appeals Board in San Francisco. The Board can affirm the decision, change it, or send it back for more evidence. That usually takes a few months.
The medical appeal moves faster. An Independent Medical Review is decided on paper, often in weeks, by a reviewing doctor you never meet. There is no hearing and no testimony. That is exactly why the documents carry the whole case. If the file does not show that simpler care failed and that treatment is medically necessary, the reviewer rubber-stamps the denial. We make sure it does.
A complete medical record. Imaging, your treating doctor's clear opinion, proof that cheaper care failed, and a panel doctor's report that explains the how and why.
Appeals are won on the record, not on volume. For a denied treatment, the winning file shows three things. First, that you tried the cheaper care the guidelines require, and it failed. Second, that your imaging backs the diagnosis. Third, that your treating doctor explains, in plain terms, why the next step is needed. A studio electrician with a torn shoulder, or a Culver City Hospital aide with a wrecked back, needs that chain spelled out.
For a denied claim, the fight usually turns on the medical-legal report. California routes most medical disputes through a panel of three Qualified Medical Evaluators, where each side strikes one name. The doctor you are left with often decides the case, so the pick matters. We know the Los Angeles panel pool and choose with care. Then we hold that doctor to a report that actually explains causation. When an insurer punishes you for filing, a separate anti-retaliation rule covers reinstatement and your lost pay.
Every appeal route above rests on these California Labor Code sections. Each link opens the official statute text.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Culver City trial orders come out of the Los Angeles WCAB at 320 West 4th Street. Reconsideration goes to the Appeals Board in San Francisco, and writs go to the Second District Court of Appeal.
Your case has three possible stops, in three different places. Culver City trials and reconsideration petitions go to the Los Angeles district WCAB, at 320 West 4th Street. Everything is e-filed through EAMS. The seven-member Appeals Board that rules on the petition sits in San Francisco. If you push the case higher, the California Second District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles hears the writ. Yazdchi Law files these appeals on Culver City cases regularly.
The appeals we see track the Westside's real economy:
Sony crews and Culver City Hospital staff get hurt doing heavy, repeated work. Their doctors then order surgery, MRIs, and long courses of therapy. Those are exactly the requests Utilization Review likes to reject. When that happens, the only real answer is a clean Independent Medical Review appeal, filed inside 30 days, with the imaging and treating-doctor report attached. The state explains the IMR process here.
Sometimes. If you settled or your case closed, and your injury has clearly worsened, a Petition to Reopen can put it back in front of the Los Angeles WCAB. The catch is the clock. You must act within five years of the original injury date. A long-quiet studio back, or a hospital worker's shoulder that failed again, can qualify.
Nothing up front, and nothing unless we win. Workers' comp fees in California are set by the judge, usually 12 to 15 percent of what we recover for you.
You pay us nothing to start, and nothing by the hour. The WCAB judge sets the attorney fee. It runs 12 to 15 percent of the benefits we win or protect, and only if we recover. No recovery, no fee. So a soundstage electrician and a hospital aide get the same representation as anyone with deep pockets.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). Fewer than 1% of California attorneys hold this credential. He has represented hundreds of California workers and appears regularly at the Los Angeles WCAB. More about Eman Yazdchi. Verify his State Bar profile.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
Get your case evaluated in 60 seconds.
Get Your Free Case EvaluationThree fields. No obligation.
Read more testimonials →“Eman really knows his stuff and we were very pleased with our end result.”