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Denied Claims
Attorney in California

Appeals and reversals of wrongfully denied workers' comp claims. Our experienced attorneys have recovered over $150 million for injured workers and accident victims across California. Free consultation — no fee unless we win.

Denied Workers' Comp Claim in California? It's Reversible.

A workers' compensation denial in California is not the end of your claim — it's the beginning of a contested case. Insurance carriers deny a significant percentage of workers' comp claims as a matter of practice, knowing that many injured workers will give up rather than fight back. The math works in the carrier's favor: every claim they deny that doesn't get appealed costs them nothing. But every denial that gets properly litigated almost always produces some recovery, and many produce substantial recoveries that exceed what the carrier would have paid voluntarily.

Nordanyan Law has reversed hundreds of denied workers' comp claims since 2014. Some denials were procedural (missed notice, paperwork errors) and resolved within weeks. Others required full litigation at the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board (WCAB) — including depositions, panel QME evaluations, and trial before a workers' comp judge. The pattern we see consistently: carriers deny aggressively, then settle for six or even seven figures once the case is properly built.

The most important thing to know about a denial is that it almost always cites a specific reason. That reason is a roadmap for the appeal. AOE/COE disputes get rebuilt through medical-legal advocacy. Pre-existing-condition denials get defeated by establishing asymptomatic baseline. Statute-of-limitations defenses get overcome with § 5412 date-of-knowledge arguments. Whatever the denial says, there is almost always a path to reversal — if you act before the appeal window closes.

“Every injured worker deserves the same quality of legal representation as any corporation. That is the principle this firm was built on.”

How We Reverse Denied Claims

Every denial follows one of a handful of carrier playbooks. The reversal strategy depends on which playbook is being run:

Pull the denial letter and identify the specific cited reason — denial letters are required to state the basis, and that basis dictates the appeal strategy
File the Application for Adjudication of Claim with the WCAB immediately to lock in jurisdiction and start the formal process
Coordinate medical care through the lien-based provider network when the carrier won't authorize treatment — denied workers can still receive care while the case is litigated
Select the panel QME strategically — the QME's report drives the entire compensability and rating analysis
Build the AOE/COE record through treating physicians, witness statements, employer documentation, Cal/OSHA records, and contemporaneous medical evidence
Defeat improper apportionment by establishing asymptomatic prior baseline — a prior MRI finding doesn't support apportionment unless the prior condition produced symptoms
Appeal UR/IMR treatment denials within 30 days, and challenge IMR decisions at the WCAB when warranted
Pursue § 5814 unreasonable-delay penalties when the carrier's denial lacked genuine basis, and § 132(a) retaliation petitions when adverse employment action accompanied the denial
Take cases to WCAB trial when settlement falls short — most carriers improve offers substantially in the final weeks before trial

No Fee Unless We Win

We work on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing upfront and nothing unless we win your case. Our success is directly tied to yours.

Cases We Handle in This Area

AOE/COE denial

Carrier disputes that the injury arose out of and in the course of employment. Most common in cumulative trauma cases and where the injury wasn't witnessed. Reversed through treating physician opinions, panel QME selection, and contemporaneous medical evidence.

Pre-existing condition denial

Carrier argues the injury existed before the work incident under § 4663 apportionment. Usually defeated by showing the prior condition was asymptomatic and the work injury was the cause of the current disability.

Late notice denial

Carrier claims you missed the 30-day notice requirement under § 5400 or the 1-year filing window under § 5405. Many late-notice denials still result in compensable claims under § 5412 (date-of-knowledge rule for cumulative trauma) or excusable-late-notice exceptions.

Intoxication / willful misconduct allegation

Carrier alleges the worker was intoxicated or engaged in willful misconduct at the time of injury. Held to a strict carrier burden of proof — toxicology must be tied to causation, and willful misconduct must be intentional, not mere negligence.

Utilization Review (UR) / Independent Medical Review (IMR) treatment denial

Specific treatment (surgery, MRI, medication) denied through the UR/IMR system. Appealable through IMR within 30 days, and reviewable at the WCAB when the IMR decision conflicts with MTUS guidelines.

Psychiatric or stress injury denial

Held to the higher 'actual events of employment' standard (§ 3208.3). Reversed by documenting specific qualifying events — assault, witnessing a fatal accident, sustained harassment — and securing a psychiatric QME report.

Immigration-status retaliation disguised as denial

Carrier or employer suggests immigration status disqualifies the claim. California law explicitly protects all workers regardless of status under Labor Code § 3351. Status-based denials are reversible and may also support § 132(a) retaliation petitions.

California Statutes That Apply

Labor Code § 5402Employer's Investigation Window

Carriers have 90 days after notice of injury to accept or deny the claim. Failure to deny within 90 days creates a presumption of compensability — the burden shifts to the carrier to overcome that presumption with substantial evidence.

Labor Code § 5803Reopening Authority (5-Year Rule)

The WCAB retains jurisdiction over a case for 5 years from the date of injury, allowing reopening when new evidence emerges or when the injury worsens. Even claims that were resolved with low awards can be reopened within 5 years.

Labor Code § 4060 / § 4061 / § 4062Medical-Legal Dispute Resolution

Disputes over compensability (§ 4060), permanent disability (§ 4061), and medical issues (§ 4062) are resolved through the panel QME process. Panel QME selection is one of the most consequential strategic decisions in a denied case.

Labor Code § 4610Utilization Review

Carriers must approve or deny treatment requests through UR within strict timelines. Late or improper UR is invalid, and treatment requests deemed timely-approved cannot later be denied.

Labor Code § 4610.5Independent Medical Review (IMR)

When UR denies treatment, the worker has 30 days to appeal through IMR. IMR decisions are reviewable at the WCAB on narrow grounds — bias, conflict with MTUS guidelines, or material factual errors.

Labor Code § 5412Date of Knowledge

For cumulative trauma and occupational illness, the statute of limitations starts when the worker first knew (or reasonably should have known) the injury was work-related — defeating many late-notice denials.

Labor Code § 132(a)Anti-Retaliation Petition

If the denial is part of a retaliation pattern (termination, demotion, hour reduction), a separate § 132(a) petition can be filed for a 50% award increase (capped at $10,000), plus reinstatement and back pay.

Labor Code § 5500 seriesWCAB Procedure

The Application for Adjudication of Claim starts the formal WCAB process. From there: pre-trial conferences, discovery, depositions, panel QME, mandatory settlement conference, and trial before a workers' comp judge.

What Denied Claims Are Worth Once Properly Litigated

Denied claims often recover the same benefits as accepted claims — and sometimes more, because the carrier's bad-faith denial supports additional remedies. Typical ranges:

Reversed denial with TD owed retroactively
$5,000–$50,000+

When the denial was wrong, the carrier owes back-TD from the date of injury. Often combined with penalties for unreasonable delay under § 5814 (up to 25% of the amount delayed).

Reversed denial + permanent disability award
$30,000–$300,000+

Once compensability is established, the case proceeds to standard PD evaluation. Most denied claims that get to trial settle in this range based on injury severity and rating.

Catastrophic injury denial reversed
$500,000–$2M+

Spinal cord injuries, TBIs, and amputations that were initially denied often produce seven-figure recoveries once liability is established, including lifetime medical care.

§ 5814 unreasonable delay penalty
Up to 25% of the delayed amount

When carriers deny benefits without genuine medical-legal basis, courts impose penalties as deterrent. We pursue § 5814 in every case with clear bad-faith conduct.

§ 132(a) retaliation petition
50% of award + reinstatement + back pay (cap $10,000)

When the denial coincided with termination or adverse employment action, the § 132(a) petition runs alongside the comp case.

Serious-and-willful misconduct (§ 4553)
+50% of award, no cap

When the employer's intentional safety violations caused the injury, § 4553 increases the award 50% without cap. Applies in many denial cases involving Cal/OSHA-cited employers.

Why Denials Get Reversed

Carrier denials follow patterns, and each pattern has known weaknesses:

Carrier Tactic
AOE/COE denial without panel QME support
How We Counter

Most AOE/COE denials are based on the carrier's internal claims examiner review, not a medical-legal opinion. Once a panel QME evaluates the case, AOE/COE denials often reverse — the QME report carries more weight than the claims-examiner conclusion.

Carrier Tactic
Apportionment to pre-existing conditions without substantial medical evidence
How We Counter

Apportionment requires substantial medical evidence that the prior condition was symptomatic and contributed to current disability. Vague apportionment based on MRI findings alone is legally insufficient and routinely defeated.

Carrier Tactic
Late-notice or late-filing denial
How We Counter

Late-notice defenses have multiple exceptions: § 5412 date-of-knowledge rule for cumulative trauma, excusable-late-notice when the employer had actual notice, and reopening under § 5803. Many late-notice denials are technically valid but practically defeatable.

Carrier Tactic
Intoxication / drug-screen positive at time of injury
How We Counter

Intoxication defense requires the carrier to prove intoxication caused the injury — not just that drugs were present. THC metabolites can stay in the system for weeks; positive results don't establish intoxication or causation under California law.

Carrier Tactic
Psychiatric injury denial under § 3208.3
How We Counter

Psychiatric injuries require 'actual events of employment' as the predominant cause (51%+). Reversed through documentation of specific qualifying events (assault, fatality witnessed, sustained harassment) and a psychiatric panel QME with experience in workers' comp.

Carrier Tactic
Carrier suggests immigration status disqualifies the claim
How We Counter

California Labor Code § 3351 covers all employees regardless of status. Status-based denials are unlawful and may support both reversal of the underlying claim and a § 132(a) retaliation petition.

Cases We Have Won

$5,500,000
Workers' Compensation
$2,245,735
Workers' Compensation
$1,495,206
Workers' Compensation
$750,000
Workers' Compensation

Frequently Asked Questions

Why was my workers' comp claim denied?+
Common denial reasons in California include: (1) employer dispute about whether the injury occurred at work, (2) statute-of-limitations defenses, (3) AOE/COE disputes (whether injury arose out of employment), (4) pre-existing condition claims, (5) intoxication or willful misconduct allegations, and (6) failure to meet the medical-legal standard. The denial letter must state the specific reason — most denials are reversible with proper medical evidence and legal advocacy.
Can I appeal a denied workers' comp claim in California?+
Yes. You file an Application for Adjudication of Claim with the WCAB to formally dispute the denial. From there, your case is litigated like any other workers' comp claim — including QME evaluations, depositions, document discovery, and ultimately a trial before a workers' comp judge. We have reversed hundreds of denials and Nordanyan Law has secured six- and seven-figure recoveries on cases that started as denials.
How long do I have to dispute a denial?+
California Labor Code § 5803 gives you 5 years from the date of injury to file an Application for Adjudication, but practically you should dispute a denial within 30–60 days to preserve evidence and lock down medical care. The longer you wait, the harder it becomes to rebuild the case. Bring the denial letter to a workers' comp attorney immediately for a free review — most disputes can still be won.
Can I get medical care while the denial is being appealed?+
Yes — through several pathways. (1) Your private health insurance can cover treatment with reimbursement rights; (2) treatment under medical-financial liens that get paid when the case settles; (3) emergency Cal-MediCal coverage for low-income workers; (4) treating physicians willing to work on a lien basis. We connect denied-claim clients with our network of lien-based providers immediately so treatment doesn't lapse.
What does it cost to fight a denied claim?+
Nothing upfront. California workers' comp attorneys work on contingency — we are paid a 9–15% fee from your settlement, capped by Labor Code § 4906 and approved by the workers' comp judge. If we don't win, you pay nothing. Most clients with denied claims have nothing to lose and substantial benefits to gain by fighting the denial.

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Lead Attorney
David Abrahamian
David Abrahamian
Senior Partner
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Client Testimonials

What Our Clients Say

I had a very positive experience working with Minas Nordanyan and his team on my workers' compensation case. Minas was knowledgeable and guided me through a process that was not easy. His staff was incredibly helpful — especially Crystal and Mayra, who were always responsive and patient, and took the time to answer my questions and follow up when needed. They made a stressful situation much easier to navigate. I'm very grateful for their support and pleased with the outcome of my case. I highly recommend this firm.

Gloria E.
Workers' Compensation
Verified Review

Thank you so much — you are the best. I appreciate the time Mr. Rubin Resnick spent explaining the process on my case and how everything works. You are clearly very knowledgeable and you genuinely care for your clients. You treated me with respect. I have to say you are one of the best lawyers in Los Angeles and Burbank. I will highly recommend you to anyone who needs a professional lawyer. Thank you again for taking the time to talk to me about everything.

Emmanuel D.
Workers' Compensation
Verified Review

From the first consultation to today, I very much appreciate the patience and time this team has dedicated to my case. They helped open my eyes to the workers' comp process and guided me through. Big thumbs up to the team — to Minas, Katy, Rubin, and Harry. Thank you. Thanks to Juan, Angela, Paulina, and Crystal as well.

Charles B.
Workers' Compensation
Verified Review
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