Your workers’ comp claim was denied because your employer says the injury didn’t happen the way you described. The denial letter looks official. It is not a final ruling. Under California Labor Code Section 3600, your injury must arise out of and occur in the course of employment. A WCAB judge, not the insurer, makes the final determination on compensability.
The Law Offices of Roy Yang has handled California workers’ comp disputes for over 20 years, representing injured workers against employer insurance carriers throughout Sacramento and Northern California. Attorney Roy Yang spent years on the defense side, learning how insurers build factual dispute files before switching to represent injured workers. That knowledge is what he brings to every denied claim.
This guide covers what a mechanism dispute means for your claim, how the 90-day rule works in your favor, what the adjuster does next, and the steps to challenge the denial before the deadline runs out.
Call (888) 975-2889 for a free case review, 24/7. No fee unless we recover.
Key Takeaways
- Your employer cannot deny your claim. Only the insurance carrier issues a formal denial within 90 days of your DWC-1 filing under Labor Code § 5402.
- If the insurer misses that 90-day window, your injury is presumed compensable, and the burden shifts onto the carrier to disprove it.
- While the decision is pending, the claims administrator must authorize up to $10,000 in medical treatment within one working day of your DWC-1 filing.
- Under Labor Code § 3600, your injury must both arise out of and occur in the course of employment. A mechanism dispute targets both requirements.
- A Qualified Medical Evaluator issues a written causation opinion. A WCAB judge weighs that opinion alongside the full evidentiary record.
- The four evidence types that carry the most weight are signed and dated witness statements, medical records documented within 48 hours of the injury, digital records placing you at the task, and incident or safety records showing the hazard existed before you were hurt.
- You are not required to give the adjuster a recorded statement before speaking with an attorney. Early statements are used to find inconsistencies in your account.
- Labor Code § 132a prohibits retaliation for filing. To open your case before a judge, file an Application for Adjudication of Claim. The statute of limitations under Labor Code § 5405 is one year from the date of injury.
Can Your Employer Get Your Claim Denied by Disputing How You Got Hurt?
No. Your employer cannot deny your workers’ comp claim. Only the insurance carrier issues a formal denial. What an employer can do is dispute the factual account, direct supervisors and coworkers to provide their version of events to the adjuster, and push the insurer toward that denial.
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What the Employer Does |
What the Insurer Does |
|
Reports the injury and provides its version of events to the insurance carrier |
Opens an investigation file based on the employer’s account and the DWC-1 form |
|
Directs supervisors and coworkers to speak with the adjuster |
Issues the formal acceptance or denial within 90 days of DWC-1 filing |
|
May instruct witnesses before the adjuster reaches them |
Collects medical records, witness statements, and arranges surveillance if warranted |
A mechanism dispute, where the employer challenges how the injury happened rather than whether you were present, is a factual argument, not a legal ruling. The employer is not saying you weren’t at work. They’re saying the cause was something other than your job, and that argument falls apart when the right evidence record is built. Your employer’s responsibilities under California workers’ comp cover exactly where that authority ends.
Why Does Disputing the Mechanism Give the Insurer Grounds to Deny?
Under Labor Code 3600, your injury qualifies only if it both arose out of your employment and occurred during the course of it. When your employer disputes how the injury happened, the insurer has a factual basis to argue that the connection never existed. That argument is the legal ground on which a denial is built.
The carrier does not need to prove you were lying. Casting enough doubt on your account to argue that the AOE/COE standard is not met is all it takes. That threshold is lower than most people expect, which is why an employer’s disputed account translates so directly into a formal denial letter.
A mechanism dispute is a medical and legal question, not just a factual one. It goes to a Qualified Medical Evaluator, whose written opinion becomes the primary evidence the WCAB judge weighs. The most common forms this dispute takes are a claimed mismatch between the injury and the job’s physical demands, a prior condition presented as the real cause, late reporting used to question the injury’s origin, or no witnesses used to discredit the account.
What Happens If the Insurer Doesn’t Deny Your Claim Within 90 Days?
Under Labor Code 5402, if the insurer does not reject your claim within 90 days of your DWC-1 filing, your injury is presumed compensable. The presumption is rebuttable only by evidence discovered after that window, not by evidence the carrier could have found during it. The burden shifts onto the carrier to disprove compensability, which is a significantly harder legal position than issuing a denial.
Within one working day of your DWC-1 filing, the claims administrator must also authorize up to $10,000 in medical treatment while the decision is pending. The sooner you file, the sooner both protections attach. If the insurer denied your claim after that window passed, an attorney can assess whether the presumption already attached before the denial was issued.
What Does the Insurance Adjuster Do After Your Employer Disputes the Injury?
Adjusters run a consistent four-step playbook the moment a factual dispute file opens, and each step works to build the denial before you have a chance to respond. All four can happen within the first two weeks of filing. Roy Yang built these files on the defense side. He knows each move before it comes.
Step 1: Recorded Statement in the First 48 Hours
Before you’ve retained an attorney, the adjuster calls and asks to record you. That statement gets compared to everything you say later, at your deposition, at the medical evaluation, and before the judge. You are not legally required to give a recorded statement before speaking with an attorney. If the adjuster calls, say: “I need to speak with my attorney before I can answer questions about my claim.” Refusing does not void your claim.
Step 2: Witness Interviews Before Your Attorney Reaches Them
Investigators contact coworkers fast, before your attorney can. Whatever they tell the adjuster gets written into the investigation file and used at the medical evaluation and hearing. Reach out to anyone who witnessed the injury before the adjuster does. Witness statements given to an adjuster before attorney contact are difficult to walk back once they are in the investigation file.
Step 3: Prior Medical Records Pull
The carrier requests your full treatment history immediately, hunting for prior treatment to the same body part. Any earlier diagnosis becomes the foundation of a pre-existing condition argument. Request your own medical records before the carrier does, so you know exactly what they will find.
Step 4: Surveillance on Soft-Tissue Claims
On back, neck, and shoulder claims, some carriers deploy surveillance. Any activity inconsistent with your reported limitations gets documented and presented at the medical evaluation and before the judge. Keep your activity consistent with what you have reported to your treating physician, and do not post anything on social media during your claim.
How to Build Your Evidence Record After a Disputed Workers’ Comp Claim
When your employer disputes how the injury happened, your evidence record is the only thing that counters their account. Four categories carry the most weight at the WCAB. The more specific and timely each one is, the harder it becomes for the carrier to tell a different story.
- Written witness statements: Signed and dated, naming the date, the task, and exactly what the person observed. Specifics are what hold up. What were you doing? Where were you? What happened next?
- Medical records within 48 hours: Get seen by a doctor immediately and describe exactly how the injury happened. The closer the record is to the injury date, the harder it is for the carrier to argue that the injury happened somewhere else or later.
- Digital footprints: Text messages, emails, clock-in data, fleet GPS, security badge logs. These places you exactly where you say you were, doing exactly what you say you were doing.
- Incident and safety records: Prior safety complaints, near-miss reports, and internal documentation showing the hazard existed before you got hurt. If your employer knew about the risk and did nothing, that is relevant to your case.
Start this on the day of the injury. Surveillance footage at most facilities is overwritten within 24 to 72 hours. Every day you wait, the record gets harder to build.
Who Decides Whether Your Injury Is Work-Related: The QME or the WCAB Judge
When the dispute is medical, whether your injury is work-related or pre-existing, a Qualified Medical Evaluator examines you and issues a written opinion on causation. An Agreed Medical Evaluator can be used instead if both sides agree on one. The WCAB judge then weighs that opinion alongside the full evidentiary record.
California covers an injury that aggravates a prior condition, so the pre-existing-condition defense is where many mechanism disputes are won or lost. Three things determine the outcome at this stage: requesting an evaluator whose specialty matches your injury type, preparing for the exam, and filing a timely objection if the report contains errors. A well-supported QME report is the primary medical evidence the judge weighs when deciding your case.
How Do You Challenge the Denial Before the Deadline Runs Out?
File an Application for Adjudication of Claim with the WCAB district office where your injury occurred. That filing opens your case before a judge and preserves the one-year statute of limitations under Labor Code 5405. In Sacramento, the district office is at 160 Promenade Circle, Suite 300.
After filing, the case moves to a Mandatory Settlement Conference. A judge reviews both positions and often signals how the evidence is landing. The MSC is a structured negotiation, not a trial. If it does not resolve, the case proceeds to a hearing before a workers’ comp judge. The full filing path is mentioned in the California DWC guide for a denied claim.
Can Your Employer Fire You for Filing After They Disputed the Injury?
No. California Labor Code 132a makes it illegal to fire, threaten, or discriminate against any worker for filing or intending to file a workers’ comp claim. The protection applies the moment you report the injury, not just after a formal claim is opened.
If your employer violates this, the consequences are specific. Your compensation increases by one-half up to $10,000. You are entitled to reinstatement, back pay, reimbursement of lost benefits, and litigation costs up to $250. You have one year from the retaliatory act to file a 132a petition with the WCAB.
If you were demoted, had shifts cut, received a sudden negative performance review, or were terminated after filing, start a written record right now. Screenshot every text. Save every email. Write down dates, times, and exactly what was said. That documentation is what a 132a petition is built on.
Why Injured Workers Hire the Law Offices of Roy Yang
At the Law Offices of Roy Yang, we have represented injured workers against employer insurance carriers throughout Sacramento and Northern California for over 20 years, bringing defense-side knowledge to every denied claim.
- Defense-side knowledge: Built dispute files for insurance carriers before representing injured workers. That background drives the strategy on every denied claim.
- Trial-ready from the start: Every case is built as if it’s going to the WCAB. Insurance carriers know that when an attorney prepares for a hearing, it changes how they negotiate.
- WCAB-approved 15% fee: Every workers’ comp attorney’s fee in California must be approved by the WCAB. The fee is 15%. Nothing is owed unless you recover.
- Bilingual Support: Spanish-speaking injured workers are represented directly, not through a translator or third-party staff.
If your account of how the injury happened is being challenged, call (888) 975-2889 before you respond to the adjuster. The consultation is free, and there is no obligation to hire.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why Does My Claim Still Stand Without a Witness?
Digital records (clock-in data, GPS, badge logs, texts), medical records documenting the mechanism close to the injury date, and prior safety complaints about the same hazard all build your case without a witness. “No witnesses” is not a legal bar to a workers’ comp claim in California.
What Should I Do If the Accident Report Describes My Injury Differently?
Document the discrepancy in writing immediately. Your DWC-1 form, your treating physician’s records, and any contemporaneous communications you sent are the counter-record. An employer-authored accident report is the insurer’s starting document, not a neutral account. It can be challenged at the QME stage and before a WCAB judge.
Why Shouldn’t I Accept a Quick Settlement After My Employer Disputed My Injury?
An early offer made before your treatment is complete locks in a number that rarely covers your full medical costs or disability. Every California workers’ comp settlement requires review and approval by a WCAB judge. Talk to an attorney before signing anything.
Why Can’t I Sue My Employer and Collect Workers’ Comp at the Same Time?
The workers’ comp exclusive remedy rule limits most injured workers to the comp system. Narrow exceptions exist under California law, including employer fraud, a power-press injury under Labor Code § 4558, and the dual-capacity doctrine.
Speak With Our Attorney For a Free Case Review Today
A disputed mechanism is one of the most common reasons a California workers’ comp claim gets denied, and one of the most winnable with the right evidence record. At the Law Offices of Roy Yang, we have represented injured workers throughout Northern California for over 20 years. The time to act is before you respond to the adjuster.
Call us at (916) 269-9100 for a free case review, 24/7.
Our office is located at 1104 Corporate Way, Suite 108, Sacramento, CA 95831. We serve injured workers throughout Sacramento, Roseville, Folsom, Elk Grove, Stockton, Modesto, Oakland, and Lodi.
No fee unless we recover. Hablamos Español.
Past results do not guarantee any future outcome, and every case is different.