Motion to Compel Independent Medical Exam
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOR THE COUNTY OF SAN BERNARDINO
MARVIN SIMMONS, Case No.: CIVSB2308626 Plaintiff, [TENTATIVE] ORDER DENYING MOTION TO COMPEL v. INDEPENDENT MEDICAL EXAM OF PLAINTIFF, FILED BY SEMISI SIOKATAME TUPOU, et al., DEFENDANT TUPOU Defendants.
IV. INTRODUCTION
On April 12, 2023, Plaintiff Marvin Simmons filed a Complaint against Defendants
Semisi Siokatame Tupou and Singh Transport, Inc. Plaintiff alleges Defendants’ freightliner
failed to stop and collided with Plaintiff’s vehicle while the parties were traveling on Interstate
10. Plaintiff alleges negligence. Trial is set for September 22, 2026.
Now before the Court is Defendant Tupou’s motion to compel the independent medical
examination of Plaintiff more than 75 miles from Plaintiff’s residence. After issuing a tentative
ruling and holding a hearing on the motion, the Court now issues its final ruling.4
V. APPLICABLE LAW
A defendant may seek a physical medical examination with leave of court. (Code Civ.
Proc., § 2032.310.) The notice of motion must set forth the time, place, identity, and specialty of
the examiner, and the “manner, conditions, scope, and nature of the examination.” (Code Civ.
Proc., § 2032.310, subd. (b).) Code of Civil Procedure section 2032.320, subdivision (a),
provides: “The court shall grant a motion for a physical or mental examination under Section
2032.310 only for good cause shown.” “The concept of good cause serves as a barrier to
excessive and unwarranted intrusions. [Citations.] [¶] .... Good cause is established by facts
that “‘appear in the record as a demonstrable reality.’” [Citation.] Mere speculation, standing
alone, will not suffice. [Citation.]” (Sporich v. Superior Court (2000) 77 Cal.App.4th 422, 428,
superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in Albertson v. Superior Court (2001) 25
Cal.4th 796, 804-08.)
With respect to distance, section 2032.320, subdivision (e), provides:
(e) If the place of the examination is more than 75 miles from the residence of the person to be examined, an order to submit to it shall be entered only if both of the following conditions are satisfied:
(1) The court determines that there is good cause for the travel involved.
(2) The order is conditioned on the advancement by the moving party of the reasonable expenses and costs to the examinee for travel to the place of examination.
4 The Court finds that the moving party has complied with its meet-and-confer obligation.
VI. EXPLANATION OF THE COURT’S RULING
A. Parties’ Positions
Defendant contends that Plaintiff alleges he suffered substantial orthopedic and spinal
injuries, bilateral knee complaints, radiating pain, numbness, and tingling, and requires ongoing
pain management treatment, including injections, medical branch blocks, and ablations. Plaintiff
claims to suffer from ongoing symptoms and to need future medical care. (Lim Decl. ¶ 3 and
Exh. B.)
At the time of the accident, Plaintiff resided in Ontario, California. At the time of the suit
and currently, Plaintiff lives in Ellicott City, Maryland, relocating in December 2022. (Lim Decl.
¶ 4.)
Defendant Tupou asserts that to evaluate Plaintiff’s claimed injuries, Defendant Tupou
retained Jeffrey C. Wang, M.D., to conduct an IME. Wang is a California-based board-certified
orthopedic surgeon, specializing in spine surgery. (Lim Decl. ¶ 6.)
On February 23, 2026, Defendant Tupou served an amended demand for IME for
Plaintiff, scheduling the IME with Dr. Wang for April 3, 2026, in Arcadia, California, describing
the procedures to occur. The examination’s location is within 75 miles of the San Bernardino
County courthouse where trial is scheduled. (Lim Decl. ¶¶ 7-8 and Exh. D.) On February 26,
2026, Plaintiff objected, asserting the examination should occur in Maryland and objecting to the
location of the examination. (Lim Decl. ¶¶ 9 and Exh. E.)
As part of Defendant’s meet and confer, he offered to advance Plaintiff’s reasonable
travel, lodging, and meal expenses for the IME. (Lim Decl. ¶ 10 and Exh. F.) Defendant
thereafter re-noticed the IME with Dr. Wang for July 14, 2026. (Lim Decl. Exh. G.)
In opposition, Plaintiff does not dispute that Defendant Tupou is entitled to conduct an
IME. He contends that Defendant has not shown good cause for compelling an examination
across the country and does not explain why Defendant cannot retain an orthopedic doctor closer
to Plaintiff’s Maryland residence. He contends that despite knowing that Plaintiff lives in
Maryland, Defendant retained Dr. Wang, located in California, to conduct the physical exam.
Plaintiff contends that on November 10, 2025, defense counsel first noticed the physical exam
with Dr. Wang and at that time Plaintiff objected. Three months later, defense counsel served an
amended notice for an IME with Dr. Wang, and Plaintiff again objected to the location. (Curry
Decl. ¶¶ 7-8.)
Plaintiff points out that with Defendant’s second notice, the exam is noticed to take place
at 1450 San Pablo Street in Los Angeles, even though the motion argues the exam is scheduled
to occur in Arcadia. Nonetheless, Plaintiff has objected because the location is more than 75
miles from Plaintiff’s current residence. (Curry Decl. ¶ 9.)
Plaintiff contends that he is 68 years old and has ongoing injuries from the accident that
cause pain and stiffness in his lower back. He asserts that it would be burdensome, unreasonable,
and substantially inconvenient to request he travel on a flight across the country for an
examination that can be conducted within 75 miles of his residence or through tele-medicine. He
asserts that this examination will require him to take a six-hour direct flight to LAX and then fly
home, and will take at least 3 days. (Curry Decl. ¶¶ 10-11.)
In reply, Defendant Tupou argues that Plaintiff does not contest the taking of an IME, it
is just the location at issue. He argues that Plaintiff does not offer any evidence that a
telemedicine examination is sufficient and asserts that under section 2032.220, he is entitled to
take Plaintiff’s in-person medical exam. He also argues that neither Plaintiff nor any medical
professional has submitted evidence in support of Plaintiff’s claim that his age and ongoing
injuries make compelling him to return to California “burdensome” and “unreasonable.” He also
contends that Plaintiff resided in Ontario at the time of the incident and availed himself of this
Court’s jurisdiction by filing the action in San Bernardino County. Finally, he argues that if trial
proceeds, Plaintiff will be required to travel to California. Defendant again raises the issue that
he has agreed to cover all reasonable travel expenses, arguing the only burden on Plaintiff is his
travel to/from California.
Defendant Tupou claims it is inequitable and unduly burdensome to require Defendant to
retain an expert in Maryland and incur the costs for the expert to attend trial in California.
B. Why the Motion Should Be Denied
Defendant’s reply does not address the issue that in the second amended notice, the
location of the examination with Dr. Wang is at an address in Los Angeles, as opposed to
Arcadia.
Nonetheless, the main issue of contention is whether good cause is demonstrated to
require Plaintiff to travel to California for the examination given Plaintiff lives in Maryland and
has lived there since before the action was filed. Defendant Tupou first sought to conduct
Plaintiff’s IME with a notice served in November 2025, to which Plaintiff objected in December
2025. (Lim Decl. ¶ 7.) It was not until May 29, 2026, with a trial date of September 22, 2026,
that Defendant filed his motion to compel Plaintiff to appear in California for an IME with Dr.
Wang.
In support of compelling Plaintiff’s travel, Defendant cites cases from Florida and the
federal district court in the Southern District of New York. In opposition, Plaintiff relies on
Hansen v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (1989) 211 Cal.App.3d 717, 719-20, in which
at issue was the Board’s order requiring an employee to appear for an examination more than
185 miles from the employee’s residence, after concluding Labor Code sections 4050 and 4051
applied to the location of the examination, not Code of Civil Procedure section 2032 [now
section 2032.320]. The Board found the employee had not shown he was physically unable to
attend the examination or that doing so was a substantial inconvenience. (Id. at p. 721.) While
the Court discussed it need not decide the applicability of section 2032, it noted it is indicative of
legislative intent to limit the distance for medical examination in civil cases to 75 miles, noting
the distance requirement is a similar relevant factor in Labor Code section 4051. (Ibid.) The
Court concluded that ordering the employee with a claimed industrial heart condition to appear
for a medical examination 185 miles from his home when there were physicians available within
75 miles of the employee’s residence was an abuse of discretion. It concluded that under the
facts, the 185-mile trip was unwarranted and unreasonable. (Id. at pp. 721-22.)
Again, here there is no dispute that Defendant Tupou is entitled to at least one physical
examination. Defendant is correct that the accident occurred in San Bernardino County and the
trial will occur here too. Defendant also correctly points out that Plaintiff has not presented any
evidence that traveling across the country would be burdensome, unreasonable, or substantially
inconvenient to him. But in these circumstances, it is the party seeking an IME — here,
Defendant — who bears the burden of establishing good cause that the examination cannot be
held within 75 miles of Plaintiff’s residence. Code of Civil Procedure section 2032.320 enforces
a strict 75-mile distance limitation from an examinee’s residence, providing no special
exceptions for plaintiffs who reside out of state
To succeed on this motion, Defendant must establish good cause and explain why he
cannot find a suitable expert located within 75 miles of Plaintiff’s Maryland residence who is
able to appear for trial here in California, or an expert, including Dr. Wang, willing to travel to
Maryland to conduct the examination.
VII. CONCLUSION
Given Defendant has not carried its burden of proving good cause to require Plaintiff to
travel to California for Dr. Wang to conduct an IME, the Court DENIES the motion.
In the interest of fairness, the Court ORDERS that Plaintiff shall not meet in person with
any expert in this litigation, including his own, if it involves travel of more than 75 miles from
his residence, unless Plaintiff is willing to undergo the IME at issue in this motion.
Finally, the Court will entertain a defense motion to permit a limited IME within 75 miles
of the courthouse immediately prior to trial, when Plaintiff must travel to San Bernardino County
anyway.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: [TENTATIVE – NOT FINAL] Hon. Joseph B. Widman Judge of the Superior Court
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