Many weed-killer cases in Rutherford hinge on reconstructing exposure tied to suburban property routines—driveway and yard treatment, curbside landscaping, shared property maintenance, or periodic herbicide use during growing seasons.
Because symptoms and diagnoses can appear months or even years later, the earliest advantage is simple: lock down the timeline.
What to capture now (even before you call a lawyer):
- Approximate dates of yard or walkway treatments (spring/fall windows matter)
- Photos of any product containers, labels, or storage areas (even partial labels)
- Notes on who applied it (homeowner vs. contractor vs. employer)
- Any records from property maintenance (invoices, emails, work orders)
- Medical records you already have: diagnosis dates, pathology/imaging reports, treatment summaries
If you’re not sure what counts, that’s normal. The goal is to gather enough to let counsel quickly determine what evidence is “core” and what is “nice to have.”


