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Staking claim to an estate

“It’s my hope that the Goldman’s get zero, nothing.”

— Malcolm LaVergne, executor

“The hope for true accountability has ended.”

— Fred Goldman

Among the many considerations when an estate is opened in the probate court are weighing provisions of the will (if there is one) or the law as to how property is to be divided, determining how specific items such as cars and boats should be passed on, and dealing with claims brought against the estate by various creditors. Often those claims are small medical bills, outstanding mechanics liens, or even overdue taxes. But every once in a while, an estate faces a massive claim. Such is the case with one of the highest profile estates currently pending anywhere – the estate of O.J. Simpson, which has just been opened in Clark County, Nevada.

The full value of Simpson’s estate has not yet been publicly revealed, though an inventory will eventually need to be filed with the court. It has been revealed by his attorney that all of his assets were placed in trust earlier this year. Nevada law requires an estate to be opened if the assets are greater than $20,000, and so that estate filing is in process.

Among the claims the estate will face is the balance of the $33.5 million judgment that a civil jury awarded to the families of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, after that jury found Simpson civilly responsible for their deaths. Several of his awards and trophies were sold to pay part of the judgment, and a book he wrote called, “If I Did It” was seized by the victims’ families and retitled, “If I Did It: Confessions of a Killer,” with the proceeds going to pay down the judgment as well.

Simpson’s long-time civil lawyer, Malcolm LaVergne, has been appointed as executor of his estate, and has told the media that he will do everything he can to prevent the Brown and Goldman families from getting anything. Ultimately, however, that’s not going to be up to him, but will be decided by the judges of Nevada’s 8th Judicial District. Whichever judge is assigned to the case will review the terms of the trust, the applicable provisions of Nevada law, and decide how to split up the assets.

It is likely that the Simpson estate will be “insolvent.” That is, that the claims against the estate will exceed the amount of money that is in it. In Ohio, we know relatively quickly whether that will be the case, because claims have to be filed within six months of the date of the decedent’s death.

If an Ohio estate is insolvent, there is a specific statute that tells the court how to divide the property. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the court gets its money first in the form of court costs and other fees. Next up is an amount, not to exceed four thousand dollars, for funeral expenses. Third is a statutory allowance of $40,000 for support to the surviving spouse or children. Fourth are “debts entitled to a preference under the laws of the United States.” Fifth are “expenses of the last sickness.” Then we’re back to funeral expenses again, with two thousand additional dollars for that purpose. Seventh are expenses of a “last continuous stay” in a nursing home. Eighth, local property taxes, Medicare recovery claims, and other debts owed to the state. Ninth, debts for manual labor that are no more than a year old and do not exceed $300.

Tenth, and last are any other debts that the estate owes. This can include any funeral expenses that have not already been paid, any manual labor debts that exceed $300, and anything else that is left. This is the category into which the Brown and Goldman civil judgments would likely fall in Ohio. Because those expenses of final sickness and final stay in a nursing home can vary from nothing up to substantial amounts (into the hundreds of thousands of dollars), it’s hard to predict what would be left at this point in an estate, and would, of course, vary widely depending on how large the estate assets were to begin with.

Prior to his death, Simpson had publically stated that he was living off of his NFL and broadcasting pensions and had few other assets. The probate process will reveal how true that was. But regardless of how Simpson’s case plays out in Nevada, it’s instructive, as it gives us good reason to examine how these kinds of cases are handled in the probate courts of Ohio.

David Hejmanowski is judge of the Probate/Juvenile Division of the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, where he has served as magistrate, court administrator, and now judge, since 2003. He has written a weekly column on law and history for The Gazette since 2005.

Memories of stays at the cabin

Gloria’s sour cream rhubarb bars.

Submitted photo

We are packing up to leave.

Sister Mary has a little cabin on a hilltop tucked in among the pines. It is a perfect little get-away.

My earliest memory of the cabin was when I was 16 years old and my family visited Daniel’s family in Danville, Ohio. That trip happens to be the first time I learned who Daniel was. Oh my, I had no idea how many amazing things were still to be discovered about him in years to come! I couldn’t help but be impressed with this Godly young man but would not dare dream that he would one day ask me to establish a friendship with him and later to become his wife.

I smile as I think of that day. The cabin was in the final stages of being built and the pines had not been planted yet. On my short walk from the cabin to the van I grabbed a couple of wild flowers and pinned them on my seat belt. On the seven-hour trip home, the flowers brought back warm memories of a time spent with Mary and her family.

A couple of years later I was back in that same cabin, only this time it was with Daniel for a Sunday afternoon date. I marveled. Could this be for real? We had a blessed time together as we read a passage in the Bible, prayed, and chatted.

Several years passed, we were back in the cabin again, this time to be with Daniel’s brother and his young family who had moved into the cabin.

Ten years down the line of time, Daniel and I were back in the cabin once more. This time we went with our six precious children over our Christmas vacation while we visited Ohio family. The quiet corner was no longer occupied on a daily basis. It was back to being a guest cabin and get away.

It was one of those perfect white Christmases. Arriving at our destination, we rounded the corner on top of the long lane with pines on either side, there was the cabin, nestled among snow covered trees. It was a winter wonderland in reality. The cabin was warm and inviting as we unloaded our belongings and settled in for a couple of days. It was good for Daniel to be back on home stomping grounds, especially with all his memories of helping his dad, brothers, and sister on the family project of building the cabin and laying stone after stone for the fireplace in the living room.

No one would ever guess that years ago this exact location was a neighborhood dump. When it was purchased by the family it was completely junked out with piles of trash. The transformation in making something so beautiful out of what used to be nothing, but annoyance is motivating. What all will God be able to do with the areas in our lives which used to be filled with only irritations or things difficult to get rid of?

Things keep changing, Daniel passed on to glory, still the cabin is there waiting to welcome friends or family. This spring I just got this strong urge that we need to go to Ohio again and spend time with Daniel’s grandparents who are in their 90s, then of course see my grandma in Walnut Creek, and be with many other friends and family in Danville.

Thanks to Mary for getting everything ready in the cabin for us once more. We will miss Daniel on this special event, nonetheless, we praise God for this opportunity to be there and trust it will be well despite the empty spot.

The children are all excited about going back to the cabin again and plan to take their soft balls, gloves, and volleyball. Little Joshua takes his Daddy shirt with him whenever he travels. This black nightshirt was given to Daniel by his brother Tobias; Joshua now takes great comfort in it and wipes his tears with it.

We hope to keep our forenoons open for ample time together as a family, having practice sessions, singing, and so on. The afternoons and evenings will probably have more events such as visiting others or hopefully having friends at the cabin with us. My list of people I want to see keeps stretching longer, we’ll see if two weeks will get it or if we’ll need to stay longer. I’m not fond of the thought of not seeing our church family for so long, but then who can be two people at once?

Mary’s lattes, baked goods, and authentic dishes have a way of making all of us feel extra loved when we miss Daddy on our visits to Ohio. I’ll pass her Rhubarb bars on for you to try. She is the one who introduced it to me this spring.

SOUR CREAM RHUBARB BARS

1 cup butter

1 cup brown sugar

2 cups flour

2 cups quick oats

1 teaspoon baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

Filling:

4 eggs yolks

2 cups rhubarb

1 /2 cup brown sugar

2 tablespoons clear gel

1 /2 cup white sugar

2 cups sour cream

Boil filling for a couple minutes or until thickened. Pat 2 /3 of crumbs into the bottom of 9 X 13 inch pan. Bake at 350 for 15 minutes. Remove from the oven and spread the filling over the baked crumbs. Then spread rest of the crumb topping on top and bake for an addition 20 minutes.

Gloria Yoder is an Amish mom, writer, and homemaker in rural Illinois. The Yoders travel primarily by horse-drawn buggy and live next to the settlement’s one-room school-house. Readers can write to Gloria at 10510 E. 350th Ave., Flat Rock, IL 62427.

Shifting from rural to suburban church

Atwood

As I look at my office window at Liberty Barn Church, there’s a cemetery that dates back to the church’s founding in 1810. Several Civil War veterans are buried there on the banks of the Olentangy River. There are times when I look out my office window and the distance between 1810 and 2024 seems pretty small.

But times have changed. Just beyond our cemetery, where an open field used to inspire imagination, now sit nearly a hundred nine-figure homes. And just beyond that now sits the third-largest home in Delaware County …if you can even call it a home. And what used to be a 10-second walk from the cemetery to the river has now been replaced with a state route where hundreds of semi-trucks each day rattle the graves of those from simpler times.

The church I serve has famously held outdoor worship services each summer for decades along that same stretch of state Route 315, only now having to reconsider if the burgeoning traffic is now turning our worshipful space into a commercial cacophony. Even the Amazon trucks find their way into our live-streams on Sundays as blue-shirted delivery workers walk past hundreds of worshippers to drop off whatever lightbulbs we ordered last week. Have things gone too far?

In the transition from a rural to a suburban church, the changes are deeper than just traffic and housing. Tastes and expectations change, too. While Folgers coffee might have been good enough before, in today’s culture the beans need to be purchased from a mission partner in Central America and roasted yourself to satisfy the demands of those accustomed to Starbucks Pike Place. In a rural church, a gravel parking lot seems modern technology. In a suburban church, the parking lot better be paved so as not to scuff designer shoes on the walk from Tesla to pew.

So how does a church (or a society for that matter) shift from rural to suburban in a way where the benefits are maximized and the negative effects are mitigated?

First, embrace the new people who come. Here’s a true confession: all pastors love population density. A church is merely the collection of people with a common commitment to follow Jesus … and the more people the better! Rather than lamenting houses replacing an open field, a new field has opened across the street, viz., people who God wants us to love. If demographics are destiny, then it’s better to flow with the river than fight against it.

Second, the switch from rural to suburban forces a church to name and claim its core identity. As things shift and change — and trust me things will — a healthy church must wrestle with determining what may change, what should change, and what must not change. Unhealthy communities either lump too many things in the “must not” category and brim with resentment and hate, or they uncritically place too many things in the “may change” category and risk losing their identity all together. This is the hard work of discernment that all churches must do.

Here at Liberty, farmers may no longer use our “grange” hall that was built nearly two centuries ago, but it is still serving its purpose by holding Bible studies, community leader meetings, Financial Peace classes, etc. The core identity was never farming … it was gathering to share life and grow together. Our identity is deeper than circumstance and our purpose timeless, so we adapt to changing times without losing who we are.

Third, and most importantly, as we transition from a rural to suburban church we recognize that the church throughout history has never been static … but it persists nonetheless. This is counterintuitive: one would think that there were would be ideal conditions under which the Gospel would flourish and that once those “conditions” are discovered they would be replicated indefinitely. Instead, one can find flourishing churches in urban Seoul, Korea, rural Kenya, and even suburban Ohio.

God is the God of all times, all places, and all types of communities. God was with Paul in metropolis of ancient Athens, and with John the Baptist in the deserted desert. As we transition from rural to suburban, we are expecting God to be more at work than ever in shaping the lives of those who call this place home.

Rev. Dr. Chris Atwood is the senior pastor at Liberty Barn Church in Delaware.

Letter: Consider attending school event

Maybe you graduated from Delaware Hayes many years ago. Maybe your kids graduated from Hayes (our kids graduated 30 years ago). Maybe you have kids that are currently attending Hayes. Or maybe you know kids in your neighborhood that attend Delaware City Schools. Have you attended a school athletic, academic, theater, or music event recently?

We were reminded again today of how very fortunate we are as Delaware community members. Today was the Senior Honors program where our graduating seniors are recognized for their incredible achievements during their high school careers. We couldn’t be more proud of the efforts of our students. Our teachers, staff, bus drivers, maintenance workers, administrators, and school board members provide a learning environment every day that helps our students reach their goals!

Based on results, our schools are good stewards of our tax dollars. We suggest that you enjoy your tax dollars at work by attending a school event.

Thank you Delaware City Schools!

Malcolm and Suzanne MacLean

Delaware

Letter: ‘Wisdom’ to consider this November

The Honorable Geoff Duncan, the most recent former lieutenant governor of Georgia, has announced that, “Unlike Trump, I’ve belonged to the GOP my entire life. This November, I am voting for a decent person I disagree with on policy over a criminal defendant without a moral compass.”

He said that he finds it “disappointing” to see Republicans “fall in line behind” Trump. He concluded by saying, “The GOP will never rebuild until we move on from the Trump era, leaving conservative (but not angry) Republicans like me no choice but to pull the lever for Biden.”

I respectfully and caringly urge my Republican friends and neighbors here in Delaware, Ohio, to consider the wisdom of former Lt. Gov. Duncan’s decision.

Jon R. Powers

Delaware

Delaware County Property Transfers

30 Chamberlain St, Delaware, Cupani, Anthony E To: Dapilmoto, Ryson & Taylor, $235,000

5482 Slater Rdg, Westerville, Wallace, Ronald & Mcsweeny, Daniell Trustees To: Rogala, Richard & Sharon, $576,900

291 Springer Woods Blvd, Delaware, D R Horton Indiana Llc To: Fitzpatrick, John Joseph & Sarah Marie, $478,900

8146 Wildflower Dr, Powell, Saunders, Eric L Bell Abigail To: Roeder, Paul J & Denise M, $750,000

405 Rochdale Run, Delaware, Maronda Homes Llc Of Ohio To: Intel Ventures Llc, $380,322

106 Keystoner Way, Delaware, Patterson, Deborah W & Mcconnell, Brian C To: Ohme, David Joseph, $390,000

372 Wheatfield Dr, Delaware, Farmer, Madison & Roudebush, Desmon To: Farmer, Madison, $146,650

9074 Scenic View Cir, Columbus, Jamshidinia, Mahdi & Noori, Soheila To: David, Peter, $325,000

3398 Pine Way, Powell, Op Spe Phx1 Llc To: Nagy, Joshua Scott & Sarah Elizabeth, $549,900

6307 Pinehurst Pointe, Westerville, Crowder, Benny G Trustee To: Hogan, Sharon K & Schneider, Raymond D, $375,000

215 Bucklewell Dr, Delaware, Rockford Homes Inc To: Louden, Eric D & Amelia, $569,555

802 Patch Reef Dr, Delaware, Nvr Inc To: Nandigama, Sai Prasad & Sadi, Mani Keerthi, $580,375

262 Wyman Lake Dr, Delaware, Nvr Inc To: Aasani, Shravan Kumar & Beemreddy, Sirisha, $542,750

100 North St, Sunbury, Seventeen Estates Llc To: Dougherty, Alison & Snider, Joshua, $379,000

6669 Henschen Cir, Westerville, Odowd, Paul David Jr To: Couchot, Allyson, $362,000

460 Delaney’s Cir, Powell, Parker, Linda K To: Parker, Donald E & Hillary, $310,000

498 Thistleview Dr, Lewis Center, Kunkleman, Alyssa L To: Khan, Shoaib Nawaz, $430,002

71 Abbeycross Ln, Westerville, Carifa, Ralph P To: Love, Stephanie J, $275,000

4004 Village Club Dr, Powell, Fallon, Shawn M & Danielle V To: Penner, Joseph M & Lauren E Trustees, $800,000

8901 Creighton Dr, Powell, Trimmer, Kevin M & Brooks, Megan G To: Tadros, Nicholas & Hannah, $789,000

Vertikoff departing Carlisle Elementary

Carlisle Elementary School Principal Paula Vertikoff poses in front of the school Thursday. Vertikoff announced this week she will be leaving the school after eight years to pursue a new role as an instructional coach for education company Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Glenn Battishill | The Gazette

After eight years with Delaware City Schools, Carlisle Elementary School Principal Paula Vertikoff announced this week she will be departing the school to seek a new position.

Vertikoff took the principal position at the school in 2016 and said she has made many positive memories at Carlisle and will miss the school community when she leaves at the end of the school year to take a position as an instructional coach with education company Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Vertikoff said the role affords her more flexibility and time to pursue writing children’s books with retired school counselor Marie Weller.

“I’m always excited to try something new and always learning,” Vertikoff said. “I’ll still be working with teachers and students but in a different capacity as an instructional coach. I’ll still be in the educational world.”

Vertikoff told families and students about the move earlier this week and said she will miss the staff and students at Carlisle.

“I’ll miss our funny little stories and our Carlisle family,” Vertikoff said. “(I’ll miss) how we all come together; parents, teachers, students. That collaboration … I enjoy seeing those people grow. The students from year to year and the teachers growing as professionals. I liked getting to know them and having that connection.”

Vertikoff said her favorite moments of her time at Carlisle were “anything that’s a core memory for kids.”

“I have so many favorite memories,” she said. “All our outings together and all the hugs … Getting presents from them. I will miss all the memories that we’ve made together.”

Vertikoff said she will miss working with Weller and teachers and students to produce “Good morning, Pacers,” a regular video segment aimed at helping students learn about becoming “kind, respectful, responsible leaders.”

Vertikoff added she’s proud of the way the school came together in “difficult situations” like the pandemic.

“(Delaware) is a big community that feels small and welcoming,” Vertikoff said. “They’ve been very supportive. I received so many emails and well wishes (after I announced I was leaving.) It’s been amazing and bittersweet.”

Vertikoff said she is sometimes called the “grandma” of the school because “(I) love everyone, unconditionally, and I want the best for them,” and she hopes that becomes her legacy at the school.

“When you pour your heart and soul into something and hopefully your body of work speaks to families and whoever was involved because as a principal, that’s what you do,” Vertikoff said. “You do everything as a principal from pulling weeds to teaching in a classroom to recess duty. You have to balance that with being with students and communicating.”

Vertikoff’s last day with the district will be June 3.

“I wish Carlisle the best as they transition to a new leader,” Vertikoff said. “I believe in this community. It’s a great community, and I’ll miss it.”

Glenn Battishill can be reached at 740-413-0903.

Click It or Ticket campaign to kick off

The SAFE Delaware County Coalition along with the Ohio State Highway Patrol, Delaware Public Health District, and Delaware Area Career Center and are joining forces for the Click It or Ticket campaign, which runs now through June 2 surrounding the Memorial Day holiday. The purpose of the campaign is to spread awareness of the importance of wearing a safety belt through education and enforcement for those who drive on Delaware County roadways.

This year’s Click It or Ticket campaign kickoff event will take place at noon on Tuesday, May 14, at the Delaware Area Career Center located at 4565 Columbus Pike, Delaware. Following the kickoff event, coalition members will be at the I-71 South rest stop taking SAFE selfies with motorists and talking to them about the importance of seat belt use.

According to the Ohio State Highway Patrol, there have been over 270,000 unbelted crashes on Ohio roadways in the last five years. Of those crashes, there were more than 2,600 fatalities due to not wearing an available safety belt.

“Properly wearing a safety belt saves lives and reduces the risk of injuries,” said Lt. Robert Curry, commander of the Delaware Post. “When a safety belt is improperly worn, the potential for crash-related injuries and death increases dramatically.”

Curry added that Ohio’s safety belt law remains a secondary violation, however, troopers will continue zero-tolerance enforcement when motorists are stopped for other violations and are found to not be wearing their safety belt. Since 2019, more than 274,000 people have been issued seat belt citations.

Additional safety belt enforcement and educational information can be found on the Patrol’s Ohio Statistics and Analytics for Traffic Safety (OSTATS) Safety Belt dashboard.

This story was submitted by the Delaware Public Health District.

Roads remain focus in Harlem Twp.

GALENA — The Harlem Township Board of Trustees met on July 19, 2023, stating it had reached out to the Delaware County Prosecutor’s Office regarding filing an injunction against American Electric Power “to stop them from potentially acquiring permanent easement across properties in Harlem Township through eminent domain.” The board was told an injunction could be filed by property owners, but it would be difficult for them to win, “especially in situations involving public utilities.”

• A special meeting on July 24 was recessed and reconvened on July 28. Among other matters, it was discussed whether the township use YouTube or Zoom for its meetings.

• On Aug. 16, the trustees approved a resolution lowering the speed limit on Lewis Road (Township Road 38) from 55 mph to 40 mph between state Route 37 and Green Cook Road (T.R. 29).

• During a special meeting on Sept. 7, the trustees approved applying for Ohio Public Works Commission funds for improvements to Montgomery Road for about a mile from Center Village to South County Line roads. The project is estimated at nearly $300,000.

• A regular meeting on Sept. 20 was recessed until Sept. 27, which included residents’ request for the township to take over a roadway in the Watts subdivision on Gorsuch Road.

• The trustees approved replacing a culvert on Evans Road at their meeting on Oct. 18.

• At the Nov. 15 meeting, the trustees approved replacing flag poles at Fancher and Maple Grove cemeteries. The age to drive fire apparatus was lowered from 21 to 18.

• The 2024 Road Improvement Program through the Delaware County Engineer’s Office was approved by the trustees on Dec. 20. This includes a second asphalt overlay on Gorsuch Road, crack sealing on Center Village Road and a 1.5” overlay on Ivy Ridge Place, all at a cost of $245,600. Also, the Maintenance Department has 65.76 tons of road salt in the salt shed.

• The trustees met on Dec. 27, where they went into executive session. After about an hour, they recessed to reconvene two days later.

• Finally, on Dec. 29, the board met for a final time in 2023. After another executive session, it moved to appoint Otis Bandy III as acting maintenance supervisor.

Assistant Editor Gary Budzak photographs and reports on stories in eastern Delaware County and surrounding areas.

Delaware County Property Transfers

222 Belle Ave, Delaware, Habitat For Humanity Of Delaware & Union Counties To: Crawford, Margaret Katherine & Bradley Michael, $245,000

559 Harding Ln, Delaware, Csa Group Llc To: O’Keefe, Conner Riley, $177,500

304 E High St, Ashley, Heine, Walter Fredrick III & Cheek, Kathryn L Successor Co Trustees To: Gray, Dante & Avrie, $309,000

120 E High St, Ashley, Harmon, George M & Lisa L To: Rl Excavating Llc, $200,000

564 Pisa Loop, Delaware, Terra Alta Llc To: Nvr Inc, $94,500

265 Livorno Rd, Delaware, Terra Alta Llc To: Nvr Inc, $94,500

785 Habitat Way, Sunbury, Mi Homes Of Central Ohio Llc To: Baral, Binita & Poudel, Tilak, $589,900

34 Royal Palm Ct, Delaware, Glenross North Llc To: Nvr Inc, $100,000

7307 Jergenson Way, Sunbury, Mi Homes Of Central Ohio Llc To: Aruchamy, Karthik & Lingaraj, Vijaya Priya, $529,570

1603 Denman Ln, Delaware, Mi Homes Of Central Ohio Llc To: Agarwal, Disha & Tipre, Rochan, $613,601

1604 Dalbey Ln, Delaware, Mi Homes Of Central Ohio Llc To: Daghupati, Divya & Jagadeesh, Naidu, $613,075

932 Executive Blvd, Delaware, Carpenter, David W & Judith L To: Keller, Ian & Baylee, $405,000

300 Burns Dr, Westerville, Faleh, Omar M & Mervat To: Soto, Sarah Urizar, $445,000

2271 Bryton Dr, Powell, Schnulo, Stephen E To: Shibuya, David & Susan Trustees, $562,500

1059 Weatherwood Ct, Westerville, Tyree, Charlowe & Barbara J To: Scherer, Kelsey M, $420,000

52 Tanglewood Dr, Delaware, Shaw, Laura To: Tudor, Gela Genelle, $360,000

269 W Heffner St, Delaware, Glesenkamp, Richard F & Phyllis A Cotrustees To: Taylor, Margaret O, $60,000

6300 Jaycox Rd, Galena, Donatelli, Sharon K Trustee To: Medley, Jill K & Bryan D, $980,000

4014 Pioneer Ct, Powell, Migliori, Michael & Dawn To: Starner, James Matthew & Lynette, $525,000

6196 Wingstem St, Westerville, Edwards, Kerin A To: Mouton, Kenneth Lyndon Ii & Kerscher, Madison, $557,000

8913 Turin Hill Ct, Dublin, Bell, George F To: Haley, David II & Bailey, $473,500

428 Coover Rd, Delaware, Mitchell, Thelma L Trustee To: Bournstein, Catherine J & Daniel Sean, $530,000

Weather

Delaware
overcast clouds
66 ° F
68 °
64.4 °
84 %
0.6mph
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