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John Goodson believes it is his patriotic duty to assist families, businesses and charities to become more efficient and successful.
University of Arizona, majors in English, Speech and Journalism; University of Arizona Law School; special studies in Business and Estate Planning at Harvard University, New York University and University of Miami.
John Goodson has over 49 years of experience actively practicing estate, tax, charitable giving and business planning law. He is the founder and senior partner of the law firm Goodson Manley Forakis PLC, one of the first firms in the nation to practice Preventive Law.
John is the founder of the Preventive Law Resource Center and the College of Preventive Law and the co-founder and chairman of the faculty of the College of Estate Planning Attorneys. As a part-time law professor, he has taught legal courses at four universities and colleges.
A third-generation member of an prominent Arizona family, John's lectures and client sessions are made entertaining and interesting by his gift for weaving in analogies, stories, and common sense experience from his colorful pre-lawyer background; from being a mountain climber and a member of a mountain rescue team; a martial arts student in Tai Chi and Akido; a lawyer and board member for the Aspen Academy of Martial Arts; an Armored Cavalry Officer with the Third Armored Cavalry Regiment on border defense in Germany; coach of the winning European Pistol Team and coach of the Le Clerk Combat Firing Team; an Outward Bound wilderness instructor for high school students for 25 years; a land navigation instructor of a course called "Zen and the Art of Land Navigation" for more than 15 years; the co-founder of the Reevis Mountain Survival School; a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers; a campaign manager for many political campaigns; the founding attorney and board member for over 40 operating foundations and hundreds of family foundations; and a radio news announcer and radio celebrity.
For decades, the Martindale-Hubbell company has rated attorneys all over the United States. Their investigators contact judges and lawyers and obtains from them ratings. John Goodson, the senior principal in the firm, has had the highest possible peer review rating for over 30 years -- the "Preeminent A/V Rating". "A" indicates top competence, "V" indicates very ethical. The firm is one of the few firms where all three principals have the preeminent A/V rating verified by their legal peers.
Throughout his distinguished career, John has been active in legal community. He is:
Wife, Siglinde; Children, Mel Goodson – Computer/Electrical Engineer, Colleen Manley – Business and Estate Lawyer, Christine Forakis – Business and Estate Lawyer with Goodson Manley Forakis PLC; 10 grandchildren.
To view his more specialized experience, click on the appropriate tab.
John believes that families must always be structured so that they have taken into account all perils and always have in place the protective legal, financial and self help structures.
During his career, John has studied and practiced law focusing on estate planning, business law, philanthropic law and asset protection.
He and his firm approach the process of preserving and protecting families, businesses and charities by forming "Zaibatsu structures" (see our Preventive Law Study: The Ideal Estate and Asset Protection Plan for the Successful Family), which become multi-generation dynasties — analogized to a five-legged stool with a leg for (1) an enduring family, (2) family trusts, (3) an investment Limited Partnership, (4) successful family businesses, (5) emergency legal protection for all family members to make a strong family foundation.
These legal structures are put together like a toy from an erector set, starting with the simplest and the most basic first and adding the others as needed with uncomplicated connections as the family dynasty expands.
John perfected these techniques after more than 15 years of battling for his clients in the courtroom, handling large and complex lawsuits and seeing the consequences of improper legal structuring while at the same time working with thousands of clients to design their protective legal structures and, as a result, avoid lawsuits and other legal and financial complications.
Working with John in this quest for better preventive law techniques are partners he has trained, among whom are his two lawyer daughters. He tutored them by allowing them to work in his firm since they were very young, in a teaching atmosphere reminiscent of a martial arts Dojo.
As a third generation Arizonan, he prepared himself to practice law by attending the University of Arizona, first as an undergraduate and then at the Law School. He also enrolled in special studies in estate and business planning at Harvard University Law School with the professor known as the "Father of Revocable Trusts" and further prepared himself with other special studies in estate planning at the University of Miami Law School and New York University Law School.
John co-authored a textbook on the "Legal Aspects of Doing Business in Arizona," published by the University of Arizona. As previously mentioned, he was the co-founder and chairman of the faculty of the College of Estate Planning attorneys and the founder and president of the College of Preventive Law.
He developed innovative approaches to the practice of estate planning by inventing the techniques for "legal architectural blueprints, (LABs)" "Zaibatsu protection structures," "General staff of bumble bees," and "Dynasty Thinking."
The LAB is a one-page diagram with all the people, legal entities, assets and moves that may be understood as a glance making complex estate planning simple.
The "Zaibatsu Protective Structures" is formatting the family structures like the ancient Japanese Zaibatsu fort groupings that inter-protected each other.
The "General Staff of Bumble Bees" came from the realization that the attorney functions better for a client if he organizes a team of related professionals: CPAs, life insurance advisors, property and casualty insurance advisors, investment advisors and others who act with a variety of clients and bring intellectual pollen into the design and planning mix.
"Dynasty Thinking" relates to planning the family, business, investments, and foundation structures so they endure for at least four generations and so that that they all fit efficiently together and move assets from one generation to the next with minimal losses, greater safety, more security and continual harmony.
John was one of the first attorneys to design and use as part of the dynasty planning process the Revocable Family Fortress Dynasty Trust, The Irrevocable Family Fortress Dynasty Trust, the Durable Living Will, the Durable General Power of Attorney, the Durable Medical Power of Attorney, the Durable Mental Health Power of Attorney, the HIPAA Consent Document, the Enforceable Funeral and Burial Instructions and the Enforceable Medical Authorization for Minor Children (see Preventive Law Studies for more studies relating to these topics).
The first to write textbooks on how to prepare estate planning documents so they are legally valid in all 50 states, he is currently writing a book on advanced estate, tax and asset protection titled "The American Family Zaibatsu – How to Create a Successful Family Dynasty."
John lectures on preventive-law-related subjects as a law professor at colleges and universities and at continuing education courses for lawyers, accountants, CPAs, financial planners, real estate brokers and other professionals. In the summer of 2008, he will be lecturing at a 4-day symposium to lawyers from all over the United States who want to be certified in Preventive Law. He co-hosts (with his daughter counselor Christine Forakis) a weekly radio show featuring topics on preventive law. Earlier in his career he hosted another radio show and was known as the "Father of Asset Protection."
John believes that businesses must be structured and operated so they will provide benefits for multi-generations.
While working as an estate-planning attorney, John and his firm found it necessary to give equal attention to business structuring.
The statistics are grim – 65% of business structures die in the second generation, and 85% die in the third generation. To avoid these unnecessary losses, John found that families must give special attention to create the security and harmony necessary for success in family businesses. It is important to note that all businesses are family businesses because all businesses are run by human beings who have families.
A key element of the family dynasty is the family business – either as a separate operating business or as a Limited Partnership investing in business stocks and bonds, loans and real estate property.
John co-authored a university textbook, "Legal Aspects of Doing Business in Arizona" and attended a specialized course study in business planning at Harvard University.
John operated a family corporation, which included a citrus ranch, stocks and bonds, interests in a car rental business and a parts manufacturing business. He formed and operated a nationwide legal forms business that included 15 books of legal forms with instructions and is the founding director and legal counsel for a start-up water company that eventually sold for over $60,000,000.
As a first-hand, functioning board member for many businesses, John learned what works, what does not work, and how legal services and structures mesh with the governing body of business organizations. He is the founding director of the new Prescott College for four years and has used his position for teaching an experimental course on operating as a board member of a Board of Directors.
John has experience with startups, problem resolution, assisting with succession planning, resolving internal disputes, planning future projects, helping clients through financial setbacks, and advising clients throughout a multiple of business happenings.
John has identified and worked with legal specialists (litigation, patent, and securities attorneys), forensic accountants, management consultants, psychologists, human resource experts, appraisers, business brokers, lobbyists.
Information on his teaching and samples of John's writings on business law can be found on his firm's web site .
From all of the above, John has the background and experience to understand what his clients have gone through and will be experiencing.
Most business meetings and conferences with attorneys are thought to be dull and conventional, but you can be assured that John will bring some color and common sense into the business planning process.
John believes that a business is not mature and secure without at least three outside directors.
As part of John's more than 45 years experience as a practicing attorney, over 15 of those have been handling complex business litigation and later focusing on structuring family businesses, philanthropy, investments and family estate planning structures, coordinating them into multi-generation dynasties.
John:
John has a wide variety of life experiences as a mountain climber; an expedition leader; journalist; an armored reconnaissance officer in Europe; coach of the winning U.S. Army Pistol Team in Europe; coach of the Le Clerk combat pistol, rifle, and machine gun teams; an escape and evasion instructor trained at the Pentagon; an Outward Bound instructor, the co-founder of the Reevis Survival School; a land navigation instructor; director and student of the Aspen Academy of Martial Arts; a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.
Before you send your knights out on a business crusade, make sure your family castle is secure. Businesses must be structured with the internal checks and balances which will perpetuate the business with security, creativity, harmony and success for many generations.
After receiving an education at the University of Arizona Undergraduate School and Law College with special studies at Harvard University and the University of Miami Law Schools, and having worked with clients for decades on creating successful family and business structures, John soon discovered that it was necessary for all of his firm's clients to become involved in philanthropic giving in order to successfully complete their life patterns.
A successful dynasty rests on a five legged stool; (1) the family structures, (2) the family investment structures, (3) the family business, (4) the family emergency structures, (5) lastly and importantly, family charitable structures including a family foundation.
John has observed the benefits of philanthropy and charitable giving to be as follows:
In order to better advise and teach on philanthropic subjects and involvement, John has developed the following qualifications for assisting clients:
Whenever a family is thinking of involving their wealth in philanthropic or charitable endeavors, we will meet with them on a complimentary basis for the initial meeting.
John believes that probates, guardianships and conservatorships can be avoided and minimized with the correct preventive law structures and that trust administration will be more economical if trusts have the requisite preventive law provisions.
Even with preventive law protection for families being readily available, there will be those who fail to utilize this protection. As a result, their family will become involved in probate, guardianship and conservatorship proceedings, which require a high level of legal expertise to bring achieve optimal results, minimize contention and litigation, and speed conclusions. Because of these desired outcomes, it is necessary to engage an attorney who has the significant knowledge and experience required to manage the multi-faceted combination of challenges that result in probate, guardianship, conservatorship and trust administration situations.
John received his undergraduate and law degree at the University of Arizona with special studies in estate, tax and probate teachings at Harvard University, New York University, and the University of Miami Law Schools. He co-authored a textbook on the legal aspects of doing business in Arizona published by the University of Arizona Press. Most of his probate experience comes from being a legal gladiator in the Probate Courts of Arizona as chief counsel in handling probate, guardianship and conservatorship controversies.
Early in his career, he focused on and was selected by clients to handle probate will contests dealing with irregularities in wills and found people's worst traits come forward during contention between family members. John handled the estate of Jules Vermaesh, which case went to the Supreme Court twice and involved over 10 years of litigation. The Superior Court trial lasted over 30 days – one of the longest – and Judge Donald Froeb later commented that, in his entire judiciary career, this was the most interesting and exciting case over which he ever presided.
Other contributors to John's legal skills and knowledge in this area include:
The Probate Courts were established in early England to prevent the violence and killing that occurred when families had have bloody battles to protect their share of the inheritance of a deceased relative. We must use logic and common sense to prevent our Probate Courts from regressing back to these rituals, which although not bloody, become emotionally devastating to the families concerned.