About Robert T.
Robert T. Naumes has practiced law in Massachusetts for decades. He leads a small firm as managing partner and appears regularly in state and federal courts. He is known among peers for steady courtroom work and a long history of bar involvement.
He earned his B.A. from Boston College in 1975 and completed his J.D. at Boston College Law School in 1978. Those years set the stage for a career spent largely in litigation. The law school training and early clerkships familiarized him with courtroom procedure and case preparation.
Naumes was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1978 and has maintained that membership continuously. His admissions extend beyond the state level. He is authorized to practice before the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts and the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York. He is also admitted to the First and Second U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeal. That combination has allowed him to handle appeals as well as trials.
Colleagues and clients know him through professional associations. He holds memberships in the Massachusetts State Bar and the Massachusetts Academy of Trial Lawyers. He is a member of the American Association for Justice and of the Academy of Rail Labor Lawyers. Those affiliations reflect an ongoing connection to trial practice and to groups that handle transportation and labor-related disputes.
At the Naumes Law Group he serves as managing partner. The firm handles litigation matters in both state and federal venues. He supervises case strategy, litigation planning, and trial preparation. He has guided younger lawyers at the firm while remaining active at the trial table.
Beyond litigation logistics, Naumes’s work involves coordinating filings in multiple jurisdictions and managing the procedural demands of appellate practice. He practices in Massachusetts courts and federal courts, including the First and Second Circuits and the U.S. District Courts in Massachusetts and the Northern District of New York. His current practice centers on trial litigation in those state and federal courts.