In the past, any party who was "interested" in the case would file the request so that parties who filed motions would serve the "interested party" with a copy of the motion. Once the interested party was on a mailing list, all other parties would also print and mail a copy of papers to the interested party. After the interested party was on a service list, the court would mail copies of orders to the interested party. Sometimes this led to the court expending labor, printing and postage to send many orders to parties who were not participants in a dispute.
In 2008, our court ended this practice in two ways:
(A) A party who meets the 5-part test of FRBP 2002(i) can file a "Request for Notice".
(B) A party who does not meet the five strict requirements of FRBP 2002(i) can file a "Request for Courtesy NEF"
In bankruptcy court, only parties who meet the 5-part test of FRBP 2002(i) are entitled to be given special notice by parties and by the court:
The "request" is not a request for the court to issue an order. It is a request for the court and other parties to send NOTICES to the creditor.