Yes.
"On behalf of the bowling club, we would like you to accept this small gift." "We collected money on behalf of the homeless. "Mr. Roberts cannot be here, so his wife will accept the prize on his behalf."
Only if you're signed in on their account.
Yes. For corporations, this is in fact what's normally done.
If that cooperative is a legal entity - that is to say, registered with the state to do business within that state - then yes, he/she can. He/she will have it in the name of the cooperative, and sign their own name "on behalf of" the cooperative.
No. I could give you the long no or the short no, but it is still no.
No. I could give you the long no or the short no, but it is still no.
pre-incoporation contracts are contracts that are entered into on behalf of unincoporated companies by their promoters or agents. just like the name proports pre-incopration contracts can only be entered into for companies that are yet to be incorp
No, there are several companies that deal with identity theft. You should register for these companies, and they will hire the lawyer on your behalf.
There are national companies that perform these background checks on a landlord's behalf. SafeRent is the most well-known of these companies.
An authorized or registered agent is a person or perhaps a company that functions on your behalf for receiving notices or official government communications in the condition department in addition to service of process in the jurisdiction of the state where the organization conducts its business. The registered agent could be anyone dwelling within the condition where the organization is registered and, generally, doesn't have to become a member or investor.
You must locate their registered agent via your state's Secretary of State website--this entity is authorized to accept SDT service on behalf of that company for your particular state. Good luck finding an actual phone number to their SDT compliance department, however, as you get dead-ended by their automated phone system early on.
A firm that conducts transactions on the behalf of the client. Brokerage firms derive their profit from commissions. Most brokerage firms must be registered with the SEC.