There are several reasons why a person could receive a certified letter. The letter could be a bill, official paperwork such as divorce papers, etc.
A personal-business letter is one that is sent from an individual to a business or company. Whereas, a business letter is a letter sent by the company or organization.
go shoot his ass LOL
To show you when the person sent it.
A letter that is sent to Florida from Ohio will take a couple of days if it is sent as first class mail. There is also overnight mail through the post office that will get the letter there the next day.
There is no such thing as a Bailey letter. However, there's a Bailee letter. A Bailee letter is a letter sent to a person before their mortgage loan price proceeds.
The purpose of sending a letter by certified mail is to have proof the letter was sent and received.
Just ask the Letter Carrier or Sales Associate, there is no rule that says they can't. Remember the Postal Service is all about Customer Service.
article 7073
No. If the landlord is sending a certified letter for specific person than only that specific person or authorized representative, such as someone living in the same household, may sign for that letter. If it is sent out then signed by the same person this could be a federal offense.
For clarification, you don't type a certified letter. A letter becomes certified when you send it by USPS certified mail. This is a great way to send important documents, legal paperwork and so on, as it provides a paper trail showing when a letter was sent and when it was received.
It don't always show the name of the sender.
I did not recieve a letter stating they were going to repo my jeep they said it was sent more than once but it was not sent certified
A letter should be sent "certified" to record that you actually made an attempt to contact someone at that listed address. It also guarantees someone received the letter sent. In the Medical field, where liability is of great concern, sending a certified letter shows as proof, that you made an attempt on X date, to contact X person specified, and that X person received the letter. This way, if anyone asks HOW you can prove you contacted the person, you have a receipt showing the proof.
No. I mean it could. All a certified letter means is that who ever is sending it to you wants to make sure you get it.
"Certified" letter, not, necessarily.You can request a "return receipt" which will show that it was delivered to the address but not necessarily to whom.But, a "registered" letter can be sent with a "return receipt" stipulating "deliver to addressee only." Of course it will cost more for this additional service.
Certified mail requires you to sign for the mail. To know who sent the certified mail, you usually need to sign for it but the sender's name is typically listed on the green card attached to the mail. You can ask to look at the card before signing and if you miss the delivery, you can look at the slip the mail carrier leaves for you that lets you know you had a certified letter or package.
When you send a certified letter, the person receiving it has to sign a receipt acknowledging it was delivered and received. The receipt (or a copy) is sent to the person who mailed it to prove that the letter was delivered and received. This eliminates the excuse "I never received it" - especially in legal matters.