Want this question answered?
Somebody who has issued cheque to you because of which money will be deposited into your account is returned back ie bank does accept the cheque issued to you for numerous reasons either due to sign mismatch, Account no missing, stale cheque been deposited etc.
A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque.
You cannot. A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque.
You cannot. A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque
It Depends:Yes you can - If you are a joint holder of your dads accountNo you cannot - If your dad is the only holder of his accountThis is because, a check can be deposited only into the account that is fully or jointly held by the person to whom the check is issued.
Somebody who has issued cheque to you because of which money will be deposited into your account is returned back ie bank does accept the cheque issued to you for numerous reasons either due to sign mismatch, Account no missing, stale cheque been deposited etc.
Somebody who has issued cheque to you because of which money will be deposited into your account is returned back ie bank does accept the cheque issued to you for numerous reasons either due to sign mismatch, Account no missing, stale cheque been deposited etc.
It depends: a. Yes - If you are joint holder of the account along with your parents then you can deposit it into that account b. No - If you are not a joint holder of the account along with your parents, then you cannot deposit it into that account. A check can be deposited only into an account that is held by the person on whose name the check is issued.
A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque.
You cannot. A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque.
It is not a legally valid document if it is not signed. Without a sign the bank has no way to verify if the account holder issued a cheque or was it stolen from him. A Signature is a proof to the bank that the account holder issued the cheque as a binding instrument to pay another person.
You cannot. A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque
It Depends:Yes you can - If you are a joint holder of your dads accountNo you cannot - If your dad is the only holder of his accountThis is because, a check can be deposited only into the account that is fully or jointly held by the person to whom the check is issued.
Some reasons are: * Insufficient funds in the cheque drawee account * Corrections/over writing in the cheque which is not counter signed by the cheque issuer * Signature of A/c holder not matching * Cheque expired (Beyond 6 months of date of issue)
A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee cheque. This type of cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into an account of the person to whom the cheque is issued. This is done to ensure that in case the cheque is lost, it cannot be cashed by anyone who finds it. Crossing a cheque is done usually by making two parallel lines in the top left corner of the cheque.
If you issued the cheque, your bank will be able to tell you that.
A cheque is a negotiable instrument that can be issued by one person to pay money to another person/entity. The person to whom the cheque is issued is entitled to receive the sum mentioned in the cheque (provided the account has sufficient balance) from the bank where the cheque issuer holds his account.