No, ...... it cannot be accessed by a third party
By Pramod Yadav & Sunil Singh
A third party to an account is an individual or entity that is not the account holder but may have access to or interest in the account, such as a joint account holder, beneficiary, or authorized user. Their rights can vary based on the nature of the relationship and the specific terms of the account agreement. Generally, they may have rights to access account information or funds, but these rights are typically limited compared to those of the primary account holder. The extent of their rights should be clearly defined in the account terms or agreements.
Transactions Account
no
Transactions account
Gmail account cannot connect to a third party site. It is because the site can be virus or malware. To avoid the security loss, it does not connect.
Self cheque can not isssue to third party this is for personnal use of individal I.e. account holder
yes
When money or funds are in trust in an account, they are typically being held for one party and handled by another. It is a way to control and convey assets for a third-party owner.
To deposit a third party check into your Bank of America account, you can either visit a Bank of America branch and endorse the check with both your signature and the third party's signature, or you can use the Bank of America mobile app to deposit the check by following the instructions for mobile check deposit.
Your phrase is not a legal term. However, you may be referring to a situation where a property owner desires to transfer her property to herself and another as joint tenants. In Massachusetts the owner now has a statutory right to execute a deed granting the property to herself and another as joint tenants. In many other states a straw must be used. By that method title to the property is conveyed to a third party thereby severing the interest of the owner. Title to the property is immediately conveyed by that third party back to the two who desire to own the property as joint tenants.
5%
The purpose of third party credit card processing lets one accept online payments without a merchant account of one's own. Instead, the service provides their own merchant account for you to use.