ofcourse no .... never a woman married can get of check the account of her husband and vice versa except if there is a Bank power of attorney
thanks
Yes. You can also write a check to yourself from your account and he can write a check to himself if he is the joint owner of the account.
If the mode of operation of the account is jointly by you and your husband in this case he can not closed the account. If the mode of operation is either or survivor, in this case your husband can close this account and you can not claim anything from bank.
Check
im not closing my account,just want to relieve my mother from my joint account and change it to single account
newtest3
The person authorized to write checks on an account is called the account holder or account operating customer. He/she is the only person authorized to write checks on that account. Nobody else can do so. (In case of a joint account, all holders of the account can write checks)
If the account is "Joint Tennants in Common" then all of the joint owners must be present to close that account/write checks/withdraw fund. Most banks do not offer Joint Tennants in Common, but offer "Joint With Rights of Survivorship" this means that only on owner must be present to close the account.
Yes
no
please let us the procedure premier to normal savings account
If your husband is on this account because he's on theJoint Account with Right of Survivorship: the joint account-holder becomes Joint Owner & can write checks & withdraw money from the bank or broker account or make investment decisions without knowledge or permission of other Joint Owner; easy to create; no legal expenses incurred upon creation nor upon death of Owner; no need for death certificate unless Tax Identif. Number must be changed.And the money is primarily hers or if he attributes money for her home expenses and your not on the account then the two of them decide your using this money without their knowledge and report you, YES you could get in trouble, it's called Stealing, fraud, money laundering.
Yes, if she writes and signs it. No, if her husband signs it. If trouble were to enter the marriage and he told a judge or police he did sign the check, but didn't approve the amount he'd be out of luck for approving a blank check.
Then you are commiting a crime known as check kiting.