You may wanna check on that. I think it's 60 days but it's very difficult it they paid for shipment like a box or something like that.
Return to sender
If you have had a piece of mail that was addressed to you be marked as undeliverable, you may want to contact your local post office. Once you contact them, they should be able to tell you if they are still holding the mail or if they have returned it to the sender.
It will be returned to the sender marked either 'refused' or 'undeliverable'. The sender than has to persue other options for delivery, such as hiring a professional process server if this is a legal summons, for instance.
Mail undeliverable at address given; no change-of-address order on file; forwarding order expired; forwarding postage not guaranteed by sender or addressee; or, mail endorsed with sender's instructions DO NOT FORWARD. i.e. I would summarize/assume that the address was incorrect, expired, etc. Try to contact the person/office/business whom you tried to send this to and obtain the correct address. p.s. Return to sender means that the letter was returned to you or the person [address] who sent it [the sender].
It depends on what restrictions the sender placed on the package. If the sender has the package "drop shipped" the driver will leave the package at the door without a signature. If the sender requires a signature, then some one has to sign for the package. However, the package comes and no one is home to sign for it, they do leave an information sheet and a place to sign for the package for a future delivery the next business day.
It is the sender of a letter or package's address. It is used just in case the letter or package that is sent does not reach it's destination it can be sent back to the sender.
Return to sender?
Recorded delivery. From the moment the sender places the package in the care of the post office, its movement is tracked. Each time it 'changes hands' throughout its journey, its barcode is scanned, and the 'transaction' is logged on the system. The sender (and recipient) can use a tracking number to find out where the parcel is. The system will even tell the sender the name of the person who signs for the package - indicating it has reached its destination.
True
Not if the sender has paid the correct postage to get the package to its destination.
You will need to contact the sender with your new address.
AE is the designator used by the US post office to send mail to military personnel stationed in Europe and the Middle East. The sender only pays the post office rate to New York, then the letter or package enters the military shipping system.