You can actually sue them, give them up to the police. Do whatever your heart tells you to do.
There are 2 ways of issuing cheques. You can cross the top left hand corner of the cheque and then issue it or you can issue it without crossing. Crossing increases the security of the cheque because: A crossed cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into an account. They are also called account payee cheques which can be encashed only by individuals with valid bank accounts. This way we as well as the bank can track the cheque and the account into which the funds were transferred.
If you do not have enough money in your account, the cheque would bounce. Which means your account does not have sufficient funds to honour the cheque you issued to somebody. In this situation the bank would return the cheque to the person who deposited informing that there is not enough funds. Also the bank would charge you a penalty fees for issuing cheques without enough funds in your account. Now, the person who received the cheque from you can file a legal complaint on you and you can be jailed for issuing such cheques.
When you order cheques/checks and have your name/address/phone number imprinted along with your bank name and account number on them, the cheques/checks are considered to be "personalised". ASAP Cheques/ASAP Checks Bank quality cheques/checks without bank prices, ready to ship in 24 hours.
# The cheque would bounce # The bank would charge you penalties for issuing cheques without sufficient funds # The person to whom you gave the cheque may sue you for issuing cheques without funds.
That depends on your bank and the type of account you have opened with the bank. There is no one answer that can be given - for instance there is no restriction on how many cheques I can write (or cash) for free with my bank.
It is impossible to sign into any website without having an account for that website. This is because the term "signing in" implies that you already have an account on the website and you are logging into it.
Signing out means you're not actively logged into eBay on your own computer. Signing out does NOT remove your name and account from the site.
It's a joint account. "Not knowing" is about the worst defense in the world for anything.
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You can put my name on the account and I'll try that theory out for you. Make sure its good money
No. The moment they start deducting PF from your account, they are bound to disclose the PF account number to the employee. It is our right to know where our money is being deposited.
The cheque would bounce and the person who issued the cheque can be legally prosecuted for issuing cheques without sufficient funds in the account. Also, the bank may take legal action against the customer for misusing the cheque facility.