The person or company the check is made out to. No one else can cash it. The person you wrote it to can endorse the check to someone else so they can cash it.
The person who wrote the check
The person who wrote the check
Definitely the person who wrote it.
Yes, a person with a bank account (a depositor) can write a check against that account for a sum of money. The person given the check (who the check is made out to) then presents it to their bank and the banks between them move the money from the account of the person who wrote the check to the account of the person who was given the check.
The person who wrote this song is Sarah Bareilles.
As long as you were authorized to write checks, no, the other person has no case to press charges against you.
You write the date, check number, the place you wrote the check and the total. Then on the far right you deduct what you spent from what is in your account.
The bank will hold you responsible for the bounced check. But you can sue the person who wrote you the check that bounced for the check amount and for the resulting penalties and your court costs.
If you accidentally wrote on the back of a check, you should not try to correct it yourself. Instead, write "void" on the back of the check and request a new one from the issuer.
If you wrote the wrong date on your check, you should void the check and write a new one with the correct date to avoid any issues with processing or payment.
Many composers wrote a 6th symphony. This question is meaningless without knowing which composer.