payer or payee, deponds on which person it signing it.
Yes. It is.
Regardless of who wrote the check, when a person signs their name on the back, they are endorsing the check.
The short answer is No. However, if the original payee signs the check over to you by endorsing the back your Financial Institution may negotiate the check as 2nd party. Besides that you must have the check re-issued by the remitter (the person who wrote the check).
A cashier's check is signed by an official representative of the bank that issues it.
payer or payee, deponds on which person it signing it.
The payer.
The payer is the person that is paying a sum of money to the payee. The payer signs the check and the payee is the person who cashes the check.
# Check the person's pulse. # Check the person's breathing. # Check the person's heartbeat. # Check the person's eyes if it is moving. # Check the person's face for signs of paleness. # As a last resort, prick the person's skin check if the blood that flows out is warm. If not, the person has died. If you check with the town clerk in the town or city the individual was a resident, they will be able to appropriately direct you.
Tap the person firmly and shout at them to assess for responsiveness, then open their airway and check for breathing.
Whoever is cashing or depositing the check will sign the back. If you cash it or deposit it yourself it will need endorsed.
Yes. It is.
Regardless of who wrote the check, when a person signs their name on the back, they are endorsing the check.
thoose signs might be right. check the person out to see for real. yet there might not be signs it could just be something else. well just see and that person might be the one. take ur chance and ask them out or something.
Type your answer here... The person who's name is first on the check signs on the line and the second name signs underneath the first signature
Check for signs of life no more than 10 seconds.
This is legal as long as the person cashing/depositing the check is the payee and it is signed by the owner of the bank account or an authorized signer on the account. It doesn't matter who writes out the check, it matters who signs it.